The most recent AMA CPT editorial meeting was February 5-6 in Palm Springs, and at day 14, February 20, they've released the Summary of Panel Actions.
Dozens of PLA codes were voted on, but for PLA, specific results and final text edits won't appear til April 1.
Here is the home page for Panel Actions:
https://www.ama-assn.org/about/cpt-editorial-panel/summary-panel-actions
And here is the February 2026 edition:
https://www.ama-assn.org/system/files/feb-2026-summary-of-panel-actions.pdf
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DEEP DIVE [Chat GPT 5.2]
CPT February 2026: AI Is Still Getting Through — Carefully
The AMA CPT Editorial Panel met February 5–6 in Palm Springs, and the Summary of Actions now public. The agenda included 69 items. By my count, 27 were withdrawn, 5 postponed, and 4 rejected outright.
That distribution is typical of a mature coding environment. Withdrawals are not defeats; they are usually strategic pauses. Applicants often pull proposals to redesign descriptors, align specialty societies, clarify units of service, or reconsider whether PLA, Category III, or Category I is the correct pathway.
Whole Slide Imaging AI: Category III Accepted
The most consequential action for digital pathology is Tab 45. Valar Labs received two new Category III codes (X568T, X569T) for AI-based prediction of immunotherapy response in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer.
This is a meaningful development. Over the past couple years, digital pathology-AI has been rejected from both PLA and MAAA categories. Some observers worried whether CPT would find a way to codify slide-based algorithmic services at all. This action demonstrates forward motion.
Category III status does not confer coverage, pricing, or payment certainty. But it does provide several critical foundations: a defined reportable service, a recognized unit of service, and a pathway to accumulate utilization and outcomes evidence.
There is historical precedent for slide-based or analytic services being placed on the CLFS (about 8 PLA codes for dig path WSI), and I believe the same precedent ought to occur for the same service, just placed as a Cat III codes. We'll see how CMS handles these codes in the summer lab fee schedule "crosswalk-gapfill" meetings.
AI in Radiology: PET Heterogeneity Survives Debate
For different reasons, Tab 64 is equally instructive. Code X567T, describing AI analysis of heterogeneity of treatment response in metastatic cancer using serial PET imaging, was accepted after prolonged discussion.
The FDA-approved software uses AI to perform algorithmic tracking of multiple metastatic lesions across time, quantifying growth, shrinkage, and metabolic activity longitudinally. Radiologists do routinely compare scans to prior imaging. But they do not typically track dozens of lesions with systematic quantitative uniformity across timepoints. That distinction likely helped establish this service as separately reportable rather than merely an automated enhancement of existing physician work. Potentially, this level of AI analysis makes the PET scans themselves more valuable to clinicians.
Pattern Behind the Withdrawals?
Several AI-related proposals were withdrawn during this cycle. That clustering suggests recurring friction points in the CPT process. Possible issues could include:
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Unclear unit of service (per slide, per case, per lesion, per episode?)
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Ambiguity about who performs or reports the service
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Insufficient differentiation from existing physician interpretation
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Framing the value proposition around improved sensitivity rather than decision impact
The services that succeeded this cycle were tightly framed around defined analytic outputs with specific clinical contexts. That appears to be the emerging template.
Some of these issues are now put into a topic called "codafiability." Use it in a sentence. "I don't like this service, so it lacks codafiability."
PLA Activity Continues
The Q1 PLA consent agenda added 29 PLA codes and revised or deleted several others. PLA remains active but algorithmic or software-driven analytic services may start showing up in Cat III.
Accepted Category III codes in this cycle are scheduled for July 1, 2026 release and January 1, 2027 effectiveness. That timing will affect any effort to coordinate with CMS annual pricing cycles.
Strategic Implications
Watch for more activity in upcoming AMA meetings on "Appendix S" - the AI appendix, which is getting intensive re-writing month by month, and track the possibility of a new code category "CMAA" for software-intensive services. I've argued that services like genomics + AI should just remain on the CLFS as they have been for several years.