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Anemia ICD 10

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According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), over 3 million Americans are affected by anemia every year. That makes anemia one of the most common blood disorders in the United States. Anemia marked by low red blood cell count or low haemoglobin levels. Understanding the ICD-10 code for anemia is essential for accurate diagnosis, billing, and effective treatment planning in healthcare settings.

Let’s explore the Anemia ICD-10 codes based upon the types and confitions including category-specific such as Iron Deficiency Anemia (D50.0, D50.1, D50.8, D50.9), Megaloblastic (Nutritional) Anemia (D51.0, D51.3, D52.0, D52.9), and Hemolytic Anemia (D55.0, D55.1, D56.0, D57.0, D58.9), along with D64.9, D50.9, and other frequently used diagnosis codes.

Coding to Different Types and Conditions for Anemia

Here are the complete coding details based on the relative conditions and types of anemia:

1. ICD 10 Code for Anemia Unspecified – D64.9

When the cause of anemia is unclear, coders often use the ICD 10 code for anemia unspecified (D64.9).

  • ICD 10 Code: D64.9
  • Description: Anemia, unspecified
  • Category: D64 — Other anemias
  • Usage: When the type or cause of anemia is not documented or determined.

Example:

A patient presents with fatigue and low hemoglobin, but further tests are pending — code D64.9 is appropriate.

2. Iron Deficiency Anemia (IDA)

Pregnant, breastfeeding women, and people who don’t get enough iron from food may be at higher risk of iron deficiency.

  • ICD 10 Code for Iron Deficiency Anemia: D50.9 – Iron deficiency anemia, unspecified.
  • Common in: Women, children, patients with poor diet or chronic blood loss.
  • Symptoms: Fatigue, pallor, dizziness, brittle nails.
  • Documentation Tip: Specify if due to blood loss or dietary deficiency when known.

Anemia of Chronic Disease

If it’s 3 months or older, it’s chronic.

  • ICD 10 Code: D63.8 – Anemia in other chronic diseases classified elsewhere
  • Alternate: D63.1 – Anemia in chronic kidney disease (CKD)
  • Usage: When anemia occurs secondary to chronic inflammatory or systemic diseases.

Examples:

  • ICD 10 code for anemia in chronic kidney disease: D63.1
  • ICD 10 anemia of CKD / ESRD: D63.1
Associated ConditionICD 10 CodeNotes
Chronic kidney diseaseD63.1Use with CKD stage codes (N18.-)
Malignancy or infectionD63.0If due to neoplastic disease
Other chronic illnessD63.8General use

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3. Macrocytic and Microcytic Anemia

According to the NIH, the normal size of red blood cells (RBCs) is between 80 to 100.

Microcytic anemia involves smaller-than-normal red blood cells (<80fL), while Macrocytic anemia involves larger-than-normal red blood cells (>100fL).

TypeICD 10 CodeFeaturesCommon Causes
Macrocytic anemia ICD 10D53.9Large red cellsB12 or folate deficiency
Microcytic anemia ICD 10D50.9Small red cellsIron deficiency
  • Megaloblastic anemia ICD 10: D53.1 – due to folate or B12 deficiency
  • Pernicious anemia ICD 10: D51.0 – autoimmune lack of intrinsic factor

4. Aplastic and Hemolytic Anemia

Occurs when bone marrow’s stem cells stop producing the required numbers of red blood cells.

TypeICD 10 CodeDescription
Aplastic anemia ICD 10 codeD61.9Bone marrow failure leading to low RBCs
Hemolytic anemia ICD 10D55–D59Premature destruction of RBCs
Autoimmune hemolytic anemiaD59.1Common in lupus or autoimmune disorders

Symptoms:

Fatigue, jaundice, rapid heartbeat, dark urine.

5. Anemia in Pregnancy

Happens when the body lacks enough red blood cells to carry oxygen; usually due to a lack of iron.

  • ICD 10 Code: O99.013 – Anemia complicating pregnancy, third trimester
  • Variants exist for first (O99.011) and second trimester (O99.012).
  • Always code trimester and specify if due to iron deficiency or chronic disease.

Example:

A pregnant woman diagnosed with iron deficiency anemia in the second trimester → O99.012 + D50.9

6. Anemia Due to Chemotherapy

Characterized by a drop in red blood cells due to chemotherapy.

  • ICD 10 Code: D64.81 – Anemia due to antineoplastic chemotherapy
  • Documentation Tip: Specify “chemotherapy-related” to distinguish from anemia due to cancer (D63.0).

Example:

A breast cancer patient receiving chemo with low hemoglobin: D64.81

7. Normocytic and Nutritional Anemia

As the name suggests, nutritional anemia is caused by a lack of essential nutrients. While the normocytic is caused by the lack of red blood cells.

  • ICD 10 Code for Normocytic Anemia: D64.9 (if cause not specified)
  • Nutritional anemia ICD 10: D53.9 – Other nutritional anemia
  • Often seen in malnutrition or malabsorption cases.

Time and Encounter-Based Coding Considerations

The following may also help in selecting the right ICD 10 code:

Encounter TypeNotes
First Visit / Initial DiagnosisCode based on available lab data. If the cause is unclear, use D64.9.
Repeated / Follow-up VisitsUpdate diagnosis once etiology is confirmed.
HospitalizationCombine with cause-specific codes (e.g., D63.1 + N18.6 for CKD-related anemia).
Outpatient CheckupUse primary anemia code and symptom codes like R53.83 (Fatigue) or R06.02 (Shortness of breath) if relevant.

Coding to Different Types and Conditions for Anemia

Table of Commonly Used Anemia ICD-10 Codes

The following table includes the most commonly used ICD-10 codes for anemia:

Type of AnemiaICD 10 CodeDescription
Anemia, unspecifiedD64.9ICD 10 anemia unspecified
Iron deficiency anemia, unspecifiedD50.9Iron deficiency anemia ICD 10
Anemia in chronic kidney diseaseD63.1ICD 10 anemia of CKD
Anemia in neoplastic diseaseD63.0Cancer-related anemia
Anemia due to chemotherapyD64.81Drug-induced
Aplastic anemiaD61.9Bone marrow failure
Hemolytic anemiaD59.9RBC destruction
Pernicious anemiaD51.0Vitamin B12 deficiency
Megaloblastic anemiaD53.1Folate or B12-related
Microcytic anemiaD50.9Iron deficiency type

Documentation & Coding Tips

The correct documentation supports your claims and helps justify the codes used.

  • Always document cause, type, and stage of anemia if known.
  • If associated with another condition (e.g., CKD, pregnancy, cancer), use combination codes.
  • For low red blood cell count ICD 10, anemia codes like D64.9 apply unless specific type known.
  • Don’t forget to update the dx code for anemia during subsequent visits when etiology is confirmed.

Connecting Anemia ICD-10 with UTI ICD-10 helps you keep your documentation spot-on and your claims cleaner. Always double-check lab results, look for how the two conditions relate, and use combo coding when it makes sense — it’s the key to accurate, compliant billing every time.

Why Accurate Coding Matters in Anemia

Accurate ICD-10 coding ensures:

  • Correct insurance reimbursement
  • Streamlined medical billing
  • Reduced claim denials
  • Improved patient outcome tracking

For healthcare practices struggling with accurate anemia coding, Hello MDs can help streamline your medical billing, reduce denials, and ensure compliance with ICD-10 guidelines.

Conclusion

Shortness of breath and fatigue, weakness, and pale skin may be some signs of anemia. Once diagnosed, accurate use of anemia ICD 10 codes supports better treatment decisions and reimbursement accuracy. Whether it’s iron deficiency anemia, anemia in chronic kidney disease, or chemotherapy-induced anemia, precise documentation is key.

Disclaimer: This blog is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, legal, or professional advice. While we strive for accuracy, errors or omissions may occur.
Some images in this blog may be AI-generated or for illustrative purposes only.

Frequently Asked Questions

It means “Claim/service lacks information or has submission/billing error(s).” For Medicare, it falls under “Return/Unprocessable Claim” (RUC) when a claim is missing required information.

The solution depends on the root cause: update missing patient or provider details, add missing authorization or referral, correct modifiers/CPT/ICD codes, ensure correct claim form, and complete fields.

  • CO 15: Missing/invalid authorization number.
  • CO 29: Timely filing limit expired.
  • CO 16 is broader: lacks information or has submission errors needed for adjudication.

It depends on the payer’s processing time, your claim volume, and whether any additional documentation is required. By fixing the issue swiftly and tracking the claim, you can often see reimbursement in the regular adjudication cycle.

“B16” is a patient responsibility adjustment code – it indicates that payment was adjusted because the “new patient” criteria were not met. This is distinct from CO 16 which is a claim submission error.

CO 18 indicates “Duplicate claim/service.” It is used when the payer determines that the same claim/service has already been adjudicated.

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