HIAcode Blog

Cerebral Infarction When Patient Has Carotid Stenosis

Written by Cari Greenwood, RHIA, CCS, CPC, CICA | Sep 25, 2018 4:00:00 AM
Coders often struggle with deciding when to assign a combination code for cerebral infarction due to carotid stenosis (i.e.I63.231) and when to assign separate codes for the specific cerebral infarction and the carotid stenosis. (i.e. I66.01 and I65.21). The key to correct coding is a careful search of the index, review of the Tabular List and the related official coding advice in Coding Clinic.

The Alphabetic Index

Confusion can arise when a patient has both carotid stenosis and a cerebral infarction based on the use of different sub-terms in the index depending on the main term the search begins with.

If the coder searches the terms, Stenosis, artery, and precerebral NEC (there is no specific subterm entry for carotid, but the carotid artery is a precerebral artery), the index directs the coder to “see Occlusion, artery, precerebral”.

A search of the index under the terms, Occlusion, artery, precerebral provides two relevant subterms “with infarction” and “carotid”. Since carotid stenosis was the original diagnosis being searched for, choosing the subterm “carotid” lends itself to finding the most specific code. At this subterm the index directs, “see Occlusion, artery, carotid”.

Once the terms Occlusion, artery and carotid are found, the index has further subterms “with” and “infarction” that direct the coder to assign a code from subcategory I63.23-. Application of the ICD-10-CM “With” convention seems to indicate a cause and effect relationship between carotid stenosis and cerebral infarction.

However, beginning a search of the index under the terms Infarct, infarction, cerebral provides a further subterm of “due to”, rather than “with”, and then occlusion NEC, precerebral arteries or due to, stenosis NEC, precerebral arteries. Both of these searches also directs the assignment of a code from subcategory I63.2-.

However, AHA Coding Clinic Second Quarter 2023, Page 17 has stated, “…the term "With" is not interchangeable with "due to" and the connotation is not the same. A diagnosis of "Anemia due to chemotherapy" indicates that the anemia is caused by, a result of, or a consequence of chemotherapy; however, the classification does not presume the relationship. The provider must document a causal relationship in order to link the two conditions.” These different searches of the index seem to contradict each other with one search indicating a cause and effect relationship can be presumed between carotid stenosis and cerebral infarction based on the use of the “With” convention and one search indicating the physician must link the conditions based on the use of “due to” in the index.

 

The Tabular List

As a matter of correct coding, any code directed for use by the index should be confirmed in the Tabular List and if the code in the Tabular does not appropriately describe the diagnosis being reported the coder should return to the index for additional review. Confirmation in the Tabular includes reviewing all instructional notes associated with the code, category or chapter the code comes from. In the case of carotid stenosis and cerebral infarction, regardless of the terms searched, the index directs the coder to assign a code from category I63 Cerebral Infarction, which includes the following specification,

It’s important to note that this “Includes” note specifies that codes from this category are intended to report occlusion and/or stenosis of cerebral and precerebral arteries that result in cerebral infarction. Based on best coding practices, and this instructional note, if the patient has an infarction and also happens to have occlusion and/or stenosis of the cerebral or precerebral arteries, but these are not the cause of cerebral infarction, it would not be appropriate to assign a code from category I63.

 

What should the coder do?

The advice in Coding Clinic Third Quarter 2018, page 5, proposes a comparable scenario. In this case the patient has had an MI and has chronic total occlusion of a coronary artery other than the artery associated with the MI. ICD-10-CM has an Excludes1 note at I25.82, Chronic total occlusion of coronary artery, which excludes "acute coronary occlusion with myocardial infarction (I21.-, I22.-)." In this case separate codes for both the MI and the chronic total occlusion are assigned because the MI was caused by occlusion in a different artery.

Similarly, in a case of cerebral infarction with carotid stenosis, the coder should look at radiology imaging reports, progress notes and/or other pertinent documentation to find the location and cause of the cerebral infarction. If the infarction is due to the carotid stenosis, and it is documented as such, then the combination code from category I63 would be assigned. However, cerebral infarctions can be due to other causes, such as a thrombus or embolus, that are not related to carotid stenosis. Many patients have minimal carotid stenosis but have cerebral infarctions due to other causes. If the documentation indicates that the cerebral infarction is not associated with carotid stenosis because it is due to another cause, the combination code would NOT be assigned. Instead, the cerebral infarction would be coded according to the cause of the infarction with an additional code assigned for carotid stenosis if it is clinically significant. For example, if the patient has minimal stenosis of the right carotid artery and the patient has a thrombotic infarction of the right posterior cerebral artery, a code for carotid stenosis may not be necessary.

When a connection between the infarction and carotid stenosis is unclear, best practice would be to query the physician to determine if there is a link between the two conditions. If the facility does not allow query in these cases, assign separate codes for the carotid stenosis and cerebral infarction because the phrase “due to” in the code description (i.e. Cerebral infarction due to unspecified occlusion or stenosis of unspecified precerebral arteries) requires a documented cause and effect relationship in order to assign the combination code.

References
Coding Clinic, Second Quarter 2023, Page 17

Coding Clinic, Third Quarter 2018, Page 5

Coding Clinic, Third Quarter 2014: Page 5

ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting

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The information contained in this post is valid at the time of posting. Viewers are encouraged to research subsequent official guidance in the areas associated with the topic as they can change rapidly.