Radiology reports are rich with clinical detail—abnormalities, precise anatomy, and incidental findings—but that level of detail doesn’t always translate cleanly into ICD-10 coding.
In my experience working with coding teams across radiology practices, this “radiology ICD-10 disconnect” is one of the most persistent compliance and revenue challenges we face, particularly in outpatient settings, where specific ICD-10-CM guidelines apply.
Let’s start with a familiar scenario.
A radiologist documents:
“Findings suggestive of early pneumonia. Recommend clinical correlation.”
What often gets coded?
J18.9 – Pneumonia, unspecified organism.
The problem? That’s a definitive diagnosis code. According to the ICD-10-CM Outpatient Coding Guidelines, Section IV.H, coders should not assign codes for diagnoses described as probable, suspected, questionable, rule out, or consistent with. Instead, coders are instructed to assign codes that reflect the highest degree of certainty for that encounter—such as abnormal findings or symptoms.
In this case, R91.8 – Other nonspecific abnormal finding of lung field would be more appropriate. This example illustrates how easily the disconnect between radiologist phrasing and ICD-10 expectations can result in noncompliant or unsupported coding.
Three Key Disconnects in Radiology Coding
- Suggestive Language Coded as Diagnoses
Radiology impressions frequently include terms like “likely,” “suspicious for,” or “cannot exclude,” especially when recommending further clinical correlation. These should be coded using signs, symptoms, or abnormal findings, unless the interpreting radiologist clearly states a definitive diagnosis. This aligns with Guideline IV.D, which permits the use of symptom and sign codes when a diagnosis hasn’t been established. - Missed Specificity
Radiology reports often contain precise documentation, including laterality, exact anatomic locations, or presence of implanted devices. Yet we still see unspecified ICD-10 codes assigned. This undermines both compliance and reimbursement accuracy. As outlined in Guideline IV.F.3, coding to the highest level of specificity supported by the documentation is required. Failing to do so not only increases denial risk but can also reduce clinical clarity in the record. - Incidental Findings Ignored or Miscoded
Radiologists are trained to document all findings—not just those related to the clinical indication. It is up to the coder to determine whether those findings are reportable, based on documentation context, payer policy, and relevance to the encounter. Per Guideline IV.K, when coding for diagnostic services, only confirmed diagnoses from the interpretation should be coded. Signs and symptoms should not be coded in addition, unless they are unrelated and pertinent.
Why It Matters
This disconnect impacts the following:
- Medical necessity determinations (including LCD/NCD policy adherence)
- Risk adjustment coding accuracy
- Payer audits and denials
- Quality metrics and reporting
Best Practices to Bridge the Gap
- Read the full report, not just the impression.
- Code to the highest level of specificity available.
- Query providers when documentation is ambiguous or incomplete.
- Collaborate with radiologists to ensure alignment on terminology and documentation practices.
- Follow ICD-10-CM outpatient guidelines—always.
Radiology coding is more than assigning diagnosis codes. It’s about interpreting narrative clinical detail through the lens of regulatory compliance. Coders serve as the bridge between what’s seen on the image and what’s reported on the claim.
With stronger documentation awareness and adherence to ICD-10-CM guidelines, we can reduce denials, protect revenue, and ensure our coding tells the full story—accurately and compliantly.
Programming note: Listen to Laura Manser report this story live this morning on Talk Ten Tuesday with Chuck Buck and Angela Comfort, 10 Eastern.
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