ICD-10 Codes: Everything You Need to Know for Accurate Claim Processing
“ICD-10 Codes” is a term that should be understood by all medical billers, coders and RCM professionals who handle the claim submission process. Or if you’re a solo practitioner who runs claims while seeing patients, then you must know about what ICD-10 codes are, how, and when you should use them. Because, a minor mishandling in these codes can slow down the whole reimbursement process.
In today’s guide, we will cover everything that would help you understand better what ICD-10 codes are and how you can use it for faster and accurate claim submissions that strengthen your overall revenue cycle process.
What Are ICD-10 Codes?
Before understanding how ICD-10 codes work, it is important to first understand what ICD-10 means.
According to the American Medical Association (AMA), ICD-10 is a medical coding system based on the Tenth Revision of the International Classification of Diseases. This system is designed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and is currently used by almost 100 countries worldwide. By implementing these medical coding systems, providers enable health insurance companies to know about the disease for which they’re curing the patient.
Now, what ICD-10 codes are? In medical coding, ICD-10 codes are the essential part, as without these codes, you can’t bill insurance companies. ICD-10 is used to document diseases, symptoms and procedures to maintain a proper healthcare system and billing as well.
Types of ICD-10 Codes in Medical Coding
Understanding ICD-10 codes is as important as using medical codes in the claim filing process. Because it helps you use the right one at the right time, preventing denials and revenue loss.
ICD-10-CM
ICD-10 CM codes refers to the standardized alphanumeric language used to indicate the morbidity and mortality of the patients. In ICD-10-CM, CM stands for the Clinical Modification, consisting of three to seven characters, along with decimals, which move forward with the more 4 characters. Together all these characters specified the disease, symptoms and procedures with their anatomical, severity and condition.
ICD-10-PCS
ICD-10-PCS codes refers to the standardized medical coding language that is used to indicate the procedures performed by doctors during the hospital inpatient stays. It consists of seven characters long code, and each character has its specific terminology by using letters and numbers. However, the first character represents the section or classification of the axis.
ICD-10 Code Structure
ICD-10 code structure consists of three to seven characters depending on which ICD-10 code category you’re used to bill claims.
However, these ICD-10 codes have a standardized formula consisting of letters and numbers combination. If you’re using a ICD-10-CM category, then these codes typically consist of three to seven characters. While, if you’re applying ICD-10-PCS codes, then it consists of seven characters.
Let’s understand this via a simple table.
| | ICD-10-CM | ICD-10-PCS |
Characters | Three to Seven | Seven |
Starts With | Letter (Excluding U) | Numbers |
Usage | Diagnosis, disease tracking and claim submission | For inpatient hospital procedure coding |
Example | E11.9, J02.9, M54.2 | 0DB60ZZ, 5A1D70Z, 02100Z9 |
How to Read an ICD-10 Codes
To read ICD-10 codes is too simple, if you understand their structure. Here’s how you can read ICD-10 codes based on their categories.
ICD-10-CM Codes
Let’s first understand how you can read ICD-10-CM codes. As these codes have three to seven characters, each character has its own language or meaning. It has been divided into three categories.
First Three Characters
- The first three characters used to document the injuries, or diseases. For example, S82 represents the fracture of the lower leg, including the ankle.
- Then the code is separated by using decimal (.) and remaining characters used to modify or elaborate the disease or injury in more detail. It’s the mix of letters and numbers.
Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Character
Character 4,5 and 6 describes the exact detail of the injury. For example, S82.101, here “1” means upper end of tibia, “0” means type of fracture, 1 represents the leg, (right or left).
Seventh Character
The last, 7th character always represents the stage of disease or injury. For example, in S82.101A, the “A” represents the “initial encounter” which means, the patient came when the injury happened.
In short, you can read the ICD-10-CM codes better by learning this formula;
- Letter+2 numbers = injury/disease
- More 3 characters = Indepth details + side of injury/disease
- 7th character = visit stage
ICD-10-PCS Codes
These codes are exactly seven characters long and used to indicate the procedures/surgeries performed in hospital. It has a fixed structure that is used by the providers or medical coders that supports the medical documentation accurately.
These codes have not any decimal, and contain 7 alphanumeric characters. Here’s how you can read ICD-10-PCS codes;
Section: shows which type of procedure was applied. For example; Medical/Surgical.
Body System: identify which part of the body it is. For e.g. heart, brain or legs.
Root Operation: insertion, means what doctor has inserted. For e.g. camera to check where the injury has been caused.
Body Part: indicates the exact part of the body. For e.g, left ventricle or right leg.
Approach: how the surgery or procedure has been done. For e.g. percutaneous.
Device: which device has been placed to treat the patient. For e.g. cardiac lead, pacemaker.
Qualifier: means more details (if any).
By learning to read these ICD-10 codes, you will be able to submit claims accurately and avoid denials, which helps you promote practice’s growth and cash flow.
What Are ICD-10 Codes Used For?
In medical billing, the ICD-10 codes are used for various purposes, out of which the most important part is it helps in submitting clean claims. Here’s the more;
Accurate Claim Processing
By using accurate ICD-10 codes (CM/PCS) based on the healthcare setting, whether its inpatient hospital or another; helps insurers understand which kind of disease or symptoms you’ve treated the patient for. It simply allows them to process claims fastly and accurately without any denials or rejections.
Clinical Documentation
When submitting medical claims, it’s important to use ICD-10 codes, along with other medical codes (CPT, HCPCS) to fulfill the clinical documentation. It helps insurers understand the patient’s condition as it classifies the anatomical, severity and nature of the injury or disease.
Public Health Reporting
In the USA, many public health sectors use ICD-10 codes to track disease trends, monitor mortality and morbidity rates, as it helps them maintain a more facilitated healthcare system and improve funding areas.
Healthcare Analytics
ICD-10 codes enable health insurance companies, healthcare and medical sectors to identify the disease trends by which they can maintain medical costs, equipment expenses, and measure treatment outcomes across millions of patient encounters.
ICD-10 vs. ICD-9 Codes (Comparison)
Feature | ICD-9 | ICD-10 |
Full Form | International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision | International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision |
Implemented in the U.S. | Before October 1, 2015 | October 1, 2015 – Present |
Code Format | Primarily numeric | Alphanumeric (first character is a letter, followed by numbers) |
Code Length | 3–5 characters | 3–7 characters |
Number of Diagnosis Codes | Approximately 14,000 | More than 70,000 |
Specificity | Limited detail for diagnoses and conditions | Highly specific, allowing precise diagnosis reporting |
Flexibility | Limited capacity for adding new codes | Flexible structure that supports future code additions and medical advancements |
Clinical Accuracy | Less accurate due to fewer coding options | Greater clinical accuracy with more detailed coding |
Laterality | Not supported | Supports left, right, and bilateral conditions where applicable |
Documentation Requirements | Basic clinical documentation | More detailed clinical documentation required |
Medical Billing & Claims | Higher risk of coding errors and claim issues | Improves claim accuracy and supports cleaner claim submissions |
Healthcare Reporting | Limited disease tracking and analytics | Enhanced reporting, research, and public health surveillance |
Current Status | Replaced in the U.S. for HIPAA-covered entities | Current standard for diagnosis coding |
Common Examples of ICD-10 Codes
Here are some of the common ICD-10 codes, used by medical billers and coders to improve clean claim rate, avoid rejections and help providers get payments on time.
ICD-10 Code | Code Type | Description | Common Use Case |
E11.9 | ICD-10-CM | Type 2 diabetes mellitus without complications | Used to document a patient diagnosed with uncomplicated Type 2 diabetes. |
I10 | ICD-10-CM | Essential (primary) hypertension | Used to report a diagnosis of primary hypertension. |
J18.9 | ICD-10-CM | Pneumonia, unspecified organism | Used when pneumonia is diagnosed without identifying the specific organism. |
M54.50 | ICD-10-CM | Low back pain, unspecified | Used to document patients presenting with lower back pain. |
N39.0 | ICD-10-CM | Urinary tract infection, site not specified | Used to report a urinary tract infection without a specified site. |
0FT44ZZ | ICD-10-PCS | Resection of gallbladder, percutaneous endoscopic approach | Used to report an inpatient laparoscopic gallbladder removal procedure. |
02100Z9 | ICD-10-PCS | Bypass coronary artery, one site, open approach | Used to code an inpatient coronary artery bypass surgery. |
0DB60ZZ | ICD-10-PCS | Resection of stomach, percutaneous endoscopic approach | Used to document certain inpatient stomach resection procedures. |
5A1D70Z | ICD-10-PCS | Performance of urinary filtration, intermittent | Used to report inpatient dialysis-related procedures. |
0BH17EZ | ICD-10-PCS | Insertion of endotracheal airway into trachea, via natural or artificial opening | Used to document inpatient endotracheal intubation procedures. |
Common ICD-10 Coding Challenges
Medical coding itself is a complicated process, but AI makes it most difficult. By using AI, payers detect the common errors, lead to rejections and slow down the payment process. The most common ICD-10 coding challenges, providers often face includes;
- Incomplete documentation: Providers forgot to use the right character code, specified the disease or injury, which triggers denials.
- Incorrect code selection: If you use J18.0 instead of J18.1 for Lobar pneumonia unspecified organism, the insurer instantly rejects the claim.
- Lack of specificity: ICD-10 codes required specification for each character. If you use S, instead of H in ICD-10-CM codes, while the patient history indicates S disease, denials occur.
- Outdated coding knowledge: The Center of Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) updated the ICD-10 coding system every year, which is the biggest hurdle for providers.
Conclusion
Accurate ICD-10 coding is essential for efficient medical billing, timely reimbursements, and regulatory compliance. By understanding code structure, knowing when to use ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS, and following coding best practices, healthcare providers and billing professionals can reduce claim errors and improve revenue cycle performance.