Billing Workflow

Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process: Step-by-Step Workflow

The billing process for cardiovascular surgery involves coordination across multiple settings, from the surgeon office to the hospital operating room and the post-surgical recovery period that may extend for weeks.

Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process: Step-by-Step Workflow
01

List the highest-RVU procedure first on multi-code cardiac surgery claims

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Submit assistant surgeon claims same day as primary surgeon to avoid timing denials

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Same-day ICU critical care (99291) is separately billable with documented time and conditions

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Complications requiring OR return use modifier 78. Unrelated conditions use modifier 24.

Overview

Why Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process Teams Need a Better Workflow

The billing process for cardiovascular surgery involves coordination across multiple settings, from the surgeon office to the hospital operating room and the post-surgical recovery period that may extend for weeks. Managing global period billing, assistant surgeon claims, and facility vs. professional fee splits requires a highly organized and detail-oriented workflow.

This guide walks through the cardiovascular surgery billing process step by step from consultation through post-operative discharge. Topics include pre-surgical authorization for high-cost cardiac procedures, global period tracking, inpatient billing coordination, and post-operative visit management during the extended recovery period.

Why Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process Challenges We Solve

Every Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

List the highest-RVU procedure first on multi-code cardiac surgery claims

The workflow has to support this issue before claim submission, or it turns into avoidable rework after the payer responds.

Submit assistant surgeon claims same day as primary surgeon to avoid timing denials

When this area is inconsistent, denial rate, payment timing, and staff follow-up effort all get worse at the same time.

Same-day ICU critical care (99291) is separately billable with documented time and conditions

Tight documentation and coding controls here usually improve both reimbursement accuracy and operational speed.

Complications requiring OR return use modifier 78. Unrelated conditions use modifier 24.

This is one of the first places revenue leakage shows up when specialty billing habits are not standardized.

Services

Complete Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process Resources

Support spans the full revenue cycle.

CPT Codes

Claim Denials

Revenue Cycle

Outsourcing

Coding Guide

Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Hub

Coverage

Serving Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Teams Nationwide

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Cardiovascular Surgery billing managers

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Guide

The Complete Guide to Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process

The Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Cycle

Cardiovascular surgery generates the highest per-case revenue in surgical billing, but the complexity of multi-code claims, concurrent surgeon billing, ICU services, and 90-day global periods creates significant opportunities for revenue leakage. A single CABG case may generate $3,000 to $5,000 in surgeon professional fees, but only if every billable component is captured: the primary procedure, add-on or secondary procedures, assistant surgeon charges, same-day critical care, and any separately billable complications during the global period. The billing workflow must capture each component without double-billing or bundling errors.

Step 1: Pre-Operative Authorization and Benefits Verification

Verify cardiac surgery benefits and obtain prior authorization when required. Most commercial payers require prior authorization for elective cardiac surgery (CABG, valve replacement, TAVR). Emergency cases are performed without prior authorization, but notification within 24 to 48 hours is required by most payers to avoid retrospective denial. During verification, confirm: cardiac surgery is a covered benefit, the specific procedure is approved, whether an assistant surgeon is authorized and at what reimbursement level, the expected length of stay, and the patient cost-share estimate.

Step 2: Operative Report Documentation

The operative report drives the entire billing process for cardiovascular surgery. It must document: each conduit used and its target vessel (LIMA to LAD, SVG to RCA, SVG to OM1), any concurrent procedures with separate indications (valve replacement, hiatal hernia repair, pericardial window), use of cardiopulmonary bypass with cross-clamp and bypass times, any complications encountered and their management, and the specific role of the assistant surgeon. A detailed operative report supports code selection, modifier usage, and appeals if claims are denied.

For combined procedures (CABG plus valve), the operative report must describe each procedure as a distinct surgical component. Simply mentioning “CABG and AVR were performed” is insufficient. Document the bypass grafting, then separately document the valve replacement with its own findings, technique, and indication.

Step 3: Multi-Code Claim Assembly

Assemble the professional claim with correct code sequencing. The highest-valued procedure is listed first. For CABG plus valve: list the valve code (typically higher RVU) as the primary procedure, add the CABG arterial code with modifier 51, add the CABG venous code with modifier 51 (if applicable). For standalone CABG: list the arterial graft code first, add the venous graft code with modifier 51. Attach the primary diagnosis codes: I25.10 (atherosclerotic heart disease, native coronary artery) for CABG, I35.0 (nonrheumatic aortic stenosis) or I35.1 (nonrheumatic aortic insufficiency) for AVR.

Step 4: Assistant Surgeon Claim Submission

The assistant surgeon submits a separate claim with the same procedure codes, date of service, and diagnosis codes as the primary surgeon, adding modifier 80 (or 82). The assistant surgeon NPI, tax ID, and credentials must be on the claim. Submit the assistant surgeon claim on the same day as the primary surgeon claim to avoid timing-based denials. If the primary claim is denied, the assistant claim will also be denied, so resolution of primary claim issues takes priority.

Step 5: ICU and Post-Operative Billing

On the day of surgery, critical care services provided in the ICU are separately billable. The surgeon or another physician providing critical care services documents the time spent in direct critical care management (not including time spent on operative documentation or routine rounding). Report 99291 for the first 30 to 74 minutes and 99292 for each additional 30-minute block. On subsequent ICU days, the surgeon may bill subsequent inpatient care codes (99231-99233) or critical care codes if the patient condition warrants critical care level management. These post-operative hospital visits are included in the 90-day global period for routine care but are separately billable for critical illness management unrelated to routine recovery.

Step 6: Global Period and Follow-Up Management

Track the 90-day global period start date and manage all follow-up accordingly. Routine visits (sternal wound check, incision monitoring, activity progression, cardiac rehabilitation referral) are included. Separately billable services during the global period include: complications requiring return to the OR (modifier 78), unrelated medical conditions (modifier 24), and diagnostic studies ordered to evaluate new symptoms. Cardiac rehabilitation is billed by the rehabilitation program, not the surgeon. After day 90, resume standard E/M billing for ongoing cardiac follow-up visits.

Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Workflow Timeline

Step Action Target Timeline
1 Prior auth + benefits verification (elective cases) 5-10 days pre-surgery
2 Operative report review for coding accuracy Within 24 hours of surgery
3 Multi-code claim assembly (primary + secondary) Within 48 hours
4 Assistant surgeon claim (same codes + modifier 80) Same day as primary claim
5 ICU critical care billing (99291/99292) Daily during ICU stay
6 Global period tracking + post-90-day E/M billing Days 0-90 then ongoing
Common Questions

Cardiovascular Surgery Billing Process FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

List the procedure with the highest RVU (relative value units) as the primary code. In most cases, the valve replacement (33405 or 33430) has a higher RVU than a single arterial CABG (33533). List the valve code first, then add the CABG arterial code with modifier 51, then the CABG venous code with modifier 51 if applicable. Correct sequencing ensures the primary procedure is reimbursed at 100% and secondary procedures at the appropriate reduced rate.

On the day of surgery, yes. Critical care (99291/99292) is separately billable on the same day as the surgical procedure. On subsequent days during the global period, the surgeon can bill critical care if the patient requires critical care level management for conditions beyond routine post-operative recovery. The documentation must support critical care criteria: life-threatening conditions requiring the surgeon direct personal management. Routine post-operative ICU monitoring does not qualify as critical care.

Modifier 80 is used when an assistant surgeon assists at a procedure. Modifier 82 is used when an assistant surgeon assists because a qualified resident surgeon is not available. In teaching hospitals with surgical residency programs, Medicare requires modifier 82 with documentation explaining why a resident could not fill the assistant role. In non-teaching hospitals, modifier 80 is standard. Both modifiers reimburse at 16% of the primary surgeon allowed amount under Medicare.

Emergency cardiac surgery (acute aortic dissection, STEMI requiring emergent CABG, cardiac tamponade) is performed without prior authorization. Most payers require notification within 24 to 48 hours of the emergency procedure. Submit the notification with the admission diagnosis, the procedure performed, and the emergency indication. Retrospective authorization is granted in the vast majority of true emergency cases. Document the emergent nature clearly in the operative report and the admission note.

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