Cardiovascular Surgery Revenue Cycle Overview
Cardiovascular surgery programs generate the highest per-case revenue in surgical medicine, but the revenue cycle is complex because each case produces multiple billable components (primary procedure, secondary procedures, assistant surgeon fees, critical care, consultations) across multiple providers and service dates. A busy cardiovascular surgery practice with two surgeons performing 400 combined cases per year generates $1.2 to $2 million in professional fees. Capturing every billable component of every case is the difference between a thriving program and one that leaves 15% to 25% of earned revenue uncollected.
Revenue Per Case
Track revenue per case by procedure type. Benchmarks for surgeon professional fees: isolated CABG $2,800 to $4,500 (depending on number and type of grafts), isolated valve replacement $2,600 to $3,200, combined CABG plus valve $4,200 to $5,500, TAVR $2,400 to $3,000, thoracic aortic repair $2,800 to $3,600. If actual collected revenue per case falls more than 15% below these benchmarks, investigate whether secondary procedure codes, assistant surgeon charges, or same-day critical care are being missed.
Revenue per case should be tracked at the collected amount, not the billed amount. The gap between billed charges and collected payments in cardiovascular surgery can be 50% to 70% because hospitals set charge master rates far above contracted rates. Tracking billed amounts gives a misleading picture of financial performance.
Multi-Code Capture Rate
Measure the percentage of multi-procedure cases where all applicable codes are submitted. For CABG cases using both arterial and venous conduits, both the arterial code and the venous code (with modifier 51) should appear on the claim. For combined CABG and valve cases, both the valve code and the CABG codes should be present. The target is 100% multi-code capture. A capture rate below 95% indicates that secondary codes are being dropped during claim assembly, resulting in direct revenue loss of $1,500 to $2,500 per missed code.
Assistant Surgeon Revenue Capture
Track the percentage of cases where an assistant surgeon was present and an assistant surgeon claim was submitted. The benchmark is 100% of eligible cases. If the practice employs or contracts the assistant surgeon, the assistant claim generates additional revenue (16% of primary surgeon Medicare fee per case). Missing assistant claims on 20 cases per year loses $8,000 to $12,000 in revenue. Also track the assistant surgeon claim payment rate to identify payers that routinely deny assistant charges.
Accounts Receivable Days
Cardiovascular surgery AR days benchmark is 40 to 50 days. The higher benchmark compared to office-based specialties reflects the complexity of multi-code claims and the longer payer processing time for high-dollar surgical claims. Payers frequently request operative reports before processing cardiovascular surgery claims above a dollar threshold ($5,000 or $10,000 total charges). Proactively submitting the operative report with the initial claim reduces AR days by preventing the request-and-response cycle that adds 15 to 30 days.
Denial Rate and Recovery
Target a denial rate below 5% for cardiovascular surgery. Track denial rate by denial reason (bundling, assistant surgeon, authorization, medical necessity) to identify systemic issues. The denial recovery rate (percentage of denied dollars successfully collected through appeals) should be 70% or higher. Given the high dollar value of cardiovascular claims, even a small improvement in the denial recovery rate generates significant revenue. Recovering one additional CABG denial per month at $3,500 adds $42,000 in annual revenue.
Critical Care Revenue
Track whether same-day critical care (99291) is being billed on cases where the surgeon provides ICU management on the day of surgery. For programs where the cardiac surgeon manages the ICU (rather than a dedicated intensivist), critical care billing should occur on nearly every case. Critical care codes add $230 to $350 per case per day. If critical care is consistently under-billed, the practice loses $50,000 to $100,000 annually on a 200-case program. Implement documentation templates that capture critical care time and conditions managed.