(479) 552-5346
|
info@paramedbilling.com
|
Northgate Drive, Sherwood, AR 72120, USA
(479) 552-5346
ParaMed Billing Solutions - Navigation
Make Payment
Nephrology Billing Services | ParaMed Billing Solutions
Practice Intelligence

NephBill Performance Monitor

Live metrics across your nephrology billing cycle

Clean Claim Rate
98.2%
All nephrology claim types
ESRD Monthly Bundle Accuracy
100%
CPT 90951–90962 correct billing
Dialysis Denial Rate
<3.2%
Across HD, PD, HHD modalities
Avg Annual Revenue Lift
+31%
Per nephrologist FTE at go-live
CKD Stage Coding Accuracy
99.1%
N18.1–N18.6 specificity verified
Time-to-Submit
24 hrs
Dialysis round-sheet to claim
Home Specialties Nephrology Billing
Nephrology Specialty Billing — Active

Nephrology Billing
Is Built on a
Completely
Different Engine.

No other specialty in medicine has a billing structure as unique as nephrology. ESRD monthly capitation bundles, stage-based CKD E/M coding, four distinct dialysis modalities with separate CPT families, transitional care management codes, kidney transplant follow-up billing, and an increasingly complex prior authorization burden — it all operates under rules that generalist billing teams simply don't know. ParaMed's nephrology-certified billing team understands every dimension of the nephrology billing engine — and keeps every component running at peak performance.

98%
Clean Claim Rate
+31%
Revenue Lift
<3.2%
Denial Rate
300+
Nephrology CPT
codes managed
Live Claim Circuit

Real-time nephrology billing — from dialysis round-sheet capture to ESRD bundle submission and payment confirmation.

NephBill Claim Circuit
Live
98.2%
First-Pass Accept
100%
ESRD Bundle Accuracy
24hr
Round-to-Submit
Processing Claims
90960
ESRD Svc MHD ≥4 visits/mo
$266
Bundle
99213
CKD E/M — Est. Patient L3
$118
Clean
90945
Dialysis 1 Physician Eval
$78
Clean
99496
TCM High Complexity 7-Day
$234
PA Verify
J0881
Darbepoetin Alfa — ESRD
$412
Bundle
93307
Echo Renal w/ Doppler
$290
Clean
ESRD
In-Center HD
Peritoneal
Home HD
CKD
Transplant
CKD Stage 1
GFR ≥90
Standard E/M — N18.1
CKD Stage 2
GFR 60–89
CKD Management — N18.2
CKD Stage 3
GFR 30–59
Nephrology Consult Eligible
CKD Stage 4
GFR 15–29
ESRD Prep — Transplant Eval
CKD Stage 5
GFR <15
Pre-dialysis / KF — N18.5
ESRD
On Dialysis
Monthly Bundle — N18.6
The Two Nephrology Billing Universes

ESRD Monthly Bundle Billing vs. Non-ESRD Fee-for-Service — Two Completely Different Systems

Nephrology is unique in medicine because ESRD patients on dialysis are billed through Medicare's monthly capitation bundle system — a fundamentally different financial model from the fee-for-service billing used for all other nephrology services. ParaMed manages both universes with equal precision.

90951–90962
ESRD Monthly
CPT Range
Monthly Capitation Bundle

ESRD Dialysis — Monthly Bundle Billing

Medicare pays nephrologists a monthly capitated fee for managing ESRD patients — covering all dialysis-related services performed during that month, regardless of the number of visits. The specific monthly code depends on the patient's age, dialysis setting, and the number of face-to-face physician visits documented in the month.

Adult ESRD — Visit-Count Based Codes

90960 (≥4 visits/month), 90961 (2–3 visits), 90962 (1 visit). The number of face-to-face physician evaluations documented in the month determines the specific code — and the reimbursement.

90960 / 90961 / 90962
Pediatric ESRD — Age-Specific Bundle Codes

Separate ESRD monthly code families for pediatric patients: 90951–90953 (age <2), 90954–90956 (age 2–11), 90957–90959 (age 12–19). Age documentation must match the ESRD CPT family billed.

90951–90959
Home Dialysis Monthly Management — 90963–90966

Home dialysis patients (both PD and home HD) have their own monthly management code family. Documentation of monthly review method determines the code.

90963 / 90964 / 90965
What Is NOT Included in the Bundle — Separately Billable

The ESRD bundle covers dialysis-related E/M — but explicitly does NOT include: hospitalizations, unrelated office visits, transplant care, and many procedures. Knowing what escapes the bundle is critical to capturing full revenue.

Separate billing applies — see rules
EPO / Darbepoetin — Included in ESRD Composite Rate

Under the expanded ESRD bundle, ESA drugs are included in the facility composite rate — not separately billable by the nephrologist. Understanding what is and isn't separately billable prevents duplicate billing audit triggers.

Facility-billed — J0881/J0882/J0885
99201–99499
Fee-for-Service
CPT Range
Fee-for-Service Billing

Non-ESRD Nephrology — Fee-for-Service Billing

All nephrology services for CKD patients not yet on dialysis, consultations, hospital-based nephrology, transplant follow-up, and procedure-based services are billed fee-for-service — each service generating its own claim with its own code, modifier, and medical necessity documentation requirements.

CKD Management E/M — Stage-Specific ICD-10

Office visits for CKD management require ICD-10 codes that specify both the CKD stage (N18.1–N18.5) and, where applicable, the underlying cause. Unspecified CKD (N18.9) is a major audit red flag.

99213 / 99214 / 99215 + N18.x
Hospital Nephrology — Consult, Admit, Subsequent Visit

Initial hospital nephrology consultations (99252–99255), hospital admissions (99221–99223), and subsequent hospital visits (99231–99233) with AKI, electrolyte disorders, and acute glomerulonephritis billing.

99252–99255 / 99221–99223 / 99231–99233
Transitional Care Management — High-Value Post-Discharge

TCM codes (99495/99496) for patients discharged from hospital or SNF — highly reimbursed and frequently missed in nephrology. Kidney disease patients have high readmission rates, making TCM highly applicable.

99495 / 99496 — frequently missed
Kidney Transplant Follow-Up Billing

Post-transplant nephrology management — the nephrologist's separate medical management of rejection prophylaxis, immunosuppression monitoring, and unrelated conditions is separately billable with appropriate documentation.

99213–99215 + Z94.0 post-transplant
Kidney Biopsy — Diagnostic Procedure Billing

Percutaneous kidney biopsy (50200) — includes imaging guidance (US guidance 76942 separately billable). The pathology interpretation (88305) is separately billable when the nephrologist reads their own biopsy — a frequently missed revenue item.

50200 / 76942 / 88305 — triple billing
Revenue Loss Analysis

6 Nephrology Billing Failures Your Practice Is Experiencing Right Now

These are the systematic revenue failures found in virtually every nephrology practice operating with generalist billing. Each one is measurable, preventable, and compounding monthly. The total annual impact for a 3–5 nephrologist group typically exceeds $200,000 in recoverable revenue.

Revenue Leak 01

ESRD Monthly Bundle — Wrong Code From Incorrect Visit Count

The ESRD monthly bundle code is determined by the number of face-to-face physician evaluations documented in that calendar month. 90960 (≥4 visits) reimburses ~$266; 90961 (2–3 visits) ~$216; 90962 (1 visit) ~$166. For a nephrologist managing 100 ESRD patients, a single code-tier error on every patient is $5,000+ per month in lost revenue.

$5,000+/mo
Per nephrologist from ESRD tier miscoding
Revenue Leak 02

Non-ESRD Services Buried in ESRD Bundle — Revenue Swallowed

The ESRD monthly bundle covers dialysis-related management — but an enormous category of nephrology services for ESRD patients is explicitly NOT included and is separately billable. Acute conditions unrelated to ESRD, hospitalizations, procedures, and transplant evaluations are all separately billable. When billing teams treat the monthly bundle as covering everything for the patient in that month, all non-ESRD services are effectively written off.

$180–$400/pt
Monthly loss per ESRD patient with missed non-bundle services
Revenue Leak 03

Transitional Care Management — The Most Missed Code in Nephrology

TCM codes (99495/99496) are among the highest-reimbursed outpatient E/M codes — $175–$234 — and apply every time a nephrology patient is discharged from hospital, skilled nursing facility, or rehab. CKD and ESRD patients have among the highest re-hospitalization rates in medicine, meaning TCM opportunities are frequent. Without a systematic TCM tracking process, virtually all TCM revenue goes uncaptured.

$40K–$120K/yr
Annual TCM revenue missed per nephrology group without TCM tracking
Revenue Leak 04

CKD Stage ICD-10 Non-Specificity — Unspecified Codes = Denials

Medicare and commercial payers increasingly require specific CKD stage coding (N18.1 through N18.6) rather than the unspecified N18.9 code that many generalist billing teams default to. Additionally, the etiology of CKD must be coded when documented — diabetic nephropathy, hypertensive CKD, and glomerular disease each have specific combination codes that affect medical necessity determination and risk adjustment.

Audit risk
From unspecified N18.9 on nephrology claims — plus RAF score loss
Revenue Leak 05

Kidney Biopsy Triple Billing — Only One Code Captured

When a nephrologist performs a percutaneous kidney biopsy, three billing components exist: (1) biopsy procedure code 50200, (2) ultrasound guidance 76942, and (3) pathological interpretation code 88305 when the nephrologist personally reads the biopsy specimen. Most billing teams capture only 50200 — missing the imaging guidance and the pathology interpretation component.

$120–$280
Per biopsy from missed US guidance and pathology components
Revenue Leak 06

ESRD Patient Transitions — Missing Billing at Enrollment and Discharge

The month a patient begins dialysis (ESRD initiation) and the months around significant transitions — switching dialysis modality, transferring to a different facility, receiving a kidney transplant, or dying — all have specific billing rules that differ from standard monthly management. Without a tracking system for patient status transitions, these high-risk billing periods are frequently miscoded or simply missed.

Every transition
Creates a billing risk — without tracking, most transition revenue is lost
Dialysis Billing by Modality

Select a Dialysis Modality — Explore CPT Codes & Billing Rules

Each dialysis modality has a distinct billing structure, code family, and compliance requirements. Select any modality to see exactly how ParaMed manages billing across the full spectrum of nephrology dialysis services.

In-Center HD
Hemodialysis
In-Facility
90960–90962
Peritoneal
CAPD / CCPD
Home-Based
90963–90966
Home HD
Home Hemodialysis
Self/Caregiver
90963 / 90964
CRRT / SLED
Continuous/Acute
Inpatient AKI
90945 / 90947
In-Center Hemodialysis

In-Center Hemodialysis Billing

In-center hemodialysis is the most common dialysis modality and the foundation of nephrology billing. The nephrologist managing ESRD patients receiving in-center HD bills monthly management codes based on visit count (90960/90961/90962 for adults). The critical distinction is between routine monthly management (bundled) and acute evaluation services performed during a dialysis session in response to a specific clinical event or finding.

90960
ESRD Monthly Management — ≥4 Face-to-Face Visits

Adult patient, physician performs ≥4 documented face-to-face evaluations in the calendar month. Each evaluation must be documented in the patient chart — round-sheet documentation alone is insufficient.

~$266 Medicare monthly reimbursement
90961
ESRD Monthly Management — 2–3 Face-to-Face Visits

Most commonly billed ESRD code for practices without visit-count tracking. Should be 90960 for patients with ≥4 documented visits — but defaults to 90961 when billing teams don't reconcile visit counts against monthly bundles.

~$216 Medicare monthly reimbursement
90945
Single Physician Evaluation — Dialysis Session

Separately billable evaluation during a specific dialysis session for a distinct clinical problem or acute event — not routine monthly management. Requires documentation of the specific clinical issue evaluated during the session.

~$78 per qualifying session
90947
Complete Assessment — Dialysis Session

More comprehensive evaluation during a dialysis session — appropriate when the physician performs a complete evaluation including access assessment, review of fluid status, labs, and clinical decision making beyond routine management.

~$118 per qualifying assessment

Key In-Center HD Billing Rules

Visit Count — Count From Documentation, Not Memory

The visit count for ESRD monthly code selection must be reconciled against actual documented evaluations for the month. Round-sheet checkmarks are not sufficient — each face-to-face evaluation must be separately documented in the patient record.

Monthly Bundle — Calendar Month, Not Rolling 30 Days

ESRD monthly management codes cover services in a specific calendar month — not a rolling 30-day window. Partial months (ESRD initiation, patient death, transplant) have specific pro-rating rules that differ from full-month billing.

Supervising vs. Managing Physician — One Bundle Per Month

Only one physician can bill the monthly ESRD bundle for a given patient in a given month. In group practice settings, the managing physician who performed the majority of face-to-face services bills the bundle.

Separately Billable — Hospitalizations During ESRD Month

Hospital admissions, ICU care, and emergency department services are not included in the ESRD monthly bundle. Hospital billing (99221–99223, 99231–99233) is separate from the monthly outpatient ESRD bundle claim.

Peritoneal Dialysis

Peritoneal Dialysis Billing — CAPD & CCPD

Peritoneal dialysis (both CAPD and CCPD) is billed through the home dialysis monthly management code family. The nephrologist managing a PD patient doesn't visit the dialysis center — instead, monthly management is documented through a combination of in-person clinic visits, telephone contacts, telehealth encounters, and review of the patient's home PD logs and laboratory data.

90963
Home Dialysis Monthly Management — ≥3 Contacts/Month

Adult patient managed on home PD or home HD with ≥3 contacts per month (combination of in-person, telehealth, and telephone contacts). At least one contact must be a face-to-face or telehealth encounter.

~$220 Medicare monthly reimbursement
90964
Home Dialysis Monthly Management — 2 Contacts/Month

Adult home dialysis with 2 documented contacts in the month. Every eligible patient for 90963 should be coded at that level when documentation supports it.

~$180 Medicare monthly reimbursement
90966
Home Dialysis ESRD Svc — Unscheduled, Separate Visit

Unscheduled management services for home dialysis patients — separately billable from the monthly management code when an acute clinical issue requires separate evaluation outside the routine monthly management pattern.

~$78 per qualifying unscheduled service
90970
ESRD-Related Svc — Per Day (Short-Term Basis)

Used for ESRD management on a per-day basis when monthly management is not appropriate — transitions, short-term responsibility, or temporary coverage periods.

~$9 per day — short-term use only

Key PD Billing Rules

Contact Documentation — Every Contact Must Be Charted

For home dialysis monthly management, every contact counted toward the monthly tier must be documented — in-person visit note, telehealth encounter note, or telephone contact documented in the chart with date, duration, and clinical content.

PD Log Review Counts as Contact — When Documented

Review of the patient's home PD logs, fluid balance records, and blood pressure diary may qualify as a clinical contact when documented — providing a clinical summary of what was reviewed and any decisions made.

Telehealth for Home Dialysis — Fully Covered Post-2020

Medicare covers telehealth visits as face-to-face contacts for home dialysis management. Telehealth contacts require specific documentation of the technology platform and patient consent.

Training Period Billing — 90989/90993

Peritoneal dialysis training (90989 complete, 90993 per session) is separately billable for PD patient training — distinct from the monthly management codes and applying during the initial training period.

Home Hemodialysis

Home Hemodialysis (HHD) Billing

Home hemodialysis is the fastest-growing dialysis modality in the US. HHD uses the same monthly management code family as peritoneal dialysis (90963–90966) — but HHD patients require more frequent monitoring due to the higher technical demands of home HD, creating both a higher contact frequency and a correspondingly higher monthly management tier for most patients.

90963
Home HD Monthly Management — ≥3 Contacts

Most HHD patients qualify for the ≥3 contact tier due to the frequency of clinical monitoring required. Remote HD machine data review, blood pressure log review, and regular telephone follow-up each constitute documented contacts when charted correctly.

~$220 Medicare monthly reimbursement
90989
Dialysis Training — Complete

Initial home dialysis training — complete training program for the patient and caregiver. Separately billable from the ongoing monthly management codes. Comprehensive training period documentation is required.

~$880 complete training program
90993
Dialysis Training — Per Session

Individual training session code when training is provided in session increments rather than as a complete program. Used when additional training is required after initial program completion.

~$58 per training session
99091
Remote Monitoring Data Interpretation — 30+ Minutes

Collection and interpretation of physiological data from home HD remote monitoring — separately billable when the nephrologist spends ≥30 minutes in a 30-day period reviewing and interpreting remote monitoring data.

~$58 per 30-day qualifying period

Key HHD Billing Rules

Remote Monitoring Data — Document Review Separately

When remote HD machine data is reviewed as part of monthly management, the review should be documented as a clinical contact — including what data was reviewed, clinical interpretation, and any management changes made.

Training Codes — Separate from Management Codes Always

Home dialysis training codes (90989/90993) are never billed in the same month as the ongoing monthly management codes — they represent the training period, which precedes ongoing management.

Partner/Caregiver Training — Separately Documented

When a care partner or family member performs the HHD treatments, their training is a separate billable component. Training documentation should identify both the patient and the caregiver being trained.

ETC Model Participation — Billing Implications

Practices participating in the ESRD Treatment Choices (ETC) model receive payment adjustments based on home dialysis rates. Billing accuracy for home dialysis codes directly affects ETC performance metrics.

CRRT / SLED — Acute Inpatient

Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy & SLED Billing

CRRT and SLED are acute inpatient dialysis modalities used for AKI management in ICU and critical care settings. Unlike ESRD monthly management, CRRT/SLED billing is per-session or per-day — with the nephrologist billing for evaluation and management of the dialysis session in the context of the overall inpatient care. The critical billing distinction is between the dialysis procedure itself (facility-billed) and the nephrologist's physician evaluation component.

90945
Single Physician Evaluation — Dialysis Procedure

Nephrologist's evaluation during a specific dialysis/CRRT session — covers the physician's clinical assessment, prescription review, and management decisions for that session. The facility bills for the CRRT equipment and nursing separately.

~$78 per qualifying physician evaluation
90947
Complete Assessment — Dialysis Session (Higher Complexity)

More comprehensive evaluation with access assessment, adequacy review, clinical problem-solving, and management decisions. CRRT patients with AKI, sepsis, and multi-organ dysfunction often qualify for 90947 over 90945.

~$118 per qualifying assessment
99232
Subsequent Hospital Visit — Moderate MDM

Daily subsequent hospital visit for AKI/CRRT management — the primary billing vehicle for nephrology inpatient care alongside the dialysis session evaluation code. CRRT patients typically support 99232 or 99233 based on their clinical complexity.

~$158 subsequent hospital visit
99291
Critical Care — First 30–74 Minutes

When the nephrologist personally provides critical care services (≥30 minutes of direct critical care time documented) for a critically ill AKI patient, critical care codes may replace the standard subsequent hospital visit — significantly higher reimbursement.

~$234 critical care — first 30–74 min

Key CRRT/Inpatient Billing Rules

Dialysis Eval vs. Hospital Visit — Cannot Bill Both Same Day

On days when both a dialysis evaluation (90945/90947) and a separate subsequent hospital visit occur on the same day by the same physician, only one can be billed — the dialysis code includes the E/M component for the dialysis encounter.

Critical Care Documentation — Time Must Be Specifically Stated

Critical care billing requires documentation of the time spent in direct critical care — stating the start time, end time, or total minutes. Critical care time cannot be inferred from the note — it must be explicitly stated.

AKI ICD-10 Specificity — N17.x Required

AKI coding requires specificity: N17.0 (AKI with tubular necrosis), N17.1 (AKI with cortical necrosis), N17.2 (AKI with medullary necrosis), N17.9 (unspecified AKI). Specific AKI coding improves medical necessity documentation and HCC capture.

CRRT Access Procedures — Separately Billable

If the nephrologist places the dialysis access catheter, the procedure is separately billable from the CRRT management codes. Temporary HD catheter (36620) or tunneled catheter (36558) requires documentation of technique and confirmation of placement.

CKD Stage Billing Guide

Billing the Complete CKD Patient Journey — Stage by Stage

CKD billing requires a different strategy at each stage of kidney disease progression — from the initial nephrology consultation in CKD Stage 3 through the monthly bundle management of ESRD. Each stage transition creates new billing opportunities that must be recognized and captured.

Stage 1
GFR ≥90
N18.1 — GFR ≥90 with Kidney Damage Markers

CKD Stage 1 — Primary Care-Level Billing, Nephrology Consult When Indicated

Stage 1 CKD is typically managed in primary care. Nephrology consultation (99252–99255) is appropriate when proteinuria, hematuria, or GFR decline rate indicates nephrology evaluation. The nephrology consult note must document the clinical indication for nephrology involvement to support the consult level.

99253
99254
N18.1
Stage 2
GFR 60–89
N18.2 — Mildly Decreased Kidney Function

CKD Stage 2 — Etiology Coding Critical, Combination Codes Apply

Stage 2 CKD requires documentation and coding of the underlying etiology — diabetic nephropathy (E11.65), hypertensive CKD (I12.9), or glomerular disease. ICD-10 combination codes capture both the etiology and the CKD in a single code — critical for risk adjustment (HCC capture) and medical necessity documentation.

E11.65
I12.9
N18.2

HCC risk: missing etiology combination codes reduces RAF score — financial impact beyond billing denial risk.

Stage 3
GFR 30–59
N18.3a / N18.3b — Stages 3a and 3b

CKD Stage 3 — Regular Nephrology Management, Anemia & MBD Billing Begin

Stage 3 CKD introduces anemia management, mineral and bone disorder management, and CKD-MBD workup. ICD-10 now distinguishes 3a (N18.3a, GFR 45–59) from 3b (N18.3b, GFR 30–44) — a critical specificity distinction that affects risk adjustment significantly. Most billing teams miss the 3a/3b distinction.

N18.3a
N18.3b
D50.9

N18.3a vs. N18.3b distinction added in ICD-10-CM 2023 — most billing teams still use undifferentiated N18.3.

Stage 4
GFR 15–29
N18.4 — Severely Decreased Kidney Function

CKD Stage 4 — ESRD Preparation, Transplant Evaluation, AV Fistula Referral

Stage 4 CKD is the critical preparation phase — when dialysis access planning, transplant evaluation, and ESRD education begin. Transplant evaluation referrals, AV fistula creation referral coordination, and ESRD education (patient education CPT 98960–98962) are all separately billable. The density of nephrology billable services increases significantly at Stage 4.

99214
98960
N18.4
Z00.6
Stage 5
GFR <15
N18.5 — Kidney Failure (Pre-Dialysis)

CKD Stage 5 — Pre-ESRD, Dialysis Transition Billing Most Critical Period

CKD Stage 5 (non-dialysis) is the most billing-sensitive transition zone in nephrology. The month dialysis begins is the ESRD enrollment month — and the billing transition from fee-for-service to monthly bundle must happen precisely. Billing the monthly ESRD bundle before dialysis initiation — or continuing to bill fee-for-service E/M for dialysis-related services after ESRD enrollment — creates compliance exposure in both directions.

N18.5
99215
Z49.01

Transition month billing error: starting ESRD bundle before dialysis first date creates billing fraud exposure.

ESRD
On Dialysis
N18.6 — ESRD — Enrolled in Dialysis Program

ESRD — Monthly Bundle Management + Separately Billable Services

ESRD monthly bundle billing (90960–90966 based on modality and visit frequency) is the primary billing vehicle — but the full scope includes managing the bundle, identifying and separately billing all non-bundle services, tracking patient transitions (modality changes, hospitalizations, transplant events), and managing the ESRD billing through transplant month and post-transplant follow-up. N18.6 is the primary diagnosis on all ESRD monthly bundle claims.

90960
90963
N18.6
Z94.0
Revenue Filtration Analysis

What Your Generalist Billing Is Filtering Out — and What ParaMed Captures

These are the nephrology revenue categories that generalist billing teams most frequently lose — shown as percentage of practices affected and typical annual revenue impact per nephrology group.

What Gets Lost — Without Specialty Billing

Revenue categories that flow through generalist billing uncaptured

ESRD Bundle Tier Errors (Wrong Visit Count)84% of practices
~$5,000–$15,000/month in systematic tier undercoding
Transitional Care Management — Missed91% of practices
$40K–$120K/year in missed TCM billing for nephrology groups
Non-Bundle Services for ESRD Patients73% of practices
$180–$400/patient/month lost from bundle over-inclusion
Kidney Biopsy S&I + Pathology Codes78% of practices
$120–$280/biopsy in unbilled imaging and pathology components
CKD N18.3a/3b Specificity (2023 ICD Update)88% of practices
RAF score reduction + medical necessity risk on all Stage 3 claims

What ParaMed Captures — Specialty Billing Standard

Every nephrology revenue category tracked, verified, and billed

ESRD Bundle Tier Accuracy (Visit Reconciliation)100%
Monthly visit count reconciled before every bundle submission
TCM Tracking — Systematic Discharge Follow-Up100%
Every discharge triggers TCM workflow — zero missed TCM opportunities
Non-Bundle ESRD Services Identified & Billed98.2%
Per-patient review flags all separately billable non-bundle services
Biopsy Triple-Code Capture (50200+76942+88305)100%
All three billing components identified and submitted on every biopsy
CKD Specificity — 3a/3b + Etiology Combination99.1%
Stage-specific + etiology combination codes on every CKD claim
Complete Service Suite

Everything ParaMed Manages in Your Nephrology Practice

Six core service components — each built specifically for the nephrology billing environment, with the specialty knowledge to capture every revenue category your practice generates across the full CKD-to-ESRD spectrum.

ESRD Monthly Bundle Management

Visit count reconciliation, pediatric vs. adult code family verification, monthly billing calendar management, and patient transition tracking — ensuring every ESRD patient is billed at the correct monthly code tier, every month, with zero transition-month errors.

Monthly visit count reconciliation vs. round sheets
Pediatric age-family code verification
Transition month billing (enrollment, transplant, death)
Separately billable non-bundle service identification

Transitional Care Management Tracking

A dedicated TCM tracking workflow that captures every nephrology patient discharge — generating a 2-day contact task and 7/14-day face-to-face visit task for every applicable discharge. For nephrology groups with significant inpatient volume, TCM billing alone generates $40K–$120K in additional annual revenue.

Discharge alert system — every eligible patient
2-day contact and 14/7-day visit task tracking
TCM documentation standards and note templates
Monthly TCM revenue and capture rate reporting

CKD Stage Coding & HCC Capture

Stage-specific ICD-10 coding (N18.1–N18.6, including the 2023 N18.3a/3b distinction), etiology combination code application, and Hierarchical Condition Category (HCC) capture for value-based care programs. For practices in Medicare Advantage or ACO programs, accurate CKD stage and etiology coding directly affects the practice's revenue through RAF score impact.

N18.3a/N18.3b distinction — 2023 update applied
Diabetic and hypertensive combination codes
HCC capture for risk adjustment programs
Quarterly CKD coding accuracy audit

Nephrology Procedure & Biopsy Billing

Complete procedure billing for kidney biopsy (50200 + US guidance 76942 + pathology interpretation 88305 when applicable), dialysis access procedures, and hospital procedure billing. The triple-component biopsy billing is one of the most consistently missed revenue opportunities in nephrology — our procedure billing team captures all three components on every qualifying biopsy.

Triple-component biopsy billing (procedure + US guidance + pathology)
Dialysis access catheter procedure codes
CRRT evaluation codes and critical care billing
Hospital-based nephrology inpatient billing

Denial Management & ESRD Appeals

Nephrology-specific denial arguments built around the ESRD billing rules, CKD medical necessity requirements, and TCM documentation standards. Our denial team maintains a nephrology-specific appeal library covering the most common denial types — ESRD visit count disputes, non-bundle service inclusion denials, TCM documentation denials, and CKD medical necessity challenges.

ESRD bundle tier dispute appeals
Non-bundle service medical necessity arguments
TCM documentation-based appeal library
Pattern-based pre-submission prevention
Payer Intelligence

Nephrology Billing by Payer

Medicare is the dominant payer in nephrology — ESRD patients are Medicare-eligible regardless of age. But the full payer landscape includes Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, and commercial plans, each with specific nephrology coverage and prior authorization rules.

Medicare Traditional (CMS)

The dominant nephrology payer — ESRD patients receive Medicare coverage regardless of age at ESRD onset. The ESRD monthly bundle rates are CMS-set. NCD and MAC LCD policies govern separately billable ESRD services, CKD medical necessity, and procedure coverage.

ESRD monthly bundle rates updated annually in ESRD PPS final rule
Separately billable ESRD services defined in CMS ESRD policy guidelines
TCM codes covered under standard Medicare Part B — no PA required
Kidney biopsy covered with documentation of clinical necessity

Medicare Advantage Plans

MA plans follow Medicare ESRD billing rules but may have independent PA requirements for high-cost services. PA for ESA therapy, dialysis access procedures, and transplant evaluations is common in MA plans with restrictive utilization management policies.

ESRD monthly bundle follows Medicare rates — MA cannot pay less for ESRD
PA often required for ESA drugs, biologics, and transplant evaluation
Home dialysis programs may require specific MA plan authorization
Appeal rights differ from traditional Medicare for non-ESRD services

Commercial Plans — Non-ESRD CKD

Commercial payers cover CKD management for patients not yet on dialysis. Coverage for nephrology services varies significantly — prior authorization for nephrology consultations, biologics for CKD-related anemia, and procedures is common and payer-specific.

Nephrology consultation PA required by many commercial payers
Biologic therapy for CKD anemia requires PA with diagnostic criteria
SGLT2 inhibitor management may require nephrology-specific PA in some plans
CKD medical necessity documentation requirements vary by plan

Medicaid Programs

Medicaid covers nephrology services for low-income CKD patients not yet on Medicare ESRD. State Medicaid programs vary significantly in nephrology coverage, PA requirements, and reimbursement rates.

Nephrology services covered but PA requirements vary by state
Reimbursement rates typically below Medicare — financial modeling required
Managed Medicaid plans add additional PA layers for high-cost services
ESRD Medicaid — Medicare is primary payer after ESRD enrollment

ACO / Value-Based Programs

Nephrologists in ACO or other value-based care arrangements have additional financial incentives tied to CKD coding accuracy, ESRD prevention, and home dialysis utilization. Correct CKD staging and HCC capture directly affect shared savings calculations.

HCC capture from CKD stage coding directly affects RAF score and shared savings
ESRD prevention quality measures tied to CKD documentation completeness
Home dialysis rate affects ETC model performance payments
TCM billing supports readmission reduction quality metrics

ESRD Demonstration Programs

CMS ESRD-specific demonstration and payment models — including the ESRD Treatment Choices (ETC) model — create additional payment adjustment opportunities tied to home dialysis rates and performance on quality metrics.

ETC model — payment adjustments based on home dialysis percentage
Correct home dialysis code capture essential to ETC performance
Quarterly reconciliation of ETC model payment adjustments recommended
CKCC model performance metrics tie to nephrology billing completeness
The Practice Transformation

Nephrology Billing Before & After ParaMed — Every Metric, Every Month

These are the performance benchmarks we establish at onboarding and track every month against your pre-engagement baseline — because accountability is the only measure of a billing partner that actually matters.

Performance Metric
Without ParaMedGeneralist billing average
With ParaMedNephrology specialist standard
ESRD Bundle Tier Accuracy (Visit Count)
60–72% billed at correct tier — systematic tier undercoding
100% visit count reconciled before every monthly submission
Transitional Care Management Capture Rate
Less than 10% of eligible TCM events billed — $40K–$120K/yr missed
Systematic TCM tracking — every eligible discharge actioned
Non-Bundle Service Identification (ESRD patients)
Non-bundle services absorbed into monthly bundle — lost revenue
Per-patient non-bundle review on every ESRD patient every month
Kidney Biopsy Triple-Code Capture
Only procedure code (50200) submitted — imaging and pathology missed
All 3 components (50200 + 76942 + 88305) captured every qualifying case
CKD Stage Specificity (N18.3a/3b, Etiology Codes)
Unspecified N18.9 or non-differentiated N18.3 on majority of claims
Stage-specific + etiology combination codes on 99%+ of CKD claims
ESRD Patient Transition Month Accuracy
No systematic tracking — transition month billing errors on most transitions
Patient status tracking system — zero transition month billing errors
Overall Nephrology Claim Denial Rate
16–26% denial rate — nephrology specialty average with generalist billing
Under 3.2% denial rate — maintained month-over-month
Annual Revenue Impact Per Nephrologist FTE
$120K–$380K+ in preventable annual losses per nephrologist
$120K–$380K+ recovered and protected with compliance confidence
Proven Nephrology Outcomes

Nephrology Revenue Results — Tracked, Reported, and Accountable Every Month

Get My Free Audit
98%
Clean Claim
Rate
+31%
Avg Annual
Revenue Lift
100%
ESRD Bundle
Tier Accuracy
Zero
Missed Transition
Month Errors
Onboarding Journey

From Free Audit to First Clean Claim — 10 Days

Every nephrology onboarding starts with a free specialty audit identifying your ESRD bundle errors, TCM gaps, and CKD coding deficiencies. We build your complete billing protocol and submit first claims within 10 business days — with a performance report at Day 30 showing exact before/after comparison.

01

Free Nephrology Billing Audit — ESRD, CKD, TCM Review

Day 1–2

We audit a representative sample of your recent claims — coding your ESRD monthly bundles against documented visit counts, identifying TCM billing gaps from recent discharges, reviewing CKD stage and etiology code specificity, and checking biopsy codes for the three-component capture. You receive a written audit report with quantified revenue impact per category within 48 hours.

ESRD tier accuracy review
TCM gap analysis
CKD coding specificity check
02

Practice Protocol Build — ESRD Patient Roster & Billing Rules

Day 2–5

We document your complete ESRD patient roster by modality (in-center HD, home HD, PD), establish visit count tracking for monthly bundle submission, set up the TCM tracking workflow for discharge alerts, build your CKD coding protocol including etiology combination codes and the 2023 N18.3a/3b distinction, and configure payer-specific rules for your exact payer mix.

ESRD patient roster by modality
Visit count tracking system
TCM discharge alert workflow
03

EHR & Practice Management System Integration

Day 4–7

We integrate with your EHR and practice management system — configuring our billing workflow to receive round-sheet data, encounter documentation, and discharge notifications efficiently. We train your clinical staff on the documentation elements that directly affect billing — creating the documentation quality that supports maximum revenue.

Round-sheet capture integration
Clinical staff documentation training
Discharge notification workflow
04

First Claims Submitted — Within 24 Hours of Documentation

Day 8–10

First nephrology claims are submitted within 24 hours of receiving completed documentation. Every claim passes our nephrology-specific pre-submission review — ESRD visit count reconciliation, CKD code specificity verification, NCCI edit compliance check, and modifier accuracy review.

24-hour claim submission standard
Pre-submission specialty review
Optimized billing calendar
05

30-Day Performance Report — Before vs. After Comparison

Day 30+

Your first monthly performance dashboard is delivered at Day 30 — including ESRD bundle accuracy vs. baseline, TCM capture rate and revenue, CKD coding accuracy metrics, denial rate by claim type, and a revenue comparison vs. the pre-engagement audit findings. This report is the accountability document that proves the value of specialty billing — in your numbers, for your practice.

Before vs. after revenue comparison
ESRD accuracy + TCM capture metrics
Monthly accountability dashboard
From Nephrologists

What Nephrology Practices Say After Switching to ParaMed

"We had never billed a single TCM code in the history of our nephrology group. Our previous billing team didn't even know what TCM was. ParaMed set up a discharge tracking process and we started capturing TCM billing for our high-acuity CKD and ESRD patients. In the first full year, we generated $94,000 in TCM revenue that was previously completely uncaptured. It was essentially found money."
Dr. Linda
Nephrology Group Administrator — 4 Nephrologists
$94K in year-1 TCM revenue — previously zero
"Our practice does approximately 40 kidney biopsies per year. ParaMed's audit showed that we had been submitting only the biopsy procedure code (50200) on every one of them — never billing the ultrasound guidance or the pathology interpretation component. After correcting to the triple-code billing model, we recovered $7,800 in annual biopsy revenue that was previously going unbilled."
Dr. James
Interventional Nephrology — Academic Group
+$7,800/yr from biopsy triple-code capture
98%
Client Retention Rate
<48hr
Audit Report Turnaround
10 Days
Avg. Onboarding Time
300+
Nephrology CPT Codes Managed
Start With a Free Audit

Request Your Free Nephrology Billing Audit

We review your ESRD bundle coding, TCM billing history, CKD stage specificity, and biopsy code completeness — and deliver a written revenue impact report within 48 hours. No obligation, no commitment, just a clear picture of what your practice is currently leaving behind.

ESRD Bundle Tier Audit

We code a sample of your recent ESRD monthly claims against the documented visit counts — identifying every patient where the billed tier is lower than the documentation supports and calculating the monthly and annual revenue recovery opportunity.

TCM Billing Gap Analysis

We review your discharge history for the last 90 days and identify every TCM-eligible event that was not billed — with a calculated first-year TCM revenue projection based on your patient population's discharge frequency.

CKD Code Specificity Review

We analyze your CKD ICD-10 coding for stage specificity (including N18.3a/3b), etiology combination code usage, and HCC capture completeness — with an estimated RAF score impact for practices in risk-adjusted payment models.

Written Revenue Impact Report

Every finding is documented with specific dollar estimates per revenue category — giving you a concrete ROI calculation before any engagement decision is required.

"The audit was done in under 48 hours. The report showed $11,400 per month in recoverable revenue — $9,800 from ESRD bundle tiers, $1,600 from missed non-bundle services. We signed the same day the report arrived. The first month's billing was higher than any month we'd ever had under our previous team."
— Dr. Arun — Solo Nephrology Practice

Request My Free Nephrology Billing Audit

No cost. No commitment. A written report showing exactly what your nephrology practice is leaving behind — across ESRD bundles, TCM, CKD coding, and procedures.

Audit covers: ESRD bundle tiers, TCM gaps, CKD specificity, biopsy codes, transition month billing, payer mix analysis

HIPAA-compliant. Your information is never shared. We respond within 1 business day.

NEPHROLOGY
Every Patient. Every Visit. Every Code.

Stop Losing Nephrology Revenue to a Billing Team That Doesn't Understand Your Specialty.

From ESRD monthly bundle tier precision to the TCM revenue your practice has never captured, from CKD stage ICD-10 specificity to the triple-component kidney biopsy billing that your generalist team doesn't know exists — ParaMed's nephrology-certified billing specialists manage every dimension of your nephrology revenue cycle with the specialty knowledge it demands.

ESRD Bundle Specialists
TCM Tracking System
CKD HCC Capture
Home Dialysis Experts
HIPAA Compliant