Bariatric Surgery Medical Billing Overview
Getting a bariatric surgery claim paid is not an accident. It is the result of a deliberate, step-by-step process that begins months before the patient ever reaches the operating room and continues through the full 90-day global surgical period. Bariatric procedures including laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (CPT 43775), Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (CPT 43644), and laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (CPT 43770) are covered by Medicare and most commercial payers, but coverage comes with specific eligibility criteria that must be documented, verified, and tracked before the claim is submitted. Miss one documentation requirement and the entire high-value claim is denied. Miss it repeatedly and the practice faces not just denials but potential recoupment requests if payments were made before the audit identifies the gap.
Medicare covers bariatric surgery for patients with a BMI of 35 or greater with at least one obesity-related comorbidity, or BMI of 40 or greater without comorbidities, when performed at a certified bariatric surgery center of excellence. Commercial payers including Aetna, UnitedHealthcare, Cigna, BCBS, and Humana apply their own coverage criteria, which commonly include a supervised medical weight loss program of 3-6 months, psychological evaluation, nutritional counseling, and physician-supervised pre-operative preparation documented across multiple visits. Without a systematic pre-authorization documentation checklist, practices routinely submit authorization requests that are incomplete and receive delays or denials that push case starts back by weeks.
Common Billing Challenges in Bariatric Surgery
- Pre-authorization documentation failures: Commercial payers require specific documentation for bariatric prior authorization, including BMI measurements at multiple time points, medical weight management records, psychological clearance notes, nutritional counseling completion, and comorbidity documentation. Submitting an incomplete authorization request restarts the review clock and delays case scheduling, affecting both revenue timing and patient access.
- Global period postoperative service billing: The 90-day global surgical period for bariatric procedures includes all routine postoperative care. Billing office visits for post-surgical follow-up without Modifier 24 (unrelated condition) or Modifier 78 (return to OR) during the global period results in claim denial. Bariatric practices with high-volume post-surgical follow-up programs must track each patient’s global period end date to avoid billing postoperative visits that are bundled into the surgical payment.
- Conversion and revision procedure coding: Conversion of adjustable gastric banding to sleeve gastrectomy (CPT 43886 for band removal + CPT 43775 for sleeve) requires documentation of the reason for conversion and, in most commercial plans, a separate prior authorization for the revision procedure. Billing the revision without establishing the failed primary procedure in the record results in denial as an elective procedure not meeting coverage criteria.
- Malnutrition and nutritional deficiency diagnosis coding: Bariatric patients commonly develop post-surgical malnutrition, vitamin deficiencies (E50-E56 ICD-10 range), and protein-calorie deficiency (E43-E46). Accurate ICD-10 coding of these conditions on follow-up visit claims supports medical necessity for post-surgical nutritional testing and infusion services. Vague or incomplete diagnosis coding on follow-up visits results in laboratory and infusion claim denials.
Key CPT Codes for Bariatric Surgery Billing
- CPT 43644: Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; the highest-reimbursing primary bariatric procedure under most commercial payer fee schedules; requires documentation of pouch size, limb lengths, and anastomosis technique
- CPT 43775: Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy; the most commonly performed bariatric procedure nationwide; requires documentation of bougie size and staple line length for complete operative documentation
- CPT 43770: Laparoscopic placement of adjustable gastric band; less frequently performed since 2015 but still covered by Medicare and select commercial plans when BMI and comorbidity criteria are met
- CPT 43886: Gastric restrictive procedure, open; revision of subcutaneous port component only; used for adjustable band port revisions and replacements without global period reset
- CPT 99213 / 99214 with Modifier 24: Post-operative office visits billed during the 90-day global period when the visit is for a condition unrelated to the bariatric procedure; requires explicit documentation that the visit addressed a separate medical problem
Revenue Cycle Considerations for Bariatric Surgery
Step 1 in maximizing bariatric revenue: build a prior authorization checklist for each commercial payer and Medicare Advantage plan in your market. Step 2: assign a dedicated authorization coordinator to track each patient’s documentation completion status against their scheduled surgery date. Step 3: do not schedule the surgery until the authorization is confirmed and the authorization number is documented in the billing system with the exact CPT codes that are approved. Step 4: set up global period tracking for every surgical case so your billing team knows which postoperative visits can be billed separately and which are bundled. Step 5: audit your denial rate monthly by denial reason code and address systemic issues at the process level, not the individual claim level.
A/R days in bariatric surgery average 45-65 days under commercial payers, where authorization complexity and medical necessity review timelines drive collection periods. Medicare bariatric claims pay faster, typically 30-40 days, when BMI, comorbidity, and center of excellence documentation is complete. A single denied gastric bypass claim at a commercial rate represents $8,000-$18,000 in lost or delayed revenue, making front-end authorization accuracy the highest-value activity in the bariatric revenue cycle.
How My Medical Bill Solution Helps Bariatric Surgery Practices
My Medical Bill Solution builds bariatric billing workflows around the prior authorization checklist process from day one. Authorization tracking dashboards monitor each patient’s documentation completion status in real time, flagging incomplete files before the surgery date is confirmed. Payer-specific authorization criteria are maintained and updated as plans revise their bariatric coverage policies, so your team is always working from current requirements. Global period management tools track each surgical patient’s 90-day window and flag postoperative visits that can be billed separately with the correct modifier.
Revision and conversion procedure billing is reviewed against the primary procedure history and prior authorization to ensure the revision claim includes the required documentation for a separate covered service. Denial management handles authorization mismatch disputes, global period bundling appeals, and medical necessity documentation requests from commercial payers. Contact My Medical Bill Solution to build a structured bariatric billing program that captures full reimbursement on every case from authorization through the final postoperative visit.