oncology Billing

โ— Hematology & Oncology Billing Experts
Artboard 422
HIPAA Compliant Billing
Mental Health Parity Expertise
All Major Payers Accepted
DSM-5 & ICD-10 Coding Specialists
No Long-Term Contracts
HIPAA Compliant Billing
Mental Health Parity Expertise
All Major Payers Accepted
DSM-5 & ICD-10 Coding Specialists
No Long-Term Contracts

Precise Oncology Billing Services for Cancer Care Practices

Oncology billing carries the highest financial stakes in outpatient medicine. A single miscoded chemotherapy drug, a missing prior authorization, or an infusion hierarchy error on a high-cost regimen can mean thousands of dollars in denied revenue. Theiatrics handles every layer of it with the precision that oncology demands.

Oncology Services Theiatrics Bills For

  • โœ“ Chemotherapy drug billing (J-code and Q-code)
  • โœ“ Immunotherapy and biologic infusion billing
  • โœ“ Targeted therapy and hormone therapy billing
  • โœ“ Chemotherapy infusion administration (96413, 96415)
  • โœ“ Non-chemotherapy infusion billing (96365, 96367)
  • โœ“ Subcutaneous and intramuscular injection billing
  • โœ“ Supportive care drug billing (antiemetics, growth factors)
  • โœ“ Biosimilar drug coding and interchangeability billing
  • โœ“ Radiation oncology billing (IMRT, SBRT, brachytherapy)
  • โœ“ Bone marrow biopsy and aspiration billing
  • โœ“ Oncology E&M visit coding (99202โ€“99215)
  • โœ“ Laboratory and pathology claims coordination

โš ๏ธ Buy-and-Bill Drug Margin Protection

For oncology practices operating under buy-and-bill, every dollar of drug margin depends on accurate HCPCS J-code selection, correct dosage unit billing, and timely prior authorization. A single miscoded chemotherapy drug on a high-cost regimen can represent a $5,000 to $50,000 per-claim revenue discrepancy. Theiatrics treats every oncology drug claim with that level of financial attention.

Optimize Operations for Maximum Efficiency

Contact us to explore how our consulting can position your business as a frontrunner.

Credentialing Section
Understanding the Specialty

What Makes Oncology Billing Services Exceptionally Complex?

Oncology billing sits in a category of its own among medical specialties. A single infusion visit for a patient receiving a modern immunotherapy regimen might involve a high-cost biologic drug billed by the milligram, a chemotherapy administration code, multiple add-on administration codes following infusion hierarchy rules, supportive care medications each with their own J-codes, and an evaluation and management visit coded at the appropriate level of complexity. Every element on that claim must be correct, and every element carries material financial consequence.

The drug billing component alone requires a detailed understanding of HCPCS J-codes, dosage unit calculations, the difference between how Medicare and commercial payers price oncology drugs, and how biosimilar interchangeability rules affect code selection and reimbursement rates. For practices operating under the buy-and-bill model, drug margin depends entirely on the accuracy of drug billing combined with careful attention to acquisition cost versus Average Sales Price reimbursement.

On top of drug billing, oncology practices deal with prior authorization requirements that vary by drug, by payer, and by clinical indication, often requiring detailed clinical documentation of the patient's cancer type, staging, treatment history, and the clinical rationale for the chosen regimen. Authorization denials for high-cost drugs leave the practice in the difficult position of either appealing while the patient waits or administering the drug at financial risk.

Theiatrics brings the specialty depth that oncology billing requires. We understand the J-code landscape, the infusion hierarchy, the buy-and-bill economics, the prior authorization processes for major payers, and the documentation requirements that separate a paid claim from a denied one in this uniquely high-stakes billing environment.

Optimize Operations for Maximum Efficiency

Contact us to explore how our consulting can position your business as a frontrunner.

98%
First-pass claim acceptance rate
15-21
Average days to reimbursement
30%
Average revenue increase for new clients
100%
HIPAA compliant โ€” always
DRUG BILLING EXPERTISE

Oncology Drug Categories We Bill With Precision

Oncology drug billing spans multiple therapeutic categories, each with its own J-code structure, dosage unit logic, and payer-specific coverage policies. Our team works with all of them daily.
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Traditional Chemotherapy

Cytotoxic agents administered intravenously or by other routes require J-codes billed per dosage unit. Correct unit calculation based on actual milligrams administered is critical to accurate reimbursement and audit compliance.

J9000 J9025 J9190 J9310 J9355
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Immunotherapy & Checkpoint Inhibitors

Modern immunotherapy agents including PD-1 and PD-L1 inhibitors are among the highest-cost drugs in oncology. Correct J-code assignment and mg-based dosage billing are essential to capturing the full reimbursement these drugs warrant.

J9271 J9299 J9322 J9355
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Targeted Therapy & Biologics

Monoclonal antibodies and targeted agents have distinct J-codes based on drug name and formulation. Biosimilar versions of reference biologics may have separate codes with interchangeability designations that affect reimbursement under some payer contracts.

J9355 J9173 J9176 J9179
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Hormone Therapy

Androgen deprivation therapy, aromatase inhibitors, and other hormone-based treatments used in prostate, breast, and other hormone-sensitive cancers require precise coding of both the drug and the injection or implant administration service.

J9217 J9202 J9155 J1950
๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ

Supportive Care Medications

Antiemetics, colony-stimulating factors, bone-modifying agents, and other supportive care drugs administered in the infusion suite each require their own J-code and dosage unit calculation alongside the primary chemotherapy billing.

J1642 J1442 J2505 J3489
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Biosimilars & New Agents

Biosimilar drugs approved as interchangeable with reference biologics may have distinct billing requirements. New oncology agents approved mid-year may receive temporary Q-codes or miscellaneous J-codes until CMS assigns permanent codes in the next HCPCS update cycle.

Q5118 Q5121 J3590 J9999
BILLING RULES

Infusion Hierarchy: The Rule That Determines Your Oncology Reimbursement

When multiple infusions or injections are administered in the same session, infusion hierarchy rules determine which service is billed as the primary and how additional services are coded. Getting this wrong is one of the most expensive billing errors in oncology.
1

Chemotherapy as Initial Infusion (Highest Hierarchy)

When a chemotherapy drug is administered by infusion, it is always billed as the primary service regardless of which drug was administered first. The initial chemotherapy infusion code is non-time-based for the first infusion in a day, and the drug is billed separately using its J-code.

96413 J-code (drug)
2

Sequential Chemotherapy Infusion

Each additional chemotherapy drug administered sequentially after the initial infusion is billed as a sequential add-on. Sequential means one infusion finishes before the next begins. This code is used once per additional chemotherapy drug regardless of infusion duration.

96417 J-code (additional drug)
3

Concurrent Infusion

When a second infusion runs simultaneously with the primary infusion through a different IV line, it is billed as concurrent. Concurrent infusions are not reported separately for each 15-minute increment. Only one concurrent infusion add-on is reported per concurrent drug administered.

96368
4

Non-Chemotherapy Infusion (Lower Hierarchy)

When a non-chemotherapy drug such as supportive care medication is infused in the same session as a chemotherapy drug, the non-chemo infusion is billed as secondary to the chemotherapy service, using the sequential non-chemotherapy add-on code rather than the initial infusion code.

96367 96368
5

Injection Services (Lowest Hierarchy)

Subcutaneous and intramuscular injections administered in the same encounter as infusions are billed as injection add-ons. Each injection is reported separately using the appropriate administration code and the drugโ€™s J-code, and each is subordinate to the infusion services in hierarchy.

96401 96402 J-code
WHAT WE HANDLE

Our Complete Oncology Billing Services

From prior authorization through drug billing, infusion coding, and final AR resolution, Theiatrics manages every step of the oncology revenue cycle.
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Prior Authorization Management

We manage prior authorization requests for all oncology drugs across every commercial payer and Medicare Advantage plan in your payer mix. We compile the required clinical documentation, track approval status, and manage appeals when initial authorization is denied.

๐Ÿ’Š

Chemotherapy Drug Coding

Our oncology billing specialists assign the correct J-code for every drug administered, calculate dosage units based on actual milligrams given, and apply new codes for recently approved agents, including temporary Q-codes and miscellaneous J-codes where applicable.

๐Ÿ”ƒ

Infusion Hierarchy Compliance

We apply infusion hierarchy rules accurately across all payers, ensuring the correct initial, sequential, and concurrent administration codes are selected for every infusion session and that each add-on service is sequenced correctly to maximize reimbursement without triggering bundling denials.

โœ…

Eligibility & Coverage Verification

We verify insurance eligibility and oncology-specific drug coverage before each treatment session, confirming prior authorization status, cost-sharing responsibilities, and any coverage limitations that could affect claim submission or patient financial counseling.

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Documentation Review & Support

We review treatment documentation for coding accuracy and compliance before billing, flagging any gaps between the clinical record and the proposed claim that could create denial risk, audit exposure, or underpayment under medical necessity review.

๐Ÿšซ

Denial Management & Appeals

When a claim is denied, we analyze the reason, correct the issue, and resubmit within 48 hours. For clinical necessity denials involving high-cost oncology drugs, we prepare detailed peer-to-peer appeal support packages with published clinical guidelines and supporting literature references.

โ˜ข๏ธ

Radiation Oncology Billing

We manage billing for external beam radiation therapy, IMRT, SBRT and stereotactic radiosurgery, brachytherapy, and simulation services. Radiation oncology uses distinct CPT codes in the 77000โ€“77999 range with separate technical and professional component billing considerations.

๐Ÿ’ฐ

AR Follow-Up & Collections

We work all unpaid and underpaid oncology claims systematically, with particular attention to high-dollar drug claims where underpayments have the most material impact. No aging account is left without active follow-up until it is resolved or correctly written off.

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Revenue Cycle Reporting

You receive regular reports on drug-level claim performance, infusion code reimbursement trends, authorization approval rates, denial root causes, and days in AR by payer so your practice has the financial visibility it needs to manage the high-cost nature of oncology services.

HOW IT WORKS

Our Oncology Billing Process

A structured workflow built around the high-stakes, high-complexity requirements of hematology and oncology billing.
1

Eligibility & Auth Verification

We verify insurance eligibility and DME coverage the moment an order is received, before any equipment is dispensed or delivered.

2

Drug & Dosage Coding

J-codes are assigned based on actual drugs administered and dosage units are calculated from the documented milligrams given, not pre-set order quantities.

3

Infusion Hierarchy Sequencing

Administration codes are sequenced according to infusion hierarchy rules with the correct primary, sequential, and concurrent codes applied for each session.

4

Claim Preparation & Submission

Every claim is reviewed for coding accuracy, documentation support, and payer-specific requirements before electronic submission with tracking through adjudication.

4

Payment Review & Denial Resolution

Payments are posted and verified against expected drug reimbursement rates. Denials are worked within 48 hours and all AR is followed through to resolution.

COMMON PAIN POINTS

Oncology Billing Challenges We Solve Every Day

These are the billing problems that hematology and oncology practices encounter most consistently. Our team prevents them before submission and resolves them quickly when they arise.
๐Ÿ’Š

Incorrect Drug Dosage Unit Billing

Each oncology J-code has a defined unit of measure, typically a specific number of milligrams per billing unit. When the actual dose administered is not divided correctly by the billing unit, the practice either underbills or risks overpayment recoupment. For a drug priced at $50 per billing unit, a unit calculation error on a 500mg dose can mean hundreds of dollars per claim in lost or at-risk revenue.

How we help: We calculate dosage units from the actual milligrams documented in the administration record for every drug on every claim, not from the order or the standard dose protocol.

๐Ÿ”

Authorization Denials for High-Cost Drugs

Prior authorization denials for immunotherapy and targeted therapy drugs are among the most costly claim denials in all of medicine. When a practice administers a high-cost drug without authorization, or when an authorization expires mid-treatment, the financial exposure can reach tens of thousands of dollars per patient per cycle.

How we help: We manage the entire authorization lifecycle from initial request through approval, including tracking expiration dates, submitting concurrent authorization extensions, and managing appeals for initial denials with clinical documentation packages.

๐Ÿ“Š

Infusion Hierarchy Errors

When two or more drugs are infused in the same session, the wrong administration code sequence results in bundling denials or systematic underpayment. Billing a non-chemotherapy infusion as the primary service when a chemotherapy drug was also administered is one of the most common hierarchy errors in oncology billing.

How we help: We apply infusion hierarchy rules across all payers for every multi-drug infusion session, ensuring chemotherapy takes primary position and all add-on services are sequenced correctly based on CMS and payer-specific hierarchy guidance.

๐Ÿงฌ

New Drug and Biosimilar Coding Gaps

New oncology drugs approved by the FDA are not always assigned a permanent J-code immediately. They may be billed under a temporary Q-code or a miscellaneous code. Practices that are unaware of new code assignments continue billing miscellaneous codes after a specific code is available, which results in claim delays and payer audit flags.

How we help: We monitor HCPCS quarterly updates and FDA drug approval announcements proactively, updating our code reference library when new oncology codes are assigned and ensuring your claims transition to specific codes as soon as they become available.

๐Ÿ“„

Medical Necessity Documentation Gaps

Payers increasingly conduct post-payment medical necessity reviews for high-cost oncology drugs, particularly immunotherapy agents used off-label or in clinical trial settings. When the clinical record does not clearly support the FDA-approved or compendium-listed indication, the claim is vulnerable to post-payment denial and recoupment.

How we help: We review treatment documentation for medical necessity compliance before billing and flag cases where the clinical record may not adequately support the indication for review by your clinical team before the claim is submitted.

๐Ÿ’ต

Drug Margin Erosion from Underpayment

Commercial payers frequently apply drug pricing methodologies that differ from Medicareโ€™s ASP-based rates. Some payers apply contracted pricing schedules that should be reviewed against actual drug acquisition costs to ensure margin is being protected. Practices that do not review drug-level remittances lose margin without knowing it.

How we help: We review oncology drug reimbursement at the line-item level, comparing payer payments against expected rates under Medicare and contracted commercial terms, and pursuing underpayments through the correct appeal process before they become unrecoverable.

CANCER TYPES WE SUPPORT

Oncology Billing Across All Cancer Types and Treatment Modalities

Our billing team supports hematology and oncology practices treating the full spectrum of cancer diagnoses and using all major treatment modalities.
๐Ÿฉธ

Hematologic Malignancies

Leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma, and myelodysplastic syndrome billing including bone marrow biopsy, CAR-T therapy coordination, and high-cost biologic agents.

๐Ÿซ€

Solid Tumor Oncology

Lung, colorectal, breast, gastric, and hepatocellular carcinoma billing including complex multi-drug regimen administration and targeted therapy coding.

๐Ÿง 

Neuro-Oncology

Brain tumor treatment billing including temozolomide, bevacizumab, and radiation oncology coordination for glioblastoma and other central nervous system malignancies.

๐Ÿงช

Genitourinary Oncology

Prostate, bladder, renal, and testicular cancer billing including androgen deprivation therapy, checkpoint inhibitors, and hormone therapy injection administration.

๐Ÿฉบ

Gynecologic Oncology

Ovarian, cervical, endometrial, and vulvar cancer billing including PARP inhibitor coding, bevacizumab combination regimens, and chemosensitization billing.

โ˜€๏ธ

Melanoma & Skin Cancers

Melanoma immunotherapy billing including ipilimumab, nivolumab, and pembrolizumab J-codes, BRAF-targeted therapy, and Merkel cell carcinoma treatment billing.

โ˜ข๏ธ

Radiation Oncology

IMRT, SBRT, stereotactic radiosurgery, brachytherapy, and simulation billing using CPT 77000-77799 range codes with technical and professional component separation.

๐Ÿ’Š

Palliative & Supportive Care

Symptom management, palliative chemotherapy, pain management infusions, and supportive care drug billing alongside active treatment regimens.

WHY CHOOSE US

Why Oncology Practices Choose Theiatrics for Billing

๐ŸŽฏ
Oncology-Specific Drug Billing Expertise Our billing specialists understand the J-code landscape across chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy, hormone therapy, and supportive care drugs. We stay current with quarterly HCPCS updates, new drug approvals, and biosimilar code changes that affect your claims.
๐Ÿงพ
Buy-and-Bill Revenue Protection We treat every oncology drug claim with the financial precision that buy-and-bill margin protection demands. Dosage unit accuracy, timely authorization, and drug-level remittance review are built into our standard workflow for every infusion session we bill.
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Proactive Authorization Management We do not wait for an authorization to expire. We track approval timelines for every drug on every active regimen and initiate renewal requests and concurrent extensions well ahead of expiration to ensure no treatment session is administered without coverage in place.
โšก
48-Hour Denial Turnaround In oncology, denied claims carry the highest financial weight of any specialty. We address every denied claim within 48 hours of receipt, prioritizing high-dollar drug claims that represent the greatest revenue impact to your practice.
๐Ÿ“Š
Drug-Level Revenue Reporting You receive regular reports on drug-level reimbursement performance, authorization approval rates, infusion code reimbursement trends, and payer-specific denial patterns so your practice has complete visibility into the financial performance of each drug and regimen you administer.

The True Financial Stakes of Oncology Billing Errors

In most medical specialties, a coding error might cost a practice $50 to $500 per claim. In oncology, the same category of error โ€” a miscoded drug, a wrong dosage unit, a missing authorization โ€” can cost $5,000 to $50,000 or more on a single claim involving a modern immunotherapy or targeted therapy agent. The financial stakes of billing accuracy in oncology are simply in a different category from most other specialties.

For a practice administering $3 million per year in oncology drugs under buy-and-bill, even a 2% systematic undercoding rate represents $60,000 in annual revenue that is not being captured. Add authorization-related denials, infusion hierarchy errors, and underpayments from commercial payers applying non-ASP pricing methodologies, and the total revenue gap can reach 8% to 12% of potential annual collections.

When Theiatrics takes over an oncology practiceโ€™s billing, we begin with a 12-month claims audit that quantifies these gaps before we manage a single new claim. This audit typically surfaces both immediate recovery opportunities and the process improvements that protect revenue going forward.

$50K+ Potential Loss Per Miscoded High-Cost Drug Claim
8-12% Typical Revenue Gap at Unoptimized Oncology Practices
98% Clean Claim Rate at First Submission
30% Avg Revenue Increase for New Clients

Ready to Protect and Maximize Your Oncology Practice Revenue?

Let Theiatrics handle the drug coding precision, authorization management, infusion hierarchy compliance, and denial resolution that oncology billing demands. Start with a free billing review and see exactly where your revenue stands.

Schedule My Free Audit โ†’
COMMON QUESTIONS

Answers to What Oncology Billing Providers Ask Us Most

Answers to the questions oncology practice administrators and billing directors ask us most when evaluating specialized billing support for their cancer care practice.

Have a specific question? Our specialists respond within 4 hours.

๐Ÿ“ž Call Our Billing Team
What are oncology billing services?
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Oncology billing services refer to specialized medical billing support for hematology and oncology practices. This includes billing for chemotherapy drug administration, immunotherapy infusions, targeted therapy injections, hormone therapy, supportive care medications, radiation oncology services, bone marrow biopsies, and oncology office visits. Oncology billing requires expertise in HCPCS J-code drug billing, infusion hierarchy rules, biosimilar coding, prior authorization for high-cost oncology drugs, and payer-specific oncology coverage policies.
How does chemotherapy billing work?
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Chemotherapy billing involves two separate billable components: the drug itself and the administration service. The drug is billed using a HCPCS J-code specific to the drug name, formulation, and dosage unit. The administration is billed using CPT codes from the infusion hierarchy. When multiple drugs are administered in the same session, infusion hierarchy rules determine which service is billed as the primary service and which are billed as sequential or concurrent add-ons. Getting the hierarchy wrong generates bundling denials or systematic underpayments that affect every multi-drug session the practice bills.
What are HCPCS J-codes and why are they critical for oncology billing?
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โ–ผ HCPCS J-codes are alphanumeric codes used to bill injectable and infusible drugs that are typically not self-administered. In oncology, J-codes identify specific chemotherapy agents, immunotherapy drugs, supportive care medications, and biosimilars by drug name and unit of measurement. Billing the wrong J-code for a drug, using an incorrect dosage unit, or failing to bill for the actual quantity administered results in underpayment or denial. J-codes are updated annually by CMS, and new oncology drugs may receive temporary Q-codes or miscellaneous J-codes until a specific code is assigned.
What is infusion hierarchy and how does it affect oncology reimbursement?
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Infusion hierarchy is a set of rules that determines how to code multiple infusion or injection services provided during the same encounter. The hierarchy establishes which service is billed as primary and how additional services are reported as sequential, concurrent, or add-on services. Chemotherapy infusions take precedence over non-chemotherapy infusions. When these rules are applied incorrectly, the result is either bundling denials where separately billable services are merged into one payment, or underpayment where lower-reimbursed codes are used where higher-reimbursed codes should apply.
How does prior authorization work for oncology drugs?
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โ–ผ Most commercial payers and many Medicare Advantage plans require prior authorization for high-cost oncology drugs. The authorization process typically requires submission of the patient's diagnosis, cancer staging, treatment history, and clinical rationale for the chosen regimen. Authorization must be obtained before the drug is administered. Administering without authorization results in claim denial with very limited appeal options. For practices administering drugs under buy-and-bill, the financial stakes of a failed authorization are particularly high since the practice has already incurred the drug acquisition cost.
What is buy-and-bill oncology billing and how does Theiatrics protect drug margins?
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Buy-and-bill is the reimbursement model where the oncology practice purchases chemotherapy and other drugs at acquisition cost and bills payers for the drug plus administration. For Medicare, reimbursement is typically based on the drug's Average Sales Price plus a 6% add-on payment. The practice's drug margin is the difference between acquisition cost and ASP reimbursement. Theiatrics protects this margin by ensuring every drug is billed with the correct J-code, accurate dosage units based on actual milligrams administered, timely authorization to avoid denial, and drug-level remittance review to catch underpayments from commercial payers.
Does Theiatrics handle radiation oncology billing?
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Yes. Theiatrics manages billing for both medical oncology services and radiation oncology services including external beam radiation therapy, IMRT, stereotactic radiosurgery and SBRT, brachytherapy, and simulation. Radiation oncology billing uses CPT codes in the 77000-77799 range and has separate technical component and professional component billing considerations that depend on whether the practice owns the equipment or performs only the professional supervision and interpretation.
Which states does Theiatrics provide oncology billing services in?
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Theiatrics provides oncology billing services for hematology and oncology practices in all 50 states. Our team understands state-specific Medicaid oncology coverage policies, Medicare Administrative Contractor LCD requirements for oncology drugs and treatments, and commercial payer prior authorization processes that vary by market and directly affect how oncology claims are processed and reimbursed across different regions of the country.
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