Back to HomeBeta

ICD-10 Coding for Granulomatous Lung Disease(J84.10, D86.0)

Complete ICD-10-CM coding and documentation guide for Granulomatous Lung Disease. Includes clinical validation requirements, documentation requirements, and coding pitfalls.

Also known as:

Pulmonary GranulomaGranulomatous Pneumonitis

Related ICD-10 Code Ranges

Complete code families applicable to Granulomatous Lung Disease

J84.1Primary Range

Other interstitial pulmonary diseases with fibrosis

Includes unspecified pulmonary granulomas and granulomatous pneumonitis.

Sarcoidosis of lung

Used when sarcoidosis is confirmed with lung involvement.

Tuberculosis

Used for granulomas caused by tuberculosis.

Code Comparison: When to Use Each Code

Compare key differences between these codes to ensure accurate selection

CodeDescriptionWhen to UseKey Documentation
J84.10Unspecified interstitial pulmonary diseaseUse for unspecified pulmonary granulomas not linked to infection.
  • CT showing calcified nodules
  • Biopsy confirming non-infectious granuloma
D86.0Sarcoidosis of lungUse when sarcoidosis is confirmed with lung involvement.
  • Biopsy confirming non-caseating granulomas
  • Elevated ACE levels

Clinical Decision Support

Always review the patient's clinical documentation thoroughly. When in doubt, choose the more specific code and ensure documentation supports it.

Key Information: ICD-10 code for granulomatous lung disease

Essential facts and insights about Granulomatous Lung Disease

The ICD-10 code for unspecified granulomatous lung disease is J84.10, while D86.0 is used for sarcoidosis of the lung.

Primary ICD-10-CM Codes for granulomatous lung disease

Unspecified interstitial pulmonary disease
Billable Code

Decision Criteria

clinical Criteria

  • CT shows calcified nodules without active infection.

documentation Criteria

  • Biopsy confirms non-infectious granuloma.

Applicable To

  • Pulmonary granuloma
  • Calcified granuloma

Excludes

Clinical Validation Requirements

  • CT showing calcified nodules
  • Biopsy confirming non-infectious granuloma

Code-Specific Risks

  • Misclassification with infectious granulomas

Coding Notes

  • Ensure documentation specifies non-infectious nature to avoid misclassification.

Ancillary Codes

Additional codes that should be used in conjunction with the main diagnosis codes when applicable.

Other nonspecific abnormal finding of lung field

R91.8
Use when imaging shows abnormalities without a definitive diagnosis.

Differential Codes

Alternative codes to consider when ruling out similar conditions to the primary diagnosis.

Sarcoidosis of lung

D86.0
Requires biopsy confirmation of non-caseating granulomas.

Tuberculosis of lung

A15.0
Requires positive AFB culture and necrotizing granulomas.

Unspecified interstitial pulmonary disease

J84.10
Used for unspecified granulomas without sarcoidosis confirmation.

Documentation & Coding Risks

Avoid these common documentation and coding issues when documenting Granulomatous Lung Disease to ensure proper reimbursement, maintain compliance, and reduce audit risk. These guidelines are particularly important when using ICD-10 code J84.10.

Impact

Clinical: Misdiagnosis of infectious vs. non-infectious granulomas., Regulatory: Non-compliance with coding standards., Financial: Potential claim denials.

Mitigation Strategy

Always document infection status with imaging and biopsy results.

Impact

Reimbursement: Incorrect coding can lead to denied claims., Compliance: Non-compliance with coding guidelines., Data Quality: Inaccurate clinical data representation.

Mitigation Strategy

Ensure biopsy confirms non-caseating granulomas for D86.0.

Impact

Using J84.10 without proper documentation of non-infectious granulomas.

Mitigation Strategy

Ensure all imaging and biopsy findings are documented.

Documentation errors, coding pitfalls, and audit risks are interconnected aspects of medical coding and billing. Addressing all three areas helps ensure accurate coding, optimal reimbursement, and regulatory compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about ICD-10 coding for Granulomatous Lung Disease, with expert answers to help guide accurate code selection and documentation.

Documentation Templates for Granulomatous Lung Disease

Use these documentation templates to ensure complete and accurate documentation for Granulomatous Lung Disease. These templates include all required elements for proper coding and billing.

Pulmonary Granuloma Evaluation

Specialty: Pulmonology

Required Elements

  • CT findings
  • Biopsy results
  • Infection status

Example Documentation

Assessment: Pulmonary granulomas (J84.10) - CT: 4mm calcified nodule RUL, no cavitation - Biopsy: Non-necrotizing granuloma, AFB/Fungal stains negative - No constitutional symptoms - Plan: Annual CT surveillance; no treatment indicated.

Examples: Poor vs. Good Documentation

Poor Documentation Example
Lung nodules seen. Follow-up in 6 months.
Good Documentation Example
Pulmonary granulomas (J84.10) - CT: 4mm calcified nodule RUL, no cavitation - Biopsy: Non-necrotizing granuloma, AFB/Fungal stains negative - Plan: Annual CT surveillance.
Explanation
The good example provides detailed findings and a clear follow-up plan.

Need help with ICD-10 coding for Granulomatous Lung Disease? Ask your questions below.

Ask about any ICD-10 CM code, or paste a medical note

We build tools for
clinician happiness.

Learn More at Freed.ai
Back to HomeBeta

Built by Freed

Try Freed for free for 7 days.

Learn more