Thoracic Surgery Billing Experts

Thoracic Surgery Medical Billing Services

Thoracic surgery billing involves complex procedural coding for operations on the chest wall, lungs, mediastinum, and esophagus.

Thoracic Surgery Medical Billing Services
96%

Net collection rate

22%

Revenue increase average

28 days

Average days in A/R

98%

Operative report coding accuracy

Overview

High-Value Revenue Cycle Management for Thoracic Surgical Practices

Thoracic surgery billing involves complex procedural coding for operations on the chest wall, lungs, mediastinum, and esophagus. Lobectomy codes (32480-32505) differ by approach, with video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) codes (32663-32672) carrying different reimbursement than open procedures. Conversion from VATS to open thoracotomy requires documentation of the clinical reason for conversion and appropriate modifier usage.

Lung biopsy and staging procedures (32096-32098 for open, 32601-32609 for thoracoscopic) must specify the technique, number of specimens obtained, and whether the procedure was diagnostic or therapeutic. Mediastinoscopy (39400) bundling rules with subsequent surgical procedures are a common source of billing errors, as many payers include the staging procedure in the global fee of the definitive surgery.

High-Value Revenue Cycle Management for Thoracic Surgical Practices
Challenges

Common Thoracic Surgery billing Challenges We Solve

Every Thoracic Surgery billing team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage. We tighten those weak points before they turn into write-offs.

VATS vs. Open Procedure Code Selection

Choosing between VATS (32663-32668) and open thoracotomy codes (32440-32507) based on the operative approach documented in the report directly affects reimbursement, with some VATS codes carrying higher RVUs than their open equivalents.

Global Period Management

Major thoracic procedures carry 90-day global periods. Managing post-operative visits, complications requiring return to OR (modifier 78), and unrelated E/M services (modifier 24) during the global period determines whether additional revenue is captured or lost.

Multi-Procedure Bundling Complexity

Thoracic cases frequently involve multiple procedures (bronchoscopy with lung resection, chest wall reconstruction after tumor excision). CCI edits and modifier 59 application determine whether each component is separately reimbursable.

Critical Care Billing Coordination

Post-operative critical care (99291-99292) must be billed separately from the surgical global period when documented critical care services exceed standard post-operative management. Time documentation and medical necessity are essential.

Services

Complete Thoracic Surgery billing Services

Support spans the full revenue cycle, from front-end verification to denial recovery and reporting.

Lung resection and lobectomy coding

VATS and robotic thoracic surgery billing

Global period management and modifier tracking

Critical care and post-operative billing

Esophageal and mediastinal procedure coding

Prior authorization for complex thoracic procedures

Coverage

Serving Thoracic Surgery billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices, multisite groups, and growing provider organizations with flexible workflows.

Independent physician groups

Multi-location practices

Private equity backed platforms

Hospital-owned outpatient groups

Guide

The Complete Guide to Thoracic Surgery billing

Thoracic Surgery Medical Billing Overview

A patient is scheduled for a video-assisted thoracoscopic (VATS) lobectomy for a Stage I lung adenocarcinoma. The pre-op evaluation is complete, prior authorization from his UnitedHealthcare Medicare Advantage plan is pending, and the scheduler is holding the OR date. Authorization comes back approved, but only for the VATS approach. Intraoperatively, the surgeon encounters dense adhesions and converts to open thoracotomy. The case proceeds successfully, but now the billing team is staring at a claim for a procedure code that was not authorized. The choice is either to appeal the denial correctly with conversion documentation or to write off a $4,500 professional fee for a procedure that was medically necessary and properly performed. How that scenario plays out depends entirely on whether the billing team knows thoracic surgery well enough to build and submit the conversion appeal correctly.

Thoracic surgery billing spans a range of procedures from relatively straightforward bronchoscopy and mediastinoscopy cases to highly complex VATS and open thoracotomy procedures for lung cancer resection, esophageal surgery, and chest wall reconstruction. The specialty sits at the intersection of oncology, pulmonology, and cardiovascular surgery in ways that create payer coverage and coding questions that a general billing service will not reliably answer correctly. Medicare is the primary payer because lung cancer, esophageal cancer, and COPD-related surgical procedures all peak in the Medicare-age population, making coverage policies from Medicare Administrative Contractors and the National Coverage Determination for lung cancer screening (LDCT, CPT 71271) central to daily billing operations.

Common Billing Challenges in Thoracic Surgery

  • VATS to open conversion documentation and billing: When a VATS procedure converts to open thoracotomy intraoperatively, the billing code changes from the VATS-specific code set to the corresponding open procedure code. Prior authorizations granted for the VATS approach do not automatically transfer to the open code. The operative note must document the reason for conversion and the specific point at which the approach changed, and an authorization appeal must be filed with that documentation before the open code claim can be processed.
  • Mediastinal staging procedure unbundling rules: Thoracic staging workups frequently involve multiple procedures: endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS, 31625, 31629), mediastinoscopy (39400), and navigational bronchoscopy (31627) are sometimes performed in the same operative session. NCCI bundling rules govern which combinations of these codes can be billed together and which require modifier 59 or XU to justify separate billing. Incorrect bundling results in denial of secondary procedure codes.
  • Lung cancer screening billing requirements: Medicare covers annual low-dose CT lung cancer screening (CPT 71271) for eligible beneficiaries with a shared decision-making visit billed under G0296. Missing the G0296 requirement on the first screening claim, or failing to document smoking history and cessation counseling in the shared decision-making note, results in denial of the screening claim and a patient financial responsibility for a service that should have been fully covered as preventive care.
  • Chest tube and drainage procedure bundling: Tube thoracostomy (32551) and related chest drainage procedures are frequently bundled into major thoracic procedure codes when performed on the same day as a major resection. Billing these separately without confirming that the procedure code description excludes incidental chest drainage creates NCCI bundle denials on the secondary code.

Key CPT Codes for Thoracic Surgery Billing

  • 32663: Thoracoscopy, surgical, with lobectomy, the primary VATS lobectomy code used for minimally invasive lung resection, the highest-volume major thoracic surgery procedure
  • 32480: Removal of lung, other than pneumonectomy, single lobe, open, the open lobectomy procedure code applicable when VATS is not performed or conversion from VATS occurs
  • 31622: Bronchoscopy, rigid or flexible, including fluoroscopic guidance, when performed, diagnostic with cell washings, brushings, and protected specimen brushings, the foundational bronchoscopy code for pulmonary diagnostic evaluation
  • 39400: Mediastinoscopy including biopsy, the primary mediastinal staging procedure code for lymph node sampling prior to lung resection
  • 71271: Computed tomography, thorax, diagnostic, low dose, for lung cancer screening, annual screening CT code covered under Medicare preventive benefit when documentation requirements are met

Revenue Cycle Considerations for Thoracic Surgery

Thoracic surgery A/R days average 45 to 70, driven by the authorization complexity on elective resection cases and the appeal process triggered by VATS-to-open conversions, NCCI bundle disputes, and post-procedure global period management. Professional fees in thoracic surgery range from $800 for straightforward bronchoscopy to over $6,000 for complex open thoracotomy procedures, making the financial impact of each denial proportionally significant. Major thoracic procedures carry 90-day global periods, requiring systematic tracking to prevent improper billing of post-operative follow-up visits within the global window without correct modifier assignment.

Lung cancer surgery billing also intersects with oncology billing in ways that create coordination questions. When a medical oncologist provides chemotherapy administration on the same date as a thoracic surgery follow-up visit, each service must be billed under the correct provider NPI with appropriate modifiers. Practices that do not clearly delineate which provider rendered which service on multi-provider encounter dates create claim confusion that slows adjudication and increases denial rates across both the surgical and oncology billing streams.

How My Medical Bill Solution Helps Thoracic Surgery Practices

The thoracic surgery billing story does not start when a claim is denied. It starts before the OR date, with prior authorization management that accounts for approach-specific authorizations and documents conversion contingency plans in the pre-authorization request. My Medical Bill Solution builds thoracic billing workflows that cover VATS vs. open code selection, NCCI bundle compliance, lung cancer screening documentation requirements, and 90-day global period tracking. When conversions or complications change the procedure code after the fact, the appeals process starts immediately with operative documentation already organized. Contact My Medical Bill Solution today for a free thoracic surgery billing assessment.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Thoracic Surgery billing

Answers to the questions practice owners and managers ask most often before switching billing partners.

How do you handle VATS lobectomy billing?

We code VATS lobectomy as 32663, verify the operative report confirms a thoracoscopic approach throughout, and separately bill any diagnostic bronchoscopy (31622) performed during the same session when it is not bundled into the primary procedure. If conversion to open occurs, we code the open procedure instead.

How do you manage the 90-day global period for thoracic surgery?

We track each patient through the 90-day global period, billing routine post-operative visits as included. When complications require return to the OR, we apply modifier 78 (unplanned return) or modifier 79 (unrelated procedure). For unrelated E/M services during the global period, we use modifier 24 with supporting documentation.

Do you bill for robotic-assisted thoracic surgery?

Yes. We code the appropriate thoracic procedure and capture the robotic approach through proper documentation. While no separate robotic add-on codes exist for most thoracic procedures, we ensure the operative time and complexity are reflected in the procedure code selection and supporting documentation.

How do you handle critical care billing after thoracic surgery?

We bill critical care (99291-99292) on post-operative days when the surgeon provides documented critical care services beyond routine post-operative management. This requires separate time documentation and clinical notes demonstrating the critical nature of the interventions provided.

What is your approach to esophageal surgery coding?

We code esophagectomy procedures (43107-43124) based on the documented approach (transthoracic, transhiatal, or thoracoabdominal) and extent of resection. We also capture related procedures like feeding jejunostomy (44186-44187) and pyloroplasty (43800) when performed during the same operative session.

What results do thoracic surgery practices see with your billing?

Our thoracic surgery clients see 15-22% revenue increases from accurate VATS code selection, proper capture of multi-procedure cases, and effective global period management. Average collection rates improve from 89% to 96% within six months of engagement.

Comparison

How We Compare for Thoracic Surgery billing

The difference is operational discipline. We focus on clean submissions, fast follow-up, and transparency.

Criteria My Medical Bill Solution Typical Provider
Specialty-specific billing workflows Included Often generic
Dedicated account ownership Yes Shared queue
Denial root-cause reporting Weekly Ad hoc
Claim submission speed Within 24 hours Varies
Communication cadence Planned check-ins Reactive only

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