Medical Billing & Coding

Why your sleep-apnea claims are denied — and how to fix the top 5 reasons

1 min read

Sleep-apnea claims sit at the intersection of three specialties: pulmonology, DME, and sleep medicine. Each brings its own documentation rules, and payers enforce them all.

Missing AHI threshold documentation

Most payers require an AHI ≥ 5 with symptoms, or ≥ 15 without, to cover a CPAP. The sleep-study report must clearly state the AHI — not just attach it as raw data.

Prior authorization gaps

CPAP, BiPAP, and oral-appliance therapy almost always require prior auth. A single missing auth ID will bounce an otherwise clean claim.

Compliance requirements for rental continuation

Medicare’s 90-day compliance rule — four hours of use on 70% of nights in any 30-day window — applies to most commercial payers too. Document compliance downloads monthly.

Incorrect HCPCS for the device

E0601 is not the same as E0470, and modifier KX versus GA matters. A DME-aware scrubber catches the mismatches before they cost you.

Failure to bill for interpretation separately

The sleep-study interpretation (95810 professional) and the home-sleep-test read (95806/G0399) are often billable on top of the study itself, if the documentation supports it.

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