Orthopedic practices today face unprecedented financial pressure. The growing complexity of AI-enhanced imaging, robotic-assisted surgeries, and ASC billing has added significant administrative and coding challenges. At the same time, reimbursements steadily decline—exhibiting a 26.2% decrease from 2016 to 2024 in orthopedic surgery payments, and a 39% reduction in total hip arthroplasty reimbursement since 2017.
Surgeons already struggle to balance clinical responsibilities with administrative demands, leaving little time to navigate evolving reimbursement rules or manage denials. These operational realities make it essential for orthopedic groups to identify revenue leaks early and adopt strategies that protect—and grow—their financial health.
The Revenue Pressure Facing Orthopedic Practices Today
Orthopedic practices operate in one of the most financially complex specialty billing environments in medicine. Procedure-specific coding demands anatomical precision, laterality documentation, surgical approach, implant details, and complex modifier sequences. As patient volumes rise and reimbursements decline, the margin between a profitable and a struggling practice increasingly depends on billing accuracy and denial prevention.
Common Revenue Leaks in Orthopedic Practices
Revenue leakage in orthopedic practices occurs at multiple points in the billing cycle. Identifying and closing these leaks is the foundation of an effective orthopedic revenue optimization strategy.
1. High Denial Rates: MUE Edits & Modifier Misuse
Orthopedics experiences some of the highest denial rates across all medical specialties, driven by its heavy reliance on multiple procedures, injections, imaging, and surgical interventions in a single visit. Frequent denial triggers include:
- MUE (Medically Unlikely Edits) errors for services billed at frequencies beyond CMS-established maximums
- Incorrect or missing modifiers 59 or 25—especially when reporting separate E/M and procedure services on the same date
- Insufficient medical necessity documentation, causing payers to reject claims even when the care delivered was clinically appropriate
Each denied claim results in delayed payment, increased administrative rework, or complete revenue loss if not properly appealed. A structured pre-submission review process dramatically reduces this exposure.
2. Imaging Documentation Gaps
Orthopedic practices generate a high volume of imaging—X-rays, MRIs, CT scans, and ultrasound-guided injections. Revenue is regularly lost when:
- Imaging documentation is incomplete or fails to explicitly link findings to the procedure performed
- Operative notes lack the required anatomical specificity for the codes billed
- Clinic notes don’t support the level of service (E/M code) billed on the same date as a procedure
Even minor documentation gaps can trigger denials or downcoding, particularly as payers increase scrutiny around linking documentation to medical necessity.
3. Missed Fracture Care Global Periods
Fracture care includes bundled follow-up visits, and navigating global periods is a persistent challenge for orthopedic billers. Revenue leaks occur when:
- Practices forget to bill the initial fracture care code—losing the entire episode payment
- Follow-up visits are incorrectly billed as separate E/M encounters instead of as included global period services
- Procedures performed within the global period are improperly documented, creating both underbilling and overbilling risk
This creates compounded financial exposure: lost revenue from underbilling and potential audit liability from overbilling.
4. Undercoding Complex Joint Replacements
Total joint replacements for hips, knees, and shoulders involve intricate coding rules—especially when robotics and advanced implant technology are involved. Undercoding happens when:
- Clinical complexity is not fully captured in the primary procedure code
- Additional procedures performed at the same session are bundled unintentionally rather than reported separately with proper modifiers
- Implant add-on codes, imaging guidance codes, or surgical assistant codes are omitted
Given that total joint arthroplasty is one of the highest-value orthopedic service lines—and that reimbursement has already declined 39% since 2017—undercoding in this area represents substantial, compounding revenue loss.
Strategies to Maximize Orthopedic Surgery Revenue
1. Use Modifiers Accurately—A Small Change That Drives Big Reimbursement Gains
Orthopedics relies heavily on precise modifier use. The specialty commonly involves multiple procedures in a single visit, requiring modifiers 51, 59, 25, and 57—as well as casting/strapping codes and imaging bundling rules. Revenue is lost when modifiers are underused, misused, or unsupported by documentation. A pre-billing quality check process—including provider education—significantly reduces preventable denials.
2. Improve DME Billing to Support Cash Flow
Orthopedic clinics dispense significant volumes of durable medical equipment—braces, boots, slings, immobilizers. DME billing has extremely high denial rates due to eligibility issues, HCPCS coding errors, and documentation gaps. Key actions include:
Verifying DME eligibility before dispensing equipment to the patient
Ensuring correct HCPCS codes and required modifiers are applied for each item
Integrating inventory management systems with billing platforms for clean, complete charge capture
When optimized, DME billing becomes a reliable and profitable revenue stream that most practices significantly underperform on.
3. Stay Current on CMS Musculoskeletal Coding Updates
Annual CMS coding updates significantly impact orthopedic reimbursement. Changes often include new musculoskeletal CPT codes, revised guidance for arthroplasty and fracture management, and updated relative value units (RVUs). Keeping coding teams continuously trained ensures practices remain compliant and capture every newly available reimbursement opportunity.
4. Strengthen Compliance in ASC and Outpatient Settings
Payers are increasing audits across several high-growth orthopedic areas: the rapid shift from inpatient to outpatient surgeries, growth of orthopedic ASCs, and imaging bundling. ASC-specific coding rules differ materially from office or hospital billing, and even minor errors lead to repeated denials. Clear documentation templates, preauthorization workflows, and specialty coders experienced in ASC billing significantly reduce this risk.
5. Optimize Orthopedic Injection Billing
Joint injections and ultrasound-guided injections are common orthopedic services but are frequently denied. Common issues include missing anatomical site documentation, incorrect ultrasound guidance codes, and insufficient medical necessity documentation. Standardized injection documentation templates and charge capture audits can substantially improve reimbursement rates for this high-volume service line.
Why Partner with an Orthopedic Revenue Cycle Management Specialist?
Given the coding complexity and financial pressure on orthopedic practices, partnering with an experienced orthopedic RCM company can dramatically strengthen operational efficiency and profitability. A strong RCM partner provides:
- Workflow audits that identify revenue leakage points before they compound into major losses
- Certified orthopedic coders who specialize in modifier sequences, global periods, and implant coding
- Automated denial tracking with root-cause analysis—preventing the same issues from recurring
- Pre-billing quality checks so claims go out clean the first time, reducing rework and AR days
- ASC-specific expertise for practices operating or transitioning to ambulatory settings
- Continuous coding education to keep billing teams current as CMS updates and payer rules evolve
For orthopedic practices aiming to protect revenue while keeping their focus on patient care, collaboration with a specialized RCM partner is not just beneficial—it is essential for long-term financial sustainability.
Stop Leaving Orthopedic Revenue on the Table
Cosentus provides specialized orthopedic revenue cycle management—designed to eliminate denials, capture missed revenue, and give your practice a financial foundation as solid as the care you deliver.
