There are approximately 6.3 million fractures reported each year in the United States and most are due to trauma, but fractures can result from other causes. A spontaneous fracture of a diseased bone is called a pathological fracture. Repetitive stress in weight bearing bones, such as those in the lower leg and foot can cause stress fractures.
Periprosthetic fractures are fractures that occur near or around a prosthetic joint. They are not complications of the prosthesis but are caused by either trauma or disease (pathological). These fractures are not coded as a complication of a device since they do not actually involve the implant. ICD-10-CM has specific codes for periprosthetic fractures.
In ICD-10-CM, periprosthetic fractures are reported with codes from category M97 Periprosthetic fracture around internal prosthetic joint. There is an instructional note under M97 that states "Code first, if known, the specific type and cause of fracture, such as traumatic or pathological."
At the direction of the “Code first” note a minimum of two codes are required when reporting periprosthetic fractures. One code is assigned from category M97 that identifies the fracture as periprosthetic and identifies the specific joint involved (ankle, knee, hip, shoulder, elbow, finger, spine, toe, wrist) including the laterality of the condition. A second code is assigned to report the specific type and cause of the fracture (traumatic vs. pathological). Based on the instructional note, the code for the type of fracture is sequenced first followed by the periprosthetic fracture code.
If the actual joint prosthesis is broken, that would be coded as a complication of internal joint prosthesis and sequenced as the principal/first listed diagnosis code.
References
The information contained in this coding advice 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.