Endocrinology billing looks deceptively straightforward until you look at what it actually involves. (Endocrinology Medical Billing Company)

Diabetes management alone spans more than 70 distinct ICD-10 codes depending on type, complication, and severity. Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and insulin pump billing require device-specific HCPCS codes, payer-specific coverage criteria, and ongoing supply billing that most practices either miss entirely or submit incorrectly. Thyroid procedures, adrenal workups, bone density studies, and hormone management visits all carry their own coding requirements, prior authorization rules, and documentation standards.

Add in the chronic care complexity of a patient panel that frequently includes diabetes, thyroid disease, obesity, and adrenal disorders simultaneously and you have a billing environment where E/M undercoding, missed device management revenue, and ICD-10 specificity errors compound into significant monthly revenue gaps.

At Malakos Healthcare Solutions, we provide specialized endocrinology billing services built around the full scope of what endocrinology practices deliver from highly specific diabetes coding and CGM billing to thyroid procedure codes, hormone panel interpretation, and chronic care management. Accurate coding, proactive authorization management, and full revenue cycle visibility so your practice gets paid correctly for the complexity of care it provides.


Why Endocrinology Billing Requires Specialty Expertise

Diabetes Coding Is the Most Specificity-Dependent Coding in Outpatient Medicine

Diabetes ICD-10 coding is not a single code it is a structured system of primary and secondary codes that must reflect type, complications, severity, and associated conditions with precision. Using E11.9 (Type 2 diabetes, unspecified) for a patient with documented diabetic peripheral neuropathy is undercoding. Billing E11.65 without the corresponding secondary code for hyperglycemia is incomplete. Failing to capture the complication-specific code means the documentation doesn’t support the complexity of care and the E/M level that complexity justifies.

Getting diabetes coding right is the foundation of endocrinology revenue cycle management. It directly affects E/M level justification, medical necessity determination for associated tests and procedures, and chronic care management billing eligibility.

CGM and Insulin Pump Billing Is a Separate Revenue Stream Most Practices Don’t Capture Correctly

Continuous glucose monitoring and insulin pump therapy generate ongoing billable services initial device coding, ongoing supply billing, and professional interpretation of CGM data that are distinct from the office visit coding. Most endocrinology practices either don’t bill these services at all, bill them under incorrect codes, or fail to meet payer-specific coverage criteria documentation requirements.

For a practice managing 100+ active CGM or insulin pump patients, this represents a material and recurring monthly revenue gap.

E/M Visits Are Systematically Undercoded for Chronic Endocrine Disease Complexity

Endocrinology visits frequently involve: managing multiple chronic conditions simultaneously (diabetes + thyroid disease + obesity + metabolic syndrome), reviewing and interpreting lab panels, adjusting complex medication regimens with monitoring requirements, reviewing CGM or insulin pump download data, and coordinating care with primary care and specialists. Under 2021 AMA E/M guidelines, this level of complexity routinely supports 99214 or 99215 but most endocrinology practices default to 99213 for established patients regardless of visit content.

Prior Authorization Is Required for High-Value Endocrinology Services

CGM devices, insulin pumps, advanced hormone testing panels, DEXA scans, thyroid ultrasounds, and specialty medications (GLP-1 agonists, injectable osteoporosis agents) all commonly require prior authorization. Authorization gaps result in expensive services rendered without coverage and unlike a routine office visit, a denied DEXA or a denied CGM device represents significant revenue at risk.


Endocrinology CPT Codes Complete Reference by Service Category


Evaluation and Management Endocrinology Office Visits

E/M visits are the highest-volume billing category in most endocrinology practices. Under 2021 AMA guidelines, level is selected based on medical decision-making complexity or total time not exam components.

CPT CodePatient TypeMDM ComplexityTypical TimeEndocrinology Clinical Context
99202New patientStraightforward15-29 minRarely appropriate in endocrinology most new patients present with chronic or complex conditions
99203New patientLow30-44 minNew patient with single stable endocrine condition; prescription required
99204New patientModerate45-59 minNew patient with diabetes or thyroid disease requiring management; new problem with diagnostic workup
99205New patientHigh60-74 minNew patient with multiple endocrine conditions; complex medication initiation; severe presentation
99212Established patientStraightforward10-19 minStable single condition; routine prescription refill; no changes
99213Established patientLow20-29 minSingle stable chronic condition with minor adjustment
99214Established patientModerate30-39 minOne or more chronic conditions with exacerbation; prescription drug management; review of diagnostic tests; CGM data interpretation
99215Established patientHigh40-54 minSevere or poorly controlled endocrine disease; multiple complex conditions; high-risk medication management

Critical E/M guidance for endocrinology:

  • Managing diabetes with complications (neuropathy, nephropathy, retinopathy) is not straightforward MDM it is moderate to high complexity. A visit where the provider reviews CGM data, adjusts insulin dosing, documents active complications, and orders follow-up labs routinely supports 99214.
  • Reviewing and interpreting a diagnostic test result HbA1c trend, thyroid function panel, adrenal hormone levels as an independent data point contributes to MDM data complexity, supporting higher E/M levels.
  • Managing two or more chronic conditions (diabetes + hypothyroidism + obesity) simultaneously meets the threshold for moderate complexity MDM (99214) under current AMA guidelines.
  • Prescription drug management with monitoring requirements insulin titration, thyroid hormone dosing, steroid tapering contributes to MDM risk and supports 99214 or 99215.

Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) Billing

CGM billing is one of the most consistently underbilled and incorrectly billed service categories in endocrinology. It involves three distinct billing components: the device itself, ongoing supplies, and professional data interpretation.

CGM Professional Services (Physician/NP Interpretation)

CPT CodeDescriptionNotes
95250Ambulatory continuous glucose monitoring of interstitial tissue fluid physician-provided equipment, sensor placement, hook-up, calibration of monitor, patient training, removal of sensor, and printout of recordingUsed when practice provides the CGM equipment and supervises the setup
95251Ambulatory CGM of interstitial tissue fluid interpretation and reportPhysician/NP professional interpretation of CGM data download; separately billable per interpretation session

Payer notes on CGM professional services:

  • Medicare covers CGM devices for patients with diabetes who require frequent insulin adjustments specific coverage criteria apply
  • 95251 can be billed for each CGM data download review session separate from the office visit if a distinct interpretation report is generated
  • When CGM data is reviewed and interpreted during an office visit as part of the E/M service, 95251 may or may not be separately billable depending on payer verify before billing both

CGM Devices and Supplies (HCPCS – Durable Medical Equipment)

HCPCS CodeDescriptionCoverage Notes
A9276CGM sensor eachPer-sensor billing for CGM supply refills
A9277CGM transmitterTransmitter replacement billing
A9278CGM receiverReceiver/reader device billing
K0553Supply allowance for therapeutic CGM device Type 1Medicare-specific; therapeutic CGM (real-time, used for treatment decisions)
K0554Receiver for therapeutic CGM deviceMedicare-specific

Medicare CGM coverage criteria (as of current guidance):

  • Patient has diabetes mellitus
  • Patient is insulin-treated (basal insulin, multiple daily injections, or insulin pump)
  • Treating physician/NP has a face-to-face visit with the patient within 6 months prior to ordering
  • CGM is prescribed as part of the diabetes management plan
  • Device must be considered a therapeutic CGM (not adjunctive) under current Medicare coverage determinations

Insulin Pump (CSII) Billing

Insulin pump therapy generates initial device billing, ongoing supply billing, and professional management codes a complete recurring revenue stream that most billing teams don’t manage systematically.

Insulin Pump Devices and Supplies (HCPCS)

HCPCS CodeDescriptionNotes
E0784External ambulatory infusion pump, insulinInsulin pump device; requires prior auth from virtually all payers
A9274External ambulatory infusion pump, insulin, per 3-month supplySupply billing for insulin pump consumables
A4224Supplies for maintenance of insulin infusion catheterInfusion sets and reservoirs
A4225Supplies for external insulin infusion pump, syringe type
A4226Supplies for external insulin infusion pump, non-needle cannula type
A4230Infusion set for external insulin pump, non-needle cannula typePer infusion set
A4231Infusion set for external insulin pump, needle type
A4232Syringe with needle for insulin pump

Insulin Pump Professional Management

CPT CodeDescriptionNotes
95249Ambulatory CGM of interstitial tissue fluid patient-provided equipment, physician analysis; includes interpretation and reportFor practices interpreting data from patient-owned CGM/pump systems
99213–99215E/M for insulin pump management visitPump downloads, basal rate adjustments, carb ratio review document MDM complexity for level selection

Prior authorization for insulin pumps: Most commercial payers require documentation of: Type 1 diabetes or insulin-dependent Type 2, history of frequent hypoglycemia or hypoglycemia unawareness, current multiple daily injection regimen with HbA1c documentation, and provider attestation. Authorization is required for the pump and separately for ongoing supplies at most payers.


Thyroid Services

Thyroid disorders are the second most common condition in endocrinology after diabetes. Billing for thyroid-related services spans E/M visits, imaging, and procedures.

CPT CodeDescriptionNotes
76536Ultrasound, soft tissue of head and neck real time with image documentationThyroid ultrasound; requires separate interpretation report in chart
76942Ultrasonic guidance for needle placement with imaging supervision and interpretationUsed when ultrasound guidance is applied during thyroid biopsy; permanent image record required
60100Biopsy, thyroidCore needle biopsy of thyroid
10005Fine needle aspiration biopsy first lesion, ultrasound guidanceFNA thyroid with ultrasound guidance most common thyroid biopsy approach
10006FNA biopsy each additional lesion, ultrasound guidanceAdd-on for additional nodule
88172Cytopathology evaluation immediate cytohistologic studyRapid on-site evaluation (ROSE) during thyroid FNA
88173Cytopathology interpretation FNA smearsInterpretation of thyroid FNA specimens
78012Thyroid uptake, single or multiple quantitative measurementNuclear medicine thyroid uptake
78013Thyroid imaging with uptake single determination
78014Thyroid imaging with uptake multiple determinations
78015Thyroid carcinoma metastases imaging limited areaPost-thyroidectomy surveillance scan
78016Thyroid carcinoma metastases imaging multiple areas
78018Thyroid carcinoma metastases imaging whole body
78070Parathyroid imaging planar
78071Parathyroid imaging with subtraction

Payer notes on thyroid imaging:

  • Thyroid ultrasound (76536) frequently requires prior authorization when ordered for nodule surveillance verify payer-specific criteria
  • FNA with ultrasound guidance requires documentation of the specific nodule characteristics (size, composition, ACR TI-RADS category) to support medical necessity
  • Thyroid cancer surveillance scans (78015-78018) require prior auth and documentation of thyroidectomy history and TSH suppression status

Bone Density and Osteoporosis

DEXA scanning is a high-value service in endocrinology that requires specific CPT code selection based on anatomy scanned and payer-specific frequency limitations.

CPT CodeDescriptionNotes
77080DXA bone density – axial skeleton (hip, pelvis, spine)Most commonly performed DEXA; requires prior auth from many payers
77081DXA bone density – appendicular skeleton (radius, wrist, heel)Peripheral DEXA; covered differently than axial
77085DXA bone density – axial and vertebral fracture assessmentCombined DEXA with VFA; increasingly required for osteoporosis risk stratification
77086Vertebral fracture assessment (VFA) via dual-energy X-ray absorptiometryVFA as standalone when axial DEXA already performed

Medicare DEXA coverage rules:

  • Medicare covers axial DEXA every 24 months for qualifying patients (estrogen-deficient women at clinical risk, vertebral abnormality, long-term glucocorticoid therapy, primary hyperparathyroidism, on osteoporosis therapy monitoring)
  • Billing DEXA more frequently than every 24 months without documented clinical exception is a Medicare compliance risk
  • Document the qualifying indication on every DEXA order and claim

Adrenal and Pituitary Procedures

CPT CodeDescriptionNotes
74178CT abdomen and pelvis with contrastAdrenal mass characterization; requires radiology
70553MRI brain with and without contrastPituitary adenoma evaluation
70551MRI brain without contrast
93000ECG with interpretationFrequently performed in endocrinology for metabolic syndrome/cardiovascular risk assessment
36415Routine venipuncture
80048Basic metabolic panel
80053Comprehensive metabolic panel
82607Vitamin B12
82306Vitamin D, 25-hydroxyvitamin DFrequently ordered; document clinical indication
84443TSHMost common endocrine lab test
84436Thyroxine (T4), total
84439Thyroxine (T4), free
84480T3, total
84481T3, free
84432ThyroglobulinThyroid cancer surveillance
86800Thyroid antibodies, TPO
82533Cortisol, total
82530Cortisol, free
82670Estradiol
83519Immunoassay for analyte other than antibody quantitativeUsed for many endocrine hormone panels
83001Gonadotropin, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH)
83002Gonadotropin, luteinizing hormone (LH)
84146Prolactin
83036Hemoglobin A1cMost commonly ordered endocrinology lab
82947Glucose, quantitative
82950Glucose, post-glucose dose
82951Glucose tolerance test 3 specimens
83525Insulin, total
83527Insulin, free
84403Testosterone, total
84402Testosterone, free
82088Aldosterone
82383Catecholamines plasmaPheochromocytoma workup
82384Catecholamines fractionated
83835Metanephrines
84585Urine vanillylmandelic acid (VMA)

Chronic Care Management (CCM) in Endocrinology

Endocrinology practices particularly those with large diabetes and thyroid disease patient panels — have significant monthly CCM billing opportunity that most are not capturing.

CPT CodeDescriptionTimeRequirement
99490CCM clinical staff, first 20 min/month20 minTwo or more chronic conditions; written consent; care plan
99439CCM clinical staff, each additional 20 min+20 minAdd-on
99491CCM physician/NP personal time, first 30 min/month30 minWhen provider personally performs CCM
99437CCM each additional 30 min+30 minAdd-on
99487Complex CCM first 60 min/month60 minModerate or high complexity MDM; multiple complex conditions
99489Complex CCM each additional 30 min+30 minAdd-on

Endocrinology CCM opportunity: A patient with Type 2 diabetes + hypothyroidism + obesity three chronic conditions qualifies for CCM. A patient with Type 1 diabetes on insulin pump therapy who requires monthly care coordination qualifies for complex CCM (99487). Most endocrinology practices with Medicare panels are leaving hundreds of qualifying CCM billing opportunities uncaptured every month.


Diabetes Prevention and Self-Management Education

CPT/HCPCS CodeDescriptionNotes
G0108Diabetes self-management training individualMedicare-covered DSMT; requires physician referral and ADA-recognized program
G0109Diabetes self-management training group2+ patients simultaneously
97802Medical nutrition therapy initial individual, 15 minMNT for diabetes; covered by Medicare with physician referral
97803MNT reassessment, individual, 15 minFollow-up MNT sessions
99401–99404Preventive counseling individual, 15–60 minObesity and lifestyle counseling
G0447Behavioral counseling for obesity face-to-face, 15 minMedicare-covered; BMI ≥30 required

DSMT billing rules:

  • Medicare covers up to 10 hours of DSMT in the first year and 2 hours annually thereafter
  • Must be provided by an ADA-recognized or AADE-accredited program
  • Requires a physician referral with the diabetes diagnosis documented
  • DSMT and MNT can both be billed in the same benefit year they are not mutually exclusive

ICD-10 Codes for Endocrinology — Complete Reference

ICD-10 coding specificity is the single most important documentation-to-billing alignment issue in endocrinology. The diabetes ICD-10 system is a structured coding framework not a list of interchangeable codes. Choosing the wrong level of specificity directly affects medical necessity determinations, E/M level justification, and authorization outcomes.

Diabetes Mellitus – Type 1

ICD-10Description
E10.9Type 1 diabetes mellitus without complications
E10.10Type 1 diabetes with ketoacidosis, without coma
E10.11Type 1 diabetes with ketoacidosis, with coma
E10.21Type 1 diabetes with diabetic nephropathy
E10.22Type 1 diabetes with diabetic chronic kidney disease, stage 1–2
E10.29Type 1 diabetes with other diabetic kidney complication
E10.311Type 1 diabetes with unspecified diabetic retinopathy, with macular edema
E10.319Type 1 diabetes with unspecified diabetic retinopathy, without macular edema
E10.40Type 1 diabetes with diabetic neuropathy, unspecified
E10.41Type 1 diabetes with diabetic mononeuropathy
E10.43Type 1 diabetes with diabetic autonomic neuropathy
E10.49Type 1 diabetes with other diabetic neurological complication
E10.51Type 1 diabetes with diabetic peripheral angiopathy without gangrene
E10.52Type 1 diabetes with diabetic peripheral angiopathy with gangrene
E10.610Type 1 diabetes with diabetic neuropathic arthropathy
E10.618Type 1 diabetes with other diabetic arthropathy
E10.65Type 1 diabetes with hyperglycemia
E10.649Type 1 diabetes with hypoglycemia without coma
E10.641Type 1 diabetes with hypoglycemia with coma

Diabetes Mellitus – Type 2

ICD-10Description
E11.9Type 2 diabetes mellitus without complications
E11.00Type 2 diabetes with hyperosmolarity, without nonketotic hyperglycemic-hyperosmolar coma
E11.10Type 2 diabetes with ketoacidosis, without coma
E11.21Type 2 diabetes with diabetic nephropathy
E11.22Type 2 diabetes with diabetic chronic kidney disease, stage 1–2
E11.311Type 2 diabetes with unspecified diabetic retinopathy, with macular edema
E11.319Type 2 diabetes with unspecified diabetic retinopathy, without macular edema
E11.40Type 2 diabetes with diabetic neuropathy, unspecified
E11.43Type 2 diabetes with diabetic autonomic (poly)neuropathy
E11.49Type 2 diabetes with other diabetic neurological complication
E11.51Type 2 diabetes with diabetic peripheral angiopathy without gangrene
E11.610Type 2 diabetes with diabetic neuropathic arthropathy
E11.65Type 2 diabetes with hyperglycemia
E11.649Type 2 diabetes with hypoglycemia without coma
Z79.4Long-term current use of insulin

Critical coding rule – Z79.4: When a Type 2 diabetes patient uses insulin (not just oral agents), Z79.4 must be added as a secondary code on every claim. Failing to include Z79.4 when a Type 2 patient is on insulin is one of the most common ICD-10 errors in endocrinology and affects CGM and insulin pump coverage determinations.

Other Diabetes Types

ICD-10Description
E08.xDiabetes mellitus due to underlying condition
E09.xDrug or chemical induced diabetes mellitus
E13.xOther specified diabetes mellitus
O24.410Gestational diabetes in pregnancy, diet controlled
O24.414Gestational diabetes in pregnancy, insulin controlled
O24.419Gestational diabetes in pregnancy, unspecified control

Thyroid Disorders

ICD-10Description
E03.9Hypothyroidism, unspecified
E03.0Congenital hypothyroidism with diffuse goiter
E05.00Thyrotoxicosis with diffuse goiter, without thyrotoxic crisis
E05.01Thyrotoxicosis with diffuse goiter, with thyrotoxic crisis
E05.10Thyrotoxicosis with toxic single thyroid nodule, without crisis
E05.20Thyrotoxicosis with toxic multinodular goiter, without crisis
E06.3Autoimmune thyroiditis (Hashimoto’s)
E04.1Nontoxic single thyroid nodule
E04.2Nontoxic multinodular goiter
C73Malignant neoplasm of thyroid gland
Z85.850Personal history of malignant neoplasm of thyroid
Z79.899Other long-term medication use (levothyroxine — use when applicable)

Adrenal, Pituitary, and Other Endocrine Disorders

ICD-10Description
E27.1Primary adrenocortical insufficiency (Addison’s disease)
E27.40Corticoadrenal insufficiency, unspecified
E24.0Pituitary-dependent Cushing’s disease
E24.2Pseudo-Cushing’s syndrome, alcohol-induced
E22.0Acromegaly and pituitary gigantism
E22.1Hyperprolactinemia
E23.0Hypopituitarism
E34.0Carcinoid syndrome
D35.00Benign neoplasm of adrenal gland, unspecified
E20.0Idiopathic hypoparathyroidism
E21.0Primary hyperparathyroidism
E21.3Hyperparathyroidism, unspecified
E28.2Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS)
E29.1Testicular hypofunction
E31.0Autoimmune polyglandular failure

Obesity and Metabolic Disorders

ICD-10Description
E66.01Morbid (severe) obesity due to excess calories
E66.09Other obesity
E66.1Drug-induced obesity
E78.00Pure hypercholesterolemia, unspecified
E78.5Hyperlipidemia, unspecified
E83.51Hypocalcemia
E83.52Hypercalcemia
E87.1Hypo-osmolality and hyponatremia
E87.5Hyperkalemia
Z68.xBody mass index

Osteoporosis and Bone Disorders

ICD-10Description
M81.0Age-related osteoporosis without current pathological fracture
M80.00Age-related osteoporosis with current pathological fracture, unspecified site
M85.80Other specified disorders of bone density, unspecified site
Z87.310Personal history of osteoporosis

Modifier Reference for Endocrinology Billing

ModifierWhen to UsePitfall if Missing
25Significant, separately identifiable E/M on same day as a procedure (e.g., thyroid ultrasound, DEXA, CGM setup)E/M bundled into procedure; paid at zero
59Distinct procedural service two services that would otherwise be bundled are genuinely separateSecondary service denied or zero-paid
TCTechnical component only facility performing imaging without professional interpretationIncorrect when billing globally (professional + technical)
26Professional component only physician interpretation of imaging performed elsewhereRequired when endocrinologist interprets study performed at another facility
GYService statutorily excluded from MedicareFor non-covered CGM services under Medicare when ABN not obtained
GAABN on file waiver of liability signedRequired when Medicare patient signs ABN for potentially denied service
33Preventive service ACA first-dollar coverageFor ACA-covered preventive services with no patient cost-sharing
95Synchronous telemedicine audio/videoRequired for telehealth endocrinology visits; commercial payers
GTVia interactive audio/videoSome Medicaid plans; verify by state

Common Reasons Endocrinology Claims Get Denied And How We Fix Each One

1. Non-specific diabetes ICD-10 coding E11.9 used universally Using E11.9 for every Type 2 diabetes patient regardless of documented complications results in lower E/M level justification, inadequate medical necessity documentation for associated services, and missed specificity that payers use to evaluate claim validity.

Our fix: We review diabetes documentation against the full ICD-10 complication code set and apply the most specific code supported by the clinical note. Complication-specific codes (neuropathy, nephropathy, retinopathy, peripheral angiopathy) are captured consistently. Z79.4 is applied to all insulin-using Type 2 patients.

2. Missing Z79.4 on insulin-using Type 2 diabetes patients Type 2 diabetes patients on insulin require Z79.4 as a secondary code. Without it, CGM coverage criteria may not be met and insulin pump authorization may be denied.

Our fix: We cross-reference insulin use documentation with ICD-10 code selection on every diabetes claim. Z79.4 is applied systematically when insulin use is documented.

3. CGM and insulin pump supply billing not captured Ongoing CGM sensor, transmitter, and insulin pump supply billing is either entirely absent or submitted under incorrect HCPCS codes.

Our fix: We build a recurring supply billing workflow for active CGM and insulin pump patients, apply the correct HCPCS codes (A9276, A9277, A9278, K0553, A4224–A4232), and manage the prior authorization cycle for device and supply renewals.

4. E/M visits defaulting to 99213 for complex chronic disease visits Patients with diabetes complications, concurrent thyroid disease, and insulin pump management qualify for 99214 or 99215 but are routinely billed at 99213.

Our fix: We review E/M documentation against 2021 AMA MDM criteria and apply the code level the visit supports. Monthly E/M distribution analysis in reporting makes undercoding patterns visible and actionable.

5. DEXA denied for missing authorization or frequency violation DEXA claims are denied when prior authorization wasn’t obtained or the 24-month Medicare frequency rule is not tracked.

Our fix: We obtain authorization for all DEXA orders, track scan frequency per patient, and flag upcoming eligibility windows to prevent frequency denials.

6. Modifier 25 missing when procedure and E/M billed same day When a thyroid ultrasound, DEXA, or CGM setup is billed on the same date as an office visit, the E/M reimburses at zero without Modifier 25.

Our fix: Same-day service combinations are reviewed on every claim before submission. Modifier 25 is applied consistently whenever a separately identifiable E/M is documented on the same date as a procedure.

7. CGM professional interpretation (95251) not billed Endocrinologists regularly review and interpret CGM download data a separately billable professional service without submitting a claim for it.

Our fix: We identify CGM data interpretation sessions in the clinical workflow and bill 95251 with a supporting interpretation report when the documentation supports a separate service.

8. Thyroid FNA guidance code missing or incorrect Thyroid FNA with ultrasound guidance requires a specific CPT code (10005/10006) and documentation of permanent image recording. Billing 60100 (core needle biopsy) for an FNA, or missing the guidance code, results in underpayment.

Our fix: Thyroid biopsy claims are reviewed for procedure type, guidance use, and permanent image documentation before submission.


Our Endocrinology Billing Services Full Scope

Malakos Healthcare Solutions provides end-to-end revenue cycle management for endocrinology practices, diabetes care centers, and metabolic medicine clinics across the United States.

Eligibility & Benefit Verification We verify active coverage, deductibles, co-pays, authorization requirements, and device-specific benefit criteria including CGM and insulin pump coverage before every appointment and before every device order.

Prior Authorization Management We manage the full authorization lifecycle for CGM devices, insulin pumps, DEXA scans, thyroid imaging, specialty medications (GLP-1 agonists, SGLT-2 inhibitors, injectable osteoporosis agents), and high-value diagnostic panels. Authorization tracking is proactive with renewals initiated before current auths expire.

Endocrinology Specialty Coding Our coders apply the complete diabetes ICD-10 complication coding framework, CGM and insulin pump HCPCS codes, thyroid and adrenal procedure codes, and 2021 AMA E/M guidelines with endocrinology-specific MDM guidance on every claim, before submission.

CGM and Insulin Pump Billing Management We build and manage the recurring billing workflow for CGM and insulin pump patients device setup, ongoing supply billing, authorization renewals, and professional interpretation coding as a structured monthly revenue stream.

Claim Submission & Scrubbing Every charge is scrubbed against endocrinology-specific billing rules ICD-10 specificity, modifier completeness, same-day service conflicts, device HCPCS accuracy before electronic submission.

Denial Management We categorize every denial by root cause, appeal with supporting documentation, and fix upstream causes. Diabetes coding errors, CGM authorization gaps, and DEXA frequency denials each have distinct resolution workflows.

Accounts Receivable Follow-Up Structured 15/30/60-day AR cycle with direct payer outreach. No claim ages past 60 days without documented escalation.

Payment Posting & Underpayment Recovery Every EOB and ERA is reconciled against contracted rates. Device-related underpayments and CGM supply reimbursement variances are tracked and appealed.

Monthly Reporting & Practice Analytics Detailed monthly reports covering collections by service category, E/M level distribution, CGM/insulin pump billing performance, denial rates by CPT and payer, AR aging, and CCM billing capture. Full financial visibility across your endocrinology practice.


Why Endocrinology Practices Choose Malakos Healthcare Solutions

Diabetes coding depth. We apply the full ICD-10 diabetes complication framework not just E11.9 and capture Z79.4 systematically for insulin-using Type 2 patients. This single improvement increases E/M level justification accuracy and device coverage outcomes across your entire diabetes panel.

CGM and insulin pump billing infrastructure. We manage CGM and pump billing as a structured recurring revenue stream device codes, supply HCPCS, authorization renewal cycles, and professional interpretation billing not as an afterthought.

DEXA and imaging authorization management. High-value imaging services in endocrinology are lost most often to authorization gaps and frequency violations. We prevent both proactively.

E/M accuracy for chronic disease complexity. We apply 2021 AMA guidelines correctly to endocrinology visit complexity and provide E/M distribution analysis that makes undercoding patterns visible and correctable.

HIPAA-compliant operations. All data handling follows strict HIPAA protocols. A Business Associate Agreement (BAA) is included with every engagement.

Dedicated account manager. One contact who knows your payer mix, your patient population, and your billing history. No support queues.

No long-term contracts. We earn your business through results month to month from day one.


Frequently Asked Questions – Endocrinology Billing

Why is diabetes ICD-10 coding so important in endocrinology billing? Diabetes ICD-10 coding in endocrinology is not a single-code decision it requires selecting the primary diabetes type code plus any complication-specific codes (nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, peripheral angiopathy) that are documented in the clinical record. Using E11.9 (unspecified) when complications are documented fails to capture the true complexity of the patient’s condition. This affects E/M level justification, medical necessity determinations for associated tests and devices, and in some cases payer authorization criteria for CGM and insulin pump therapy.

What is Z79.4 and when must it be used? Z79.4 (Long-term current use of insulin) is a required secondary ICD-10 code for any Type 2 diabetes patient who uses insulin. It is not required for Type 1 patients (insulin use is inherent in the Type 1 diagnosis). Failing to include Z79.4 when a Type 2 patient is insulin-treated is one of the most common ICD-10 errors in endocrinology. It can affect CGM coverage determinations and insulin pump authorization outcomes under Medicare and commercial plans.

Can endocrinologists bill for CGM data interpretation separately from the office visit? Yes. CPT 95251 covers ambulatory CGM interpretation and report as a distinct professional service. When a provider reviews CGM data outside of an office visit and documents a formal interpretation report, 95251 is separately billable. When CGM data review is incorporated into an office visit as part of the E/M service, the billing approach depends on payer-specific rules we verify and apply the correct approach by payer.

What makes DEXA scanning a compliance risk in endocrinology billing? Medicare covers axial DEXA every 24 months for qualifying patients. Billing DEXA more frequently than the coverage interval without documented medical exception is a Medicare compliance violation. Additionally, DEXA requires prior authorization from most commercial payers. We track DEXA frequency per patient and obtain authorization before every scan to prevent both compliance exposure and claim denials.

How does CCM billing apply to endocrinology practices? Chronic Care Management codes (99490 series) are billable for Medicare patients with two or more chronic conditions a description that applies to the majority of endocrinology patients (diabetes + hypothyroidism, diabetes + obesity, etc.). CCM requires written patient consent, a documented care plan, 24/7 access, and monthly time tracking. Most endocrinology practices have large qualifying CCM panels but no billing infrastructure to capture it. We build and manage that workflow as part of our standard service.

How quickly can we get started? Most endocrinology practices are fully onboarded within 7-14 business days. We begin with a free billing audit identifying CGM billing gaps, diabetes coding specificity issues, E/M undercoding patterns, and DEXA authorization workflows followed by a kickoff call to review your payer mix, EHR platform, and practice structure. Transition runs in parallel with no disruption to billing or cash flow.


Ready to Capture the Full Revenue Your Endocrinology Practice Earns?

If your practice is dealing with non-specific diabetes coding, uncaptured CGM billing, DEXA authorization denials, or E/M undercoding on complex chronic disease visits we can fix all of it.

A free billing audit will show you exactly where your practice is losing revenue and what the recovery opportunity looks like.

Schedule Your Free Billing Audit

📞 +1 (307) 441-3431 ✉️ support@malakoshcs.com


Malakos Healthcare Solutions | Endocrinology Billing Services USA | Serving endocrinology practices, diabetes care centers, and metabolic medicine clinics nationwide