Proteinuria ICD-10 Codes: Complete Documentation & Billing Guide

Proteinuria ICD-10 Codes: Complete Documentation & Billing Guide
Learn about proteinuria ICD-10 codes — R80.0 to R80.9, nephrotic range, diabetes, pregnancy, and persistent proteinuria.

Proteinuria, which means excess protein in the urine, is one of the most commonly documented findings in nephrology, primary care, and obstetric billing. It is also one of the most frequently miscoded diagnoses in kidney disease billing, generating unnecessary claim denials and compliance risk.

The ICD-10-CM framework for proteinuria is context-driven. The correct proteinuria ICD-10 code depends on what proteinuria type is present, whether the cause has been established, how long it has persisted, and whether the patient is pregnant or diabetic. Defaulting to R80.9 — Proteinuria, unspecified, on every claim when a more specific ICD-10 code for proteinuria is available is a compliance failure that causes audits.

This guide covers every billable ICD-10 code for proteinuria, the Excludes1 rules that drive most claim rejections, and the distinction between nephrotic range proteinuria ICD-10 coding versus standard R80 codes. We’ll also uncover diabetes with proteinuria ICD-10 sequencing rules, proteinuria in pregnancy ICD-10 coding, and the CPT codes most commonly paired with proteinuria diagnoses.

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Proteinuria ICD-10 Quick Reference Card

CodeDescriptionWhen to UseBillable
R80.0Isolated proteinuriaSingle episode without persistent or recurrent documentation; no morphologic lesionYes
R80.1Persistent proteinuria, unspecifiedProteinuria documented across multiple tests over time, no specific cause establishedYes
R80.2Orthostatic proteinuria, unspecifiedProteinuria found only in upright position; resolves when supineYes
R80.3Bence Jones proteinuriaAbnormal immunoglobulin light chains in urine; typically multiple myeloma contextYes
R80.8Other proteinuriaProteinuria with an identified cause not captured elsewhere (e.g., type 2 DM with proteinuria)Yes
R80.9Proteinuria, unspecifiedUse only when cause and type are truly undocumented; last resort codeYes
N06.xIsolated proteinuria with morphologic lesionProteinuria with confirmed renal biopsy and specific glomerular finding — see N06.0–N06.9Subcodes Yes
N04.xNephrotic syndromeNephrotic-range proteinuria (>3.5g/day) with edema, hypoalbuminemia, hyperlipidemiaSubcodes Yes
E11.21Type 2 DM with diabetic nephropathyDiabetes type 2 with confirmed diabetic nephropathy and proteinuriaYes
E10.21Type 1 DM with diabetic nephropathyDiabetes type 1 with confirmed diabetic nephropathy and proteinuriaYes
O12.1xGestational proteinuriaPregnancy-induced proteinuria without hypertension — trimester-specific subcodes requiredSubcodes Yes

What Is Proteinuria and Why Does Accurate Coding Matter?

Proteinuria is the presence of abnormal levels of protein, predominantly albumin but also globulin, in the urine. It is both a finding and a diagnosis, and that distinction drives everything in ICD-10-CM coding for proteinuria.

As a finding, proteinuria is detected on routine urinalysis and documented with R80 codes when no underlying cause has yet been established. As a diagnosis, proteinuria is a documented manifestation of a known underlying condition and must be coded using condition-specific codes rather than the R80 family.

In nephrology billing, using R80.9 when a more specific proteinuria ICD-10 code is supported by the documentation is a coding quality failure. It reduces claim specificity, lowers audit defense, and may result in a medical necessity challenge when paired with nephrology-level CPT codes.

Why This Matters for Your Revenue Cycle: Nephrology practices treating CKD, diabetic nephropathy, or nephrotic syndrome must use condition-specific codes — not R80.9 — to justify the complexity and medical necessity of billed E/M services. Payers reviewing claims for 99214–99215 expect a diagnosis code that matches the documented complexity. R80.9 paired with a high-complexity E/M raises medical necessity flags. To completely eliminate these documentation bottlenecks, many growing practices partner with the best nephrology billing services to protect their cash flow and automate claim scrubbing prior to submission.

The Complete R80 Family: ICD-10 Codes for Proteinuria

The R80 category, under Chapter 18 (Symptoms, signs, and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings) of ICD-10-CM, contains six billable proteinuria ICD-10 codes. While master lists of ICD-10 codes for nephrology billing cover everything from organ failure to electrolyte imbalances, these specific R80 codes are used when proteinuria is documented strictly as a finding or a condition without a confirmed underlying glomerular or systemic diagnosis.

R80.0 — Isolated Proteinuria

R80.0 is used when proteinuria is documented as a single, isolated finding on urinalysis without evidence of persistence, an identified underlying cause, or a morphologic renal lesion. It applies most appropriately to initial or one-time detection in outpatient settings.

Documentation Requirement: A one-time positive dipstick or quantitative protein result without repeat confirmation. If the same patient returns with confirmed proteinuria on two separate tests, upgrade to R80.1. Do not use R80.0 for patients with established nephrology diagnoses.

R80.1 — Persistent Proteinuria ICD-10 (Unspecified)

Persistent proteinuria ICD-10 code R80.1 is used when proteinuria has been confirmed on at least two separate urine tests separated by time — typically at least 3 months apart per nephrology clinical standards — without an identified underlying cause. This code is appropriate in early CKD workup scenarios where proteinuria is confirmed, but biopsy or advanced testing has not yet established a specific glomerular lesion.

R80.1 is the correct ICD-10 CM code for proteinuria when the documentation uses language like “persistent albuminuria,” “recurrent proteinuria,” or “proteinuria confirmed on repeat testing.”

AAPC Coding Guidance: Per AAPC Codify discussions, coders often encounter the question of whether to use R80.1 or E11.29 for diabetes patients with proteinuria. If the provider documents diabetic nephropathy, E11.21 or E11.29 takes precedence. R80.1 is appropriate only when the underlying cause is not yet established.

R80.2 — Orthostatic Proteinuria, Unspecified

R80.2 applies to orthostatic (postural) proteinuria, which is a protein found in urine collected when the patient is upright, resolving when supine. This is a benign condition most common in adolescents and young adults. It requires documentation of the positional pattern to distinguish it from pathologic proteinuria.

R80.3 — Bence Jones Proteinuria

R80.3 is specific to the detection of Bence Jones proteins (immunoglobulin light chains) in the urine. This finding typically accompanies multiple myeloma, Waldenström macroglobulinemia, or other plasma cell dyscrasias. In nephrology billing, it often appears alongside hematology diagnoses.

R80.8 — Other Proteinuria

R80.8 is used for proteinuria associated with an identified cause that is not captured by the more specific diabetes or glomerular codes. Its most common application in nephrology billing is proteinuria due to type 2 diabetes mellitus, when the provider has not explicitly documented diabetic nephropathy as a diagnosis. However, coders should be aware of AAPC forum guidance: E11.69 (Type 2 DM with other specified complications) alongside R80.8, this is a viable coding combination. But E11.21 with linked nephropathy documentation is preferable when supported.

R80.9 — Proteinuria Unspecified ICD-10

Proteinuria unspecified ICD-10 code R80.9 is a last-resort code used only when the type and cause of proteinuria are genuinely not determinable from the documentation. It is the most overused code in this category.

ICD-10 Code for Proteinuria Unspecified — When NOT to Use R80.9: Do not use R80.9 when the documentation supports a more specific code. If the patient has diabetes and the provider documents kidney involvement, use E11.21. If biopsy results confirm a glomerular lesion, use N06.x. If proteinuria has been present over multiple visits, use R80.1. R80.9 should appear rarely on a nephrology practice’s claim database.

R80 Code Selection Quick Reference

Clinical ScenarioCorrect ICD-10 CodeDo Not Use
First-time positive dipstick, no prior testingR80.0 — Isolated proteinuriaR80.9 (too vague when type is known)
Protein confirmed on two tests, no cause establishedR80.1 — Persistent proteinuria ICD-10R80.0 (understates clinical picture)
Protein only in standing position, resolves supineR80.2 — Orthostatic proteinuriaR80.9, R80.0
Bence Jones protein detected in urineR80.3 — Bence Jones proteinuriaR80.8, R80.9
Proteinuria with type 2 DM, nephropathy not yet documentedR80.8 + E11.69 (or E11.21 if nephropathy confirmed)R80.9 alone
Cause and type genuinely unknownR80.9 — Proteinuria unspecified ICD-10Acceptable if truly undocumented

Isolated Proteinuria with Morphologic Lesion — The N06 Family

When a renal biopsy confirms a specific glomerular morphologic lesion alongside isolated proteinuria, the appropriate code is not R80.x but rather the N06 family. N06 codes are used when the provider documents both proteinuria and a confirmed biopsy finding.

They sit in Chapter 14 (Diseases of the genitourinary system) rather than Chapter 18, which means they carry higher specificity and greater diagnostic weight in payer review.

CodeDescriptionKey Clinical Indicator
N06.0Isolated proteinuria — minor glomerular abnormalityBiopsy shows minimal change or near-normal glomeruli
N06.1Isolated proteinuria — focal and segmental glomerular lesionsBiopsy confirms FSGS pattern
N06.2Isolated proteinuria — diffuse membranous glomerulonephritisBiopsy confirms membranous nephropathy pattern
N06.3Isolated proteinuria — diffuse mesangial proliferative GNBiopsy shows mesangial hypercellularity
N06.4Isolated proteinuria — diffuse endocapillary proliferative GNBiopsy shows endocapillary proliferation
N06.5Isolated proteinuria — diffuse mesangiocapillary GNBiopsy confirms MPGN (membranoproliferative GN)
N06.8Isolated proteinuria — other morphologic lesionsBiopsy confirms lesion type not listed above
N06.9Isolated proteinuria — unspecified morphologic lesionBiopsy performed but specific pattern not documented

Critical Coding Rule: R80.0 (Isolated proteinuria) carries an Excludes1 note for N06.x. If a biopsy has confirmed a specific morphologic lesion, you must use N06.x, never R80.0. Violating this Excludes1 generates an automatic scrubber rejection. The biopsy result and provider documentation of the specific lesion are required to support any N06.x code.

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Nephrotic Range Proteinuria ICD-10 Coding: When to Use N04

Nephrotic range proteinuria ICD-10 coding requires a critical distinction: nephrotic-range proteinuria (protein loss exceeding 3.5 grams per 24 hours in adults) is not coded with R80 codes. When the clinical picture meets the criteria for nephrotic syndrome, including massive proteinuria, edema, hypoalbuminemia, and hyperlipidemia, the correct code family is N04 (Nephrotic syndrome).

Nephrotic proteinuria ICD-10 coding under N04 is morphology-driven, exactly like N06. The specific subcode depends on what the biopsy reveals. When biopsy has not been performed or the morphologic pattern is not documented, N04.9 (Nephrotic syndrome with unspecified morphologic changes) is used.

CodeDescriptionClinical Context
N04.0Nephrotic syndrome — minor glomerular abnormalityMinimal change disease; most common in children
N04.1Nephrotic syndrome — focal and segmental glomerular lesionsFSGS; common cause in adults, especially African American patients
N04.2Nephrotic syndrome — diffuse membranous GNMembranous nephropathy; common in middle-aged adults
N04.3Nephrotic syndrome — diffuse mesangial proliferative GNIgM nephropathy or IgA nephropathy with nephrotic features
N04.4Nephrotic syndrome — diffuse endocapillary proliferative GNPost-infectious GN with nephrotic presentation
N04.5Nephrotic syndrome — diffuse mesangiocapillary GNMPGN type I or III
N04.9Nephrotic syndrome — unspecified morphologic changesNephrotic syndrome confirmed, biopsy not performed or result not documented

ICD-10 Code for Nephrotic Range Proteinuria — Key Threshold: Nephrotic range proteinuria requires protein excretion greater than 3.5 g/day (or a urine protein-to-creatinine ratio above 3.5). If documentation only states ‘significant proteinuria’ without quantification meeting this threshold, do not assume nephrotic syndrome. Use R80.1 (persistent proteinuria) until the provider explicitly diagnoses nephrotic syndrome.

Diabetes with Proteinuria ICD-10 Coding — The E10 and E11 Framework

DM with proteinuria ICD-10 coding is among the most complex and most frequently miscoded scenarios in nephrology and primary care billing. The coding principle is this: when diabetes and proteinuria coexist, the relationship between the two must be documented by the provider before a combination diabetes-kidney code is used.

Type 2 Diabetes with Proteinuria ICD-10 — Choosing the Right Code

Diabetes with proteinuria ICD-10 coding for type 2 patients requires evaluating whether the provider has documented a specific renal complication:

Provider DocumentationCorrect ICD-10 CodeAdd-On Codes
Type 2 DM with diabetic nephropathy (with proteinuria)E11.21 — Type 2 DM with diabetic nephropathyAdd N18.x for CKD stage if documented
Type 2 DM with CKD (with or without proteinuria)E11.22 — Type 2 DM with diabetic CKDAdd N18.x for CKD stage; add Z99.2 if dialysis
Type 2 DM with proteinuria but nephropathy not specifiedE11.69 + R80.8 (per AAPC forum guidance)Query provider to document nephropathy if clinically appropriate
Type 2 DM with diabetic nephrotic syndromeE11.21 + N04.9 (when nephrotic range)Add N18.x if CKD stage documented
Type 1 DM with diabetic nephropathyE10.21 — Type 1 DM with diabetic nephropathyAdd N18.x for CKD stage if documented

Important Sequencing Rule: For diabetes with proteinuria ICD-10 coding, the diabetes code is always the principal or first-listed diagnosis. The CKD code (N18.x) and any proteinuria code (R80.x) are additional diagnoses sequenced after the diabetes code. ICD-10-CM Chapter 4 guidelines are explicit: sequence the diabetes code first when the provider has documented a causal relationship between diabetes and the kidney condition.

AAPC Forum Insight — DM with Proteinuria: AAPC Codify forum discussions confirm ongoing debate about E11.69 + R80.8 versus E11.21. The preferred path is always to query the provider: if they document ‘diabetic nephropathy,’ E11.21 is supported, and R80.8 drops off. If the provider only documents ‘proteinuria in a diabetic patient’ without linking the two, E11.69 + R80.8 is defensible until documentation is clarified.

Proteinuria in Pregnancy ICD-10 — The O12 Family

Proteinuria in pregnancy ICD-10 coding uses a completely separate code family from R80: the O12 category — Gestational (pregnancy-induced) edema and proteinuria without hypertension.

This is a critical distinction. Gestational proteinuria is coded from Chapter 15 (Pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium), not from Chapter 18. The R80 codes carry a Type 1 Excludes note for gestational proteinuria, meaning R80 and O12.1x cannot be reported together for the same patient encounter during pregnancy.

O12.1 Subcodes — Trimester-Specific Coding Is Required

ICD-10-CM requires trimester specificity for all O12.1x codes. Using O12.10 (unspecified trimester) when the trimester is known and documented is a coding quality failure and may trigger payer edit flags.

CodeDescriptionTrimester Definition
O12.10Gestational proteinuria, unspecified trimesterUse only when trimester is not documented — avoid if possible
O12.11Gestational proteinuria, first trimesterUp to 13 weeks 6 days gestation
O12.12Gestational proteinuria, second trimester14 weeks 0 days through 27 weeks 6 days
O12.13Gestational proteinuria, third trimester28 weeks 0 days or greater
O12.14Gestational proteinuria, complicating childbirthProteinuria documented at time of delivery
O12.15Gestational proteinuria, complicating the puerperiumProteinuria in postpartum period
O12.2xGestational edema with proteinuriaWhen both edema AND proteinuria are documented — use trimester-specific subcodes

Critical Distinction — Gestational Proteinuria vs. Preeclampsia: O12.1x applies only when proteinuria is present WITHOUT hypertension. If the provider documents proteinuria with hypertension in pregnancy, this shifts to the preeclampsia code family (O14.x). Never use O12.1x and O14.x together for the same encounter. The R80 codes are excluded when O12.1x applies.

Excludes1 Rules That Drive Proteinuria Claim Denials

Understanding the Excludes notes is essential for avoiding automated scrubber rejections in proteinuria billing. The R80 category carries Type 1 Excludes notes that prohibit specific code combinations.

If You Code…You CANNOT Also Code…Why
R80.0 (Isolated proteinuria)N06.x (Isolated proteinuria with morphologic lesion)Type 1 Excludes — morphologic biopsy result overrides R80.0
Any R80.xO12.1x (Gestational proteinuria)Type 1 Excludes — gestational cases must use O12.x, not R80.x
E11.21 (DM with nephropathy)R80.x as the primary proteinuria codeThe diabetes code is the combination code; R80.x is redundant
N04.x (Nephrotic syndrome)R80.x alone for the same nephrotic-range findingNephrotic syndrome codes capture the proteinuria; R80.x is unnecessary
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Documentation Requirements for Each Proteinuria Code

Documentation determines whether a proteinuria claim survives a payer audit. Each code has specific requirements that must be present at the time of claim submission.

For R80.0 — Isolated Proteinuria

  • Single episode of urinalysis showing proteinuria, whether detected by dipstick or quantitative testing.
  • No prior documentation of persistent or recurrent proteinuria in the record.
  • Provider assessment noting proteinuria as a finding without an established diagnosis.
  • Absence of documented diabetes, glomerular disease, or pregnancy context.

For Persistent Proteinuria ICD-10 (R80.1)

  • At least two separate urine test results confirming proteinuria, ideally separated by time.
  • Provider note referencing persistence, using terms such as “persistent,” “ongoing,” or “recurrent proteinuria.”
  • Documentation that workup for the underlying cause is in progress or was negative.
  • Quantitative urine protein values (UPCR or 24-hour urine) to support medical necessity for nephrology referral or advanced testing.

For N04.x — Nephrotic Range Proteinuria ICD-10

  • Quantitative protein measurement exceeding 3.5 g/day or UPCR greater than 3.5.
  • Provider documentation confirming nephrotic syndrome, rather than documenting only heavy proteinuria.
  • Documentation of associated findings: edema, hypoalbuminemia (serum albumin <3.0 g/dL), and hyperlipidemia.
  • Renal biopsy report confirming the morphologic pattern (required for N04.0–N04.8; N04.9 if biopsy not performed).

For DM with Proteinuria ICD-10 (E11.21)

  • Provider documentation confirming diabetic nephropathy, rather than documenting only proteinuria in a patient with diabetes.
  • Laboratory values: urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio, 24-hour urine protein, or UPCR.
  • CKD stage documented to support N18.x add-on code.
  • Explicit provider linkage between diabetes and kidney complications in the assessment.

For Proteinuria in Pregnancy ICD-10 (O12.1x)

  • Gestational age documented in weeks to determine correct trimester subcode.
  • Urine protein measurement, dipstick or quantitative, with results noted in the provider record.
  • Absence of hypertension documentation in the same encounter (if hypertension present, use O14.x preeclampsia codes instead).
  • Provider signature with date confirming the encounter occurred in the documented trimester.

Code Sequencing Rules for Proteinuria in Nephrology Billing

Correct sequencing depends on the care setting, underlying etiology, and whether proteinuria is the primary reason for evaluation or a secondary manifestation of another renal or systemic condition.

Outpatient Sequencing Rules

In outpatient settings, the first-listed diagnosis is the condition mainly responsible for services rendered. Sequencing proteinuria correctly is critical to justifying the level of E/M service billed.

  • If the patient presents specifically for evaluation of proteinuria, new or worsening, sequence the proteinuria code first (R80.x or condition-specific equivalent).
  • If the patient’s primary encounter is for CKD management and proteinuria is a monitored finding, sequence CKD first (N18.x) and add the proteinuria code additionally.
  • For diabetic patients, always sequence the diabetes code first per ICD-10-CM Chapter 4 guidelines, regardless of whether proteinuria prompted the visit.
  • Symptoms integral to the proteinuria diagnosis, such as foamy urine or edema, are not separately coded unless they carry distinct clinical significance beyond the proteinuria diagnosis.

Inpatient Sequencing Rules

In inpatient settings, the principal diagnosis is the condition established after study to be chiefly responsible for the admission.

  • If admitted for nephrotic syndrome workup, N04.x is the principal diagnosis.
  • If admitted for CKD with proteinuria as a complicating finding, N18.x is the principal diagnosis and proteinuria is additional.
  • If admitted for pre-eclampsia with proteinuria, O14.x is principal; O12.1x would not apply.
  • Acute kidney injury (N17.9) when caused by nephrotic syndrome or proteinuria-related glomerular disease may be coded additionally when documented and managed.

CPT Codes Commonly Paired with Proteinuria ICD-10 Codes in Nephrology

Every CPT code billed in nephrology requires a supporting ICD-10 diagnosis that establishes medical necessity. Proteinuria codes, whether R80.x, N04.x, or condition-specific, are among the most common medical necessity requirements in nephrology claims.

CPT CodeDescriptionProteinuria ICD-10 Pairing Notes
81001 / 81003Urinalysis with or without microscopyR80.x or condition-specific proteinuria code provides medical necessity for monitoring urinalysis in nephrology
82042 / 82043Urine protein quantitative / microalbuminR80.1, E11.21, N04.x, N18.x — medical necessity is established by the underlying nephrology diagnosis
82570Creatinine, urine (for UPCR calculation)Pairs with R80.1, N18.x, E11.21, or N04.x for monitoring protein excretion ratios
84156Protein, urine — quantitativeUsed for 24-hour urine protein collection; pairs with R80.1, N04.x, or N06.x for nephrotic syndrome workup
99213–99215Office E/M — established patientR80.x, N04.x, E11.21, or N18.x drive MDM complexity; proteinuria workup and management support higher E/M levels
99205 / 99215New or established patient, high complexity E/MN04.x or complex R80.1 with CKD justifies high-complexity MDM when multiple conditions are managed
00800 / 50300Renal biopsy (percutaneous)R80.1 or N04.9 when biopsy is ordered to establish morphology; N06.x or N04.x after results
90960–90962ESRD monthly managementN18.6 primary; E11.22 or E11.21 additional when diabetes with proteinuria is part of the clinical picture

Common Denial Patterns in Proteinuria Billing and How to Prevent Them

Proteinuria claims are frequently denied due to sequencing errors, insufficient specificity, or documentation that does not fully support the billed diagnosis and level of service. Here are the most common denial patterns in proteinuria billing and how to prevent them.

Denial TypeRoot CausePrevention Strategy
Specificity denialR80.9 used when documented findings support a more specific codeImplement coder query protocol: any R80.9 claim requires attestation that no specific code applies
Excludes1 violationR80.0 submitted alongside N06.x after biopsy result availableAudit claims post-biopsy; replace R80.0 with N06.x when morphologic findings are documented
Pregnancy code mismatchR80.x used instead of O12.1x for pregnant patientsBuild payer scrubber or coding checklist: pregnancy status check triggers O12 code family review
Diabetes sequencing errorR80.x sequenced before E11.21 on diabetic nephropathy claimsApply Chapter 4 diabetes-first sequencing rule; audit DM nephrology claims quarterly
Medical necessity failureR80.9 paired with high-complexity nephrology CPT codes without supporting complexity documentationEnsure MDM documentation reflects proteinuria workup complexity; R80.9 alone rarely supports 99214-99215
Nephrotic range miscodedN04.9 used without meeting the >3.5 g/day proteinuria thresholdConfirm quantitative lab values before N04.x coding; R80.1 is appropriate until threshold is met and documented

Nephrology Billing Best Practices for Proteinuria Claims

Accurate proteinuria coding in a nephrology practice requires a proactive documentation and coding workflow. The following best practices reduce denials and strengthen compliance in your nephrology practice.

1. Establish a Provider Query Protocol for Ambiguous Proteinuria Documentation

When documentation states only ‘proteinuria’ without specifying type, persistence, or cause, coders should issue a provider query before assigning a code. The query should ask: Is this isolated, persistent, or associated with a known condition? Has a biopsy been performed?

2. Audit R80.9 Usage Monthly

In a nephrology practice, R80.9 should appear in a small minority of claims. A high volume of R80.9 claims relative to R80.1, N04.x, or E11.21 signals under-documentation and missed specificity. Pull monthly reports and flag claims where the billed E/M complexity does not align with R80.9 specificity.

3. Link Every Renal Lab CPT to a Diagnosis That Justifies It

CPT codes 82042, 82043, 82570, and 84156 require a diagnosis code that establishes a clinical indication. R80.1, N04.9, E11.21, and N18.x are all strong medical necessity anchors. R80.9 alone for a complex nephrology lab panel may trigger medical necessity review.

4. Train Front Office Staff on Pregnancy Proteinuria Routing

Gestational proteinuria (O12.1x) must be coded by trimester. Ensure front-office or EHR workflows capture gestational age at each encounter for obstetric-nephrology co-management cases. Missing trimester documentation defaults to O12.10 — an unspecified code that may trigger payer edit flags.

5. Review Diabetes Nephropathy Claims for Chapter 4 Compliance

ICD-10-CM Chapter 4 guidelines require that diabetes codes be sequenced first when the provider documents a causal link to kidney disease. Automated claim scrubbers often flag claims where R80.x leads and E11.x follows for the same encounter in a diabetic patient.

Picture of Warda Razzaq
Warda Razzaq
Healthcare Copywriter | Specialist in Medical Billing & RCM

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