Coding Reference

Cardiovascular Surgery Coding Guide: ICD-10 and CPT Pairing

Coding for cardiovascular surgery demands precise pairing of cardiac-specific ICD-10 diagnoses with high-complexity surgical CPT codes that reflect the exact procedure performed.

Cardiovascular Surgery Coding Guide: ICD-10 and CPT Pairing
01

I25.10 (native coronary artery) is the most common CABG primary diagnosis. Use I25.810 for redo cases.

02

Diagnosis order should match procedure code order: valve first if valve is primary indication

03

Never use Z95.1 (status post CABG) as primary diagnosis. Use the active disease code (I25.810).

04

Modifier 24 claims need a diagnosis code unrelated to the surgery to demonstrate separate service

Overview

Why Cardiovascular Surgery Coding Guide Teams Need a Better Workflow

Coding for cardiovascular surgery demands precise pairing of cardiac-specific ICD-10 diagnoses with high-complexity surgical CPT codes that reflect the exact procedure performed. The diagnosis must clearly support the specific operation, and documentation requirements for cardiovascular surgery are among the most detailed and scrutinized in all of surgery.

This coding guide covers the essential ICD-10/CPT pairing rules for cardiovascular surgery across procedure types. Sections address coronary artery disease and CABG coding, valvular heart disease and replacement or repair codes, aortic aneurysm procedures, and the documentation standards that establish medical necessity for these high-acuity interventions.

Why Cardiovascular Surgery Coding Guide Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Cardiovascular Surgery Coding Guide Challenges We Solve

Every Cardiovascular Surgery Coding Guide team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

I25.10 (native coronary artery) is the most common CABG primary diagnosis. Use I25.810 for redo cases.

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

Diagnosis order should match procedure code order: valve first if valve is primary indication

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

Never use Z95.1 (status post CABG) as primary diagnosis. Use the active disease code (I25.810).

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

Modifier 24 claims need a diagnosis code unrelated to the surgery to demonstrate separate service

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

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Guide

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Cardiovascular Surgery Diagnosis Coding Foundation

Cardiovascular surgery diagnosis coding requires precise selection from the ICD-10 circulatory system chapter (I00-I99) to match the specific anatomy and pathology being treated. The primary diagnosis must reflect the condition that necessitated the surgical intervention, and secondary codes document contributing conditions. For coronary artery bypass, the primary diagnosis is I25.10 (atherosclerotic heart disease of native coronary artery without angina) or I25.110 through I25.119 (with angina). For valve surgery, the diagnosis identifies the specific valve and pathology (stenosis, insufficiency, or both).

Coronary Artery Disease Coding (I25.x)

CABG procedures pair with I25.10 (atherosclerotic heart disease of native coronary artery without angina) as the most common primary diagnosis. When the patient has angina, use I25.110 (with unstable angina), I25.111 (with angina with documented spasm), or I25.119 (with unspecified angina). For patients with prior CABG undergoing redo surgery, use I25.810 (atherosclerosis of coronary artery bypass graft without angina) or the corresponding angina subcodes (I25.710 through I25.799 for autologous vein grafts, I25.810 for native artery grafts).

Code the number of involved vessels as a secondary diagnosis using I25.x subcategories when documented. Acute STEMI cases proceeding directly to emergent CABG use the acute MI codes (I21.01 through I21.4) as the primary diagnosis with I25.10 as a secondary code. The acute MI code captures the urgency and medical necessity of the emergency surgical intervention.

Valvular Heart Disease Coding (I34-I37)

Aortic valve codes: I35.0 (nonrheumatic aortic stenosis), I35.1 (nonrheumatic aortic insufficiency), I35.2 (nonrheumatic aortic stenosis with insufficiency). Mitral valve codes: I34.0 (nonrheumatic mitral insufficiency), I34.1 (nonrheumatic mitral valve prolapse), I34.2 (nonrheumatic mitral stenosis). Tricuspid valve: I36.0 (nonrheumatic tricuspid stenosis), I36.1 (nonrheumatic tricuspid insufficiency). For rheumatic valve disease (less common in current practice), use the I05-I09 code range instead.

When combined CABG and valve surgery is performed, list the condition driving the higher-complexity procedure as the primary diagnosis. If the valve disease is the primary surgical indication and the coronary disease is addressed concurrently, list the valve diagnosis first. If the coronary disease is the primary indication and a valve is replaced opportunistically, list I25.10 first. The diagnosis order should match the procedure code order on the claim.

Thoracic Aortic Disease Coding

Aortic aneurysm codes: I71.1 (thoracic aortic aneurysm, ruptured), I71.2 (thoracic aortic aneurysm, without rupture). Aortic dissection: I71.00 (dissection of unspecified site of aorta), I71.01 (dissection of thoracic aorta). These codes pair with the thoracic aortic repair CPT codes (33860-33877). For acute aortic dissection, the diagnosis code I71.01 establishes the emergency surgical indication. For elective aneurysm repair, I71.2 requires supporting documentation of aneurysm size meeting surgical criteria (typically 5.5 cm or greater for ascending aorta).

Modifier Pairing with Diagnosis Codes

When using modifier 78 (return to OR for related complication), pair the procedure with a complication diagnosis code: T81.0xxA (hemorrhage following a procedure), T81.31xA (disruption of surgical wound), I97.0 (postcardiotomy syndrome), or T82.x (complications of cardiac device). When using modifier 24 (unrelated E/M during global period), pair the E/M code with a diagnosis unrelated to the surgery (pneumonia J18.9, urinary tract infection N39.0, deep vein thrombosis I82.40x). The diagnosis code on the modifier 24 claim must be distinct from the surgical diagnosis to demonstrate the service is unrelated to routine postoperative care.

Common Coding Errors

The most frequent cardiovascular surgery coding error is using I25.1 (atherosclerotic heart disease) without the fifth character specifying native versus graft vessel. I25.10 (native) and I25.810 (bypass graft) have different clinical implications and support different procedures. The second most common error is listing Z95.1 (presence of aortocoronary bypass graft) as a primary diagnosis for redo CABG instead of the active disease code (I25.810). Z95.1 is a status code indicating prior surgery, not a condition requiring current treatment. It should appear as a secondary code when relevant, never as primary.

Key Cardiovascular Surgery ICD-10 and CPT Pairings

CPT Code Primary ICD-10 Common Secondary Codes
33533 (CABG, 1 arterial) I25.10 I25.110 (angina), I10, E11.9
33405 (Aortic valve) I35.0 or I35.2 I25.10 (if concurrent CAD)
33430 (Mitral valve) I34.0 or I34.2 I48.91 (atrial fibrillation)
33361 (TAVR) I35.0 I10, I25.10, Z68.x if applicable
33860 (Ascending aorta) I71.2 or I71.01 I35.0 (if concurrent valve)
33533 (Redo CABG) I25.810 Z95.1 (status), I25.10 (native disease)
Common Questions

Cardiovascular Surgery Coding Guide FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

For first-time CABG on native coronary arteries, use I25.10 (atherosclerotic heart disease of native coronary artery without angina) or the corresponding angina subcodes (I25.110-I25.119). For redo CABG addressing diseased bypass grafts, use I25.810 (atherosclerosis of coronary artery bypass graft) as primary with Z95.1 (presence of prior CABG) as secondary. For emergent CABG during acute MI, use the acute MI code (I21.x) as primary.

List both conditions as diagnoses, with the primary surgical indication first. If the valve disease drove the decision to operate and CABG was added based on catheterization findings, list the valve diagnosis (I35.0 for aortic stenosis) as primary and I25.10 as secondary. Match the diagnosis order to the procedure code order on the claim. Both conditions must be independently documented as requiring surgical treatment.

Use acute MI codes (I21.01 through I21.4) when the CABG is performed during an active ST-elevation or non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction, typically within 24 to 48 hours of the acute event. Use chronic CAD codes (I25.10, I25.110-I25.119) for elective or semi-elective CABG performed for stable angina or progressive coronary disease documented on catheterization. The distinction affects medical necessity documentation and may impact authorization requirements.

Use the specific complication code that necessitated the return to surgery. Common codes include: T81.0xxA (hemorrhage and hematoma complicating a procedure), T81.31xA (disruption of operation wound), I97.0 (postcardiotomy syndrome), T82.01xA (breakdown of heart valve prosthesis), and T82.518A (breakdown of coronary artery bypass graft). The complication diagnosis must be supported by documentation in the operative note for the return procedure.

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