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How to Code Sepsis in ICD-10-CM: A Guide for Medical Coders
Sepsis is one of the most complex and highly tested topics in medical coding.
Understanding how to code sepsis correctly in ICD-10-CM is critical for accurate
reimbursement, compliance, and passing the CPC exam. This guide provides a clear
breakdown of the sepsis coding guidelines, sequencing rules, and key codes every
coder needs to know.
What Is Sepsis? Key Definitions for Medical Coders
Accurate sepsis coding begins with understanding the clinical terminology.
Sepsis is a life-threatening systemic response to infection, coded using the A40–A41 category.
Severe sepsis is sepsis with acute organ dysfunction, requiring an additional code
from subcategory R65.2-. Septic shock is a subset of severe sepsis involving circulatory
failure, coded as R65.21. Bacteremia (R78.81) is simply bacteria in the blood without
systemic symptoms and should not be coded when sepsis is documented.
| Condition | ICD-10-CM Code | Key Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Sepsis (unspecified) | A41.9 | Code the underlying systemic infection |
| Sepsis due to MSSA | A41.01 | Organism-specific code |
| Sepsis due to MRSA | A41.02 | Organism-specific code |
| Sepsis due to E. coli | A41.51 | Organism-specific code |
| Severe sepsis without shock | R65.20 | Sequence after the systemic infection code |
| Severe sepsis with septic shock | R65.21 | Never a principal diagnosis; add organ dysfunction codes |
| Bacteremia | R78.81 | Do not code if sepsis is documented |
Sepsis Sequencing Rules
The ICD-10-CM coding guidelines provide strict sequencing instructions.
Getting the principal diagnosis correct is essential for proper reimbursement
and is frequently tested on the CPC certification exam.
The sepsis code is sequenced first as the principal diagnosis, followed by the
localized infection.
The localized infection is the principal diagnosis, followed by the sepsis code.
Sequence the complication code first, then the systemic infection code.
The device complication code is sequenced first, followed by the sepsis code.
Coding Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock
Coding severe sepsis requires a minimum of three codes, and septic shock
requires three steps:
- Code the underlying systemic infection.
- Code severe sepsis (R65.20 or R65.21).
- Code the acute organ dysfunction.
R65.20 and R65.21 can never be assigned as the principal diagnosis.
The systemic infection must always be sequenced first.
CPC Exam Tips for Sepsis Coding
Sepsis questions appear frequently on the AAPC CPC exam. Key strategies:
determine whether sepsis was present on admission or developed later,
look for documented organ dysfunction to identify severe sepsis,
and never assume sepsis based on lab values alone.
Ready to Master Sepsis Coding and Pass Your CPC Exam?
At Certify Me Now Medical Coding, we teach the official coding guidelines
for every chapter along with proven test-taking strategies to help you
earn your certification.