The TRIARQ Health Blog

Revenue Cycle Management in Urology: Stop Leaving Money Behind

Written by triarqhealth | May 19, 2026 5:59:47 PM

Urology practices deal with one of the most coding-intensive specialties in medicine. A single patient visit can involve diagnostic imaging, in-office procedures, device implantation, pathology, and surgical planning — each requiring distinct CPT codes, modifiers, and documentation. When coding isn't precise, claims get denied. And in urology, up to 30–40% of claims are denied on first submission due to coding errors or incomplete documentation.

Poor billing practices cost physicians in the United States approximately $125 billion per year, according to Equifax. For independent urology practices navigating rising overhead, staffing challenges, and payer complexity, revenue leakage from preventable billing errors is a problem they can't afford to ignore.

 

 
30–40%
 
of urology claims denied on first submission due to coding errors
 

 

 

What Makes Urology Revenue Cycle Management Different?

  • Cystoscopy and lithotripsy coding requiring precise anatomical documentation
  • Catheter, stent, and implant claims needing device type, size, and clinical justification
  • Infusion management for intravesical therapies and cancer treatments
  • Complex modifier requirements for multiple procedures in the same session
  • High prior authorization volume for advanced imaging and surgical procedures

Generic billing teams — even experienced ones — miss these nuances. A coder trained in family medicine doesn't instinctively know that a urology implant claim needs specific device documentation. The result: denied claims and revenue left on the table.

 

How Can Urology Practices Improve Clean Claim Rates?

Practices that implement specialty-trained coding teams see clean claim rates improve from the industry-standard 78–82% to above 95%. The financial impact is immediate: faster reimbursement, fewer denials to appeal, and reduced A/R days.

TRIARQ Health brings over 20 years of specialty expertise in urology revenue cycle management — built around the specific coding, documentation, and payer requirements that urology practices face.

 

What Are the Most Common Urology Billing Denials?

  • Missing or expired prior authorization
  • Insufficient medical necessity documentation
  • Coding errors on multi-procedure encounters with incorrect modifier sequencing
  • Device and implant claims lacking required specifications
  • Duplicate billing flags when diagnostic and therapeutic procedures overlap

Each is preventable with the right pre-submission checks. AI-driven claims scrubbing catches modifier errors, flags missing authorizations, and validates documentation before claims go out.

Meet you where you are, with what you need. 

 
 
 Sources: 1. Rivet Health. "Revenue Cycle Management for Urology Practices." 2025. 2. MBW RCM. "Best Practices for Clean Claims in Urology Medical Billing." 2025. 3. Urology Times. "The Urology Practice Revenue Cycle: How to Track and Manage It." 4. Experian Health. "State of Claims 2025: The Denial Problem."