The Most Commonly Denied Gastroenterology CPT® Codes
May 7, 2026
Commonly Denied CPT Codes in Gastroenterology often involve colonoscopy classification, endoscopy documentation, modifier selection, pathology relationships, anesthesia coordination, payer-specific screening rules, and medical necessity support. Gastroenterology practices may see denials on high-volume services even when care is clinically appropriate because the claim, report, diagnosis codes, authorization details, and payer policy must all tell the same reimbursement story.
GI billing is especially vulnerable because one patient encounter can include evaluation and management, a diagnostic or screening procedure, biopsy, polypectomy, lesion removal, anesthesia, pathology, and facility components. When any part of that encounter is coded or documented inconsistently, payers may deny, reduce, bundle, or pend the claim for review.
Denial Snapshot
Most common GI denial themes: screening versus diagnostic mismatch, missing medical necessity, modifier errors, bundled endoscopy services, frequency limits, prior authorization problems, and incomplete procedure documentation.
The codes below are not the only GI services that may deny, but they represent common pressure points for gastroenterology revenue cycles. They also show why denial prevention must start before claim submission, not after the remittance arrives.
| CPT® Code | Common GI Service | Frequent Denial Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 45378 | Diagnostic colonoscopy | Screening versus diagnostic mismatch |
| 45380 | Colonoscopy with biopsy | Bundling, documentation, diagnosis support |
| 45385 | Colonoscopy with lesion removal by snare | Modifier issues, pathology support, payer edits |
| 43239 | EGD with biopsy | Medical necessity, bundling, duplicate review |
| 43235 | Diagnostic EGD | Diagnosis support and frequency limits |
| 91110 | Capsule endoscopy | Prior authorization and medical necessity |
| 91010 | Esophageal motility study | Incomplete diagnostic history |
| 99214 | Established patient office visit | Same-day procedure bundling and modifier support |
GI Denials Usually Follow a Pattern
Recurring denials often point to the same workflow gaps, including documentation, modifier usage, authorization, and payer policy alignment.
Guarantee: We’ll help identify the CPT® codes and denial categories affecting your gastroenterology revenue cycle.
Colonoscopy Denials and Screening Classification Problems
Colonoscopy codes are among the most closely reviewed services in gastroenterology because they can move between preventive, screening, surveillance, and diagnostic categories. A patient may schedule a screening colonoscopy, but the encounter may become diagnostic when symptoms, abnormal findings, biopsies, or lesion removal are documented. That shift can change payer processing, patient responsibility, modifier expectations, and coverage rules.
Documentation Reminder
Before claim submission: Confirm whether the record supports screening, surveillance, diagnostic evaluation, biopsy, polypectomy, or another therapeutic intervention. The diagnosis codes and modifiers should match that clinical pathway.
Why 45378, 45380, and 45385 Are Common Denial Targets
CPT® 45378 may deny when a payer expects preventive screening information but receives a diagnostic diagnosis, or when frequency limits have already been met. CPT® 45380 and 45385 may deny when biopsy or snare removal is not supported by the procedure note, when pathology does not align with the reported service, or when payer edits bundle multiple colonoscopy techniques performed in the same session.
These denials can be financially significant because colonoscopy volume is high and many GI practices depend on efficient endoscopy reimbursement. Even a modest denial rate across common colonoscopy codes can create unnecessary rework, delayed cash flow, and patient billing confusion.
| Colonoscopy Scenario | Potential Billing Issue | Operational Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Screening turns diagnostic | Diagnosis or modifier does not reflect findings | Patient balance questions and payer reprocessing |
| Biopsy performed | Procedure note lacks clear biopsy site or reason | Medical record requests and delayed payment |
| Snare polypectomy performed | Removal method not clearly documented | Downcoding, denial, or bundling review |
Endoscopy Denials for EGD and Upper GI Procedures
EGD codes such as 43235 and 43239 may deny when the payer does not see a clear medical reason for the procedure, when documentation does not support biopsy, or when repeat testing appears too frequent. Since GERD, dysphagia, abdominal pain, anemia, nausea, and surveillance indications can involve payer-specific criteria, the diagnosis alone may not always be enough.
Strong medical necessity documentation helps connect the patient’s symptoms, prior treatment, findings, and procedure rationale. Without that connection, the claim may look unsupported even when the clinical decision was appropriate.
Medical Necessity for Upper Endoscopy
Payers may review whether conservative management was attempted, whether alarm symptoms were present, whether prior findings justify surveillance, or whether the ordered service matches the documented condition. EGD denials often appear when the record uses general symptoms without enough context or when repeated studies are billed without a clear change in status.
Revenue Cycle Insight
GI practices should monitor: repeat EGD frequency, diagnosis-to-procedure alignment, biopsy documentation, pathology follow-up, and payer requests for supporting records.
| EGD Code | Documentation Needed | Common Denial Concern |
|---|---|---|
| 43235 | Symptoms, indication, findings, and diagnostic reason | Procedure not supported as medically necessary |
| 43239 | Biopsy site, reason, findings, and pathology connection | Biopsy not supported or bundled incorrectly |
| Repeat EGD | Interval history and reason another study was needed | Frequency limit or duplicate service review |
Modifier Denials in Gastroenterology Claims
Modifier denials are common because GI encounters often combine visits, procedures, multiple techniques, screening rules, and same-day services. Modifiers may be needed to show that an E/M visit was separately identifiable, that a screening colonoscopy converted to a diagnostic or therapeutic service, or that multiple procedural services were distinct under payer policy.
Practices that build modifier review into claims submission and edits can often catch avoidable issues before claims leave the billing system. This is especially important when providers perform high-volume endoscopy services across multiple payer contracts.
| Modifier | GI Billing Use | Potential Denial Issue |
|---|---|---|
| 33 | Preventive service designation | Does not align with diagnosis or procedure findings |
| PT | Screening colorectal test converted to diagnostic or therapeutic service | Payer does not accept or expects different supporting data |
| 25 | Separately identifiable E/M on same day as procedure | Visit note does not support separate medical decision-making |
| 59 | Distinct procedural service | Insufficient support for separate service or site |
| XS | Separate structure or organ | Anatomic distinction not clear in the report |
| 52 | Reduced services | Incomplete explanation of reduced work |
Modifier Errors Can Turn Clean GI Claims Into Denials
A strong modifier review process helps connect the procedure note, diagnosis, payer rules, and claim format before submission.
Guarantee: We’ll help review where modifier-related denials are affecting your GI reimbursement.
Capsule Endoscopy and Motility Testing Denials
Capsule endoscopy and motility testing can be vulnerable to denials because payers often require specific clinical criteria before reimbursement. CPT® 91110 may require documentation of suspected small bowel bleeding, prior negative studies, iron deficiency anemia evaluation, Crohn’s disease assessment, or another qualifying indication. CPT® 91010 may require symptoms, prior evaluation, and a clear reason that motility testing was needed.
Prior Authorization and Payer Criteria
These services may deny when authorization is missing, when the payer does not consider the indication covered, or when the documentation does not show that prerequisite testing was completed. GI teams should not assume that clinical complexity alone will satisfy payer criteria. The record must show why the test was necessary under the payer’s coverage rules.
Compliance Reminder
Check before scheduling: Confirm authorization requirements, diagnosis coverage, prerequisite testing, frequency limits, and documentation expectations for capsule endoscopy and motility studies.
Consistent alignment with payer policy requirements reduces the chance that high-value diagnostic services will be delayed or denied. It also helps front-office and clinical teams understand when payer criteria should be confirmed before the patient arrives.
| Service Category | What Payers Often Review | Denial Prevention Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Capsule endoscopy | Prior testing, diagnosis, and covered indication | Verify criteria before scheduling |
| Motility testing | Symptoms, prior studies, and clinical rationale | Document why the test changes management |
| Repeat testing | Frequency, interval history, and new findings | Show what changed since the last test |
Same-Day E/M and Procedure Denials
GI practices often see patients for consults, follow-ups, chronic disease management, and procedure planning. When an office visit is billed on the same date as a procedure, payers may deny the E/M service as bundled unless the documentation supports a separately identifiable evaluation. This frequently affects established patient codes such as 99214 when billed with endoscopy or other GI procedures.
Separating Visit Work From Procedure Work
The E/M note should support the medical decision-making that is separate from the procedure itself. A brief pre-procedure update may not support a separately billable visit, but a distinct assessment for new symptoms, medication management, disease flare, abnormal labs, or complex treatment planning may support separate reporting when documented clearly.
Billing Alignment Check
Ask before billing: Did the provider document a separate problem, assessment, plan, and decision-making process beyond the routine procedure work?
Same-day denials also create workflow stress because appeals often require both the visit note and procedure report. Clear templates, provider education, and pre-bill review can reduce avoidable rework and improve first-pass claim acceptance.
Bundling, Multiple Procedures, and Endoscopy Edits
Multiple GI procedures may be performed during the same session. A colonoscopy may include biopsy, polypectomy, control of bleeding, ablation, dilation, or other work. Upper endoscopy may also involve multiple techniques. Payers and coding edits may bundle certain combinations, deny lower-valued services, or require documentation showing why separate reporting is appropriate.
When denial data is organized by CPT® code, modifier, payer, diagnosis, and denial reason, practices can see whether the issue is coding selection, documentation, payer policy, or a training gap. QuestNS resources on claims auditing and quality control emphasize the importance of catching billing problems before they become denials.
| Bundling Concern | Example Issue | Financial Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Multiple colonoscopy techniques | Biopsy and snare removal reported together without support | Partial denial or reduced reimbursement |
| EGD with biopsy and other service | Report does not support separate procedural work | Bundling edit or records request |
| Same-day E/M and procedure | Modifier 25 unsupported by note | E/M denial and appeal workload |
Bundling Denials Require More Than a Quick Resubmission
GI practices need to know whether the problem is documentation, coding, modifier selection, payer policy, or claim editing.
Guarantee: We’ll help organize your denial patterns into actionable billing priorities.
Using Denial Data To Strengthen GI Billing Performance
Denied CPT® codes should be reviewed as part of a larger revenue cycle pattern. A single denial may be a one-time documentation issue, but repeated denials by payer or procedure code usually point to a process problem. GI practices should track denials by CPT® code, provider, location, payer, modifier, diagnosis, authorization status, denial category, appeal outcome, and final reimbursement.
What GI Practices Should Track
A denial dashboard can help leaders separate preventable denials from payer behavior. For example, if 45385 denials cluster around one payer, the issue may involve payer-specific modifier rules. If 43239 denials appear across multiple payers, the practice may need to review biopsy documentation or diagnosis selection. If 91110 denials occur before records are requested, the scheduling team may need a stronger authorization workflow.
A structured approach to denials management and appeals gives billing teams a clearer way to prioritize work. Instead of chasing every denial with the same process, practices can focus on high-dollar, high-volume, and highly recoverable claim categories.
Appealing Commonly Denied Gastroenterology CPT® Codes
Not every denial should be appealed, but many GI denials deserve a closer look. Appeals may be appropriate when the documentation supports the procedure, the payer applied the wrong policy, the service was authorized, or the modifier was supported but not recognized. The strongest appeals usually include the procedure report, office notes, pathology results when relevant, authorization records, payer policy references, and a concise explanation of why the service meets coverage criteria.
Audit Risk Alert
Do not appeal blindly: Repeated appeals without correcting root causes can waste staff time and may signal that documentation, coding, or payer policy workflows need review.
QuestNS describes appeals for denied claims as a process that depends on payer guidelines, supporting records, and timely follow-up. For GI practices, that means appeal packets should be specific to the denied code, not generic. A 45385 denial needs different support than a 91110 denial, and a same-day E/M denial needs different support than a screening frequency denial.
| Denial Type | Appeal Support | Root Cause Review |
|---|---|---|
| Medical necessity | Symptoms, findings, prior treatment, and clinical rationale | Provider documentation quality |
| Authorization | Approval number, date range, and payer confirmation | Scheduling and eligibility workflow |
| Modifier denial | Separate note, distinct service support, or preventive conversion detail | Coding review and claim edits |
Need Help Reducing GI Claim Denials?
QuestNS helps gastroenterology practices identify denial trends, strengthen documentation workflows, and improve reimbursement performance.
Guarantee: We’ll help pinpoint your highest-risk CPT® codes and give you a clear path for improvement.
Turning GI Denial Trends Into Better Reimbursement
Commonly denied CPT® codes in gastroenterology usually reveal more than isolated claim errors. They show where documentation, coding, authorization, modifier selection, payer policy review, and claim editing need better alignment. Colonoscopy, EGD, capsule endoscopy, motility testing, same-day E/M services, and bundled procedures all require clean coordination between clinical records and billing workflows.
GI practices that monitor denials by CPT® code and denial reason can respond with more precision. Instead of reacting to denials after payment is delayed, they can strengthen front-end checks, provider documentation, coder review, and appeal strategy. That shift helps protect revenue, reduce administrative rework, and create a more predictable billing process.
For informational purposes only.

