Gangrene in Diabetics: Assume the Code?

Diabetes could be a contributing factor without being the direct cause.

In the first article in this series, I compared pressure ulcers and diabetic foot ulcers (the latter are considered non-pressure chronic ulcers in ICD-10-CM). My conclusion was that there is significant overlap, but heel ulcers are prime candidates to be classified as pressure injuries by providers. Ultimately, their documentation will determine whether an ulcer on the foot of a diabetic will be considered a “diabetic foot ulcer” or a pressure ulcer. This article will explore whether they are mutually exclusive conditions.

Additionally, I will give you my opinion on the Coding Clinic advice found on pages 3 and 4 of the third-quarter edition. I am not telling you to disregard Coding Clinic. I just subscribe to the rule that if there is a discrepancy between conventions or the Official Guidelines and Coding Clinic, and you are led to a code that does not seem to identify a condition correctly, you might need to go back to the drawing board.

A question recently posed was regarding a diabetic patient “with a gangrenous decubitus ulcer of the heel,” diagnosed as “Stage 3 necrotic decubitus ulcer of left heel associated with diabetic neuropathy and peripheral vascular disease.” The question was which condition to use as principal diagnosis (PDx).

The reviewer first tried to explain why this was not a diabetic ulcer. She stated that “diabetic ulcers typically involve the foot, starting on the toes and moving upward.” What does this mean? Does upward mean dorsal? Does it mean cranial? When giving advice regarding clinical topics, I strongly recommend being precise in anatomical terms.

This advice harkens back to the Coding Clinic published for the first quarter of 2004, wherein a patient had NIDDM, gangrene, and osteomyelitis of a heel decubitus ulcer. The ruling there was that the gangrene and osteomyelitis were related to the pressure ulcer and that “a relationship between DM and osteomyelitis (is assumed) when both conditions are present, unless the physician has indicated in the medical record that the acute osteomyelitis is totally unrelated to the diabetes (bold emphasis mine). In this case, the physician indicated that the osteomyelitis was due to the decubitus ulcer, so the osteomyelitis would not be coded as a diabetic complication.”

In my opinion, diabetes could be a contributing factor without being the direct cause, and also without being “totally unrelated.” Osteomyelitis develops in the bone afflicted with the decubitus ulcer, but diabetes can contribute to its development.

On Oct. 24, 2016, PodiatryToday published an article titled “Essential Tips on ICD-10 and Wound Care Coding.” It specifically referred to this same prototypical patient: “a patient with diabetes, peripheral arterial disease, and neuropathy may develop an ulcer…” It stated that NPUAP provides guidance that this should be considered a diabetic foot ulcer, even if arterial disease and/or pressure played a role in its development.

Let’s look at the coding recommendations.

The instructions at L89, Pressure ulcer, tell us to:

  • Code first any associated gangrene (I96)
  • Type 2 Excludes list diabetic ulcers, non-pressure chronic ulcers, and varicose ulcers.

Does this mean that ulcers can be categorized as both pressure and chronic ulcers at the same time, or is it indicating that a patient may have both simultaneously, but not necessarily at the same site?

Our Coding Clinic question points to just such a patient, with multifactorial reasons for ulceration. It does not offend my sensibilities to select the gangrene (I96, Gangrene, not elsewhere classified) as the PDx. However, I strongly object to the characterization that the “gangrene is associated with the pressure ulcer rather than the diabetes mellitus.” Gangrene has to affect a body part (e.g., musculoskeletal system, intestine portion, gallbladder, etc.); it does not occur diffusely, i.e., directly due to diabetes. In the case of an existing ulcer, gangrene (or osteomyelitis) is a progression or complication of that ulcer. I would actually say that “gangrene is associated with the pressure ulcer as well as the diabetes mellitus.”

In our case, the provider documented “Stage 3 necrotic decubitus ulcer of left heel associated with diabetic neuropathy and peripheral vascular disease.” The provider declared the ulcer to be a decubitus/pressure ulcer, so it should be registered as such (be sure the POA designation is accurate!).

Clinically, diabetes renders a patient more prone to develop gangrene and infection. There is an obvious clinical relationship. Peripheral vascular disease and peripheral neuropathy, also more common in diabetes, contribute to the development and severity of ulcers and gangrene. This provider actually connected the dots for us, aligning gangrene with the decubitus and also with the diabetic neuropathy and PVD by utilizing that “associated with” phrase.

My objection is that the Coding Clinic direction is to use E11.51, Type 2 DM with diabetic peripheral angiopathy without gangrene. Not only does it not make clinical sense, but it doesn’t adhere to coding rules, either.

I96 has an Excludes 2 for gangrene in diabetes mellitus, and the Alphabetic Index instructs us that Type 2 diabetes “with gangrene” goes to E11.52, according to the assumptive rule.

EricaRemer103018

The coding guidelines remind us of the “basic rule of coding…that further research must be done when the title of the code suggested by the Alphabetic Index clearly does not identify the condition correctly.” How can a patient with a principal diagnosis of gangrene have a condition specified as “without gangrene” in the same encounter?

(As an aside, E11.40 has the title of Type 2 DM with diabetic neuropathy, unspecified, not “with neurological complications.”)

In conclusion, I believe the correct depiction of this patient would be expressed with the following coding schema:

  • I96 Gangrene, not elsewhere classified
  • L89.623 Pressure ulcer of left heel, stage 3
  • E11.52 Type 2 diabetes mellitus with diabetic peripheral angiopathy with gangrene
  • E11.40 Type 2 diabetes mellitus with diabetic neuropathy, unspecified

I will leave it to coders to determine whether the Excludes 2 suggests that a code for Type 2 DM with foot ulcer should also be picked up. Similarly, this scenario might emerge if one were to query the provider and get the response that the ulcer could be due to pressure and/or the diabetes.

It reminds me of CKD in a patient with hypertension and diabetes. You assumptively use the code for hypertensive CKD and diabetic CKD, and no one cries foul. But it makes my head hurt trying to reconcile how one could have a “non-pressure” and “pressure” ulcer at the same time at the same site. This would call for an L97 and an L89 code, according to the “use additional code” instruction. Both of these codes would serve the purpose of specifying site and depth/extent of the ulcer. I only find Excludes 2 notes, not Excludes 1, so it would seem that it is not prohibited, but it seems redundant.

The bottom line is that not all ulcers on a diabetic foot are categorized as diabetic foot ulcers. Heel ulcers may be considered pressure injuries/ulcers if the provider thinks that was the primary etiology.

Our job is to accurately depict how sick and complex each patient is. We need to use as many codes as it takes to give a complete picture of the clinical situation. I think the important thing is to capture preventable pressure ulcers when present, and to avoid contradiction (gangrene without gangrene) in the coding.

Program Note:

Listen to Dr. Remer every Tuesday on Talk Ten Tuesday, 10 a.m. ET.

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Erica E. Remer, MD, CCDS

Erica Remer, MD, FACEP, CCDS, has a unique perspective as a practicing emergency physician for 25 years, with extensive coding, CDI, and ICD-10 expertise. As physician advisor for University Hospitals Health System in Cleveland, Ohio for four years, she trained 2,700 providers in ICD-10, closed hundreds of queries, fought numerous DRG clinical determination and medical necessity denials, and educated CDI specialists and healthcare providers with engaging, case-based presentations. She transitioned to independent consulting in July 2016. Dr. Remer is a member of the ICD10monitor editorial board and is the co-host on the popular Talk Ten Tuesdays weekly, live Internet radio broadcasts.

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