About bivalirudin (Angiomax) FDA label verified May 2026
A direct thrombin inhibitor used as a heparin alternative during PCI, including in patients with HIT or HITTS undergoing PCI.
Bivalirudin (originator brand Angiomax) is a synthetic 20-amino-acid peptide that directly and reversibly inhibits thrombin (Factor IIa) by occupying both its catalytic and substrate-recognition sites. Unlike heparin, bivalirudin works independently of antithrombin and does not cross-react with HIT antibodies — this is the basis for its use as a heparin alternative in patients with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) or HIT with thrombosis syndrome (HITTS) who require percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). The drug was originally developed by Biogen and approved as Angiomax under NDA 20-873 in December 2000 by The Medicines Company; the originator brand has since been discontinued post patent-expiration and the U.S. market is now served by multiple generic manufacturers including Sandoz, Hospira (Pfizer), Maia, Mylan (Viatris), and Accord Healthcare.
The FDA-labeled indication is for use as an anticoagulant in patients undergoing PCI, including patients with or at risk of HIT/HITTS, and for provisional use with glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors. Bivalirudin is dosed by weight as a single IV bolus followed by a continuous IV infusion that runs for the duration of the procedure, titrated to an activated clotting time (ACT) target of approximately 300–350 seconds. Half-life is roughly 25 minutes in patients with normal renal function and is prolonged in renal impairment; there is no specific reversal agent, but the short half-life and partial dialyzability (~25%) provide intrinsic mitigation.
Why this page is defensive. For the drug's primary indication — anticoagulation during PCI — bivalirudin is functionally never separately payable. The CMS OPPS Addendum B assigns HCPCS J0583 Status Indicator N ("Items and services packaged into APC rates") for the hospital outpatient setting, which means the drug cost is embedded in the APC payment for the PCI procedure and no separate Part B line will produce incremental payment. In the inpatient setting, bivalirudin acquisition cost is captured in the MS-DRG payment for the admission (typically MS-DRG 246–251 PCI DRGs). The page exists to answer "you cannot bill this separately," to help billing staff push back when clinicians or vendors suggest carving out the drug, and to document the rare scenarios where separate payment might apply.
Dosing & ACT targets FDA label verified May 2026
Continuous IV infusion titrated to activated clotting time (ACT) during PCI. Per the Wave 7D template adaptation for continuous-titration anticoagulants, this section includes a dedicated target-range table.
Weight-based dosing matrix
| Indication / patient | Bolus | Infusion | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCI (general) | 0.75 mg/kg IV push | 1.75 mg/kg/hr | For duration of PCI procedure (typically 30 min – 4 hr); may continue up to 4 hr post-PCI if clinically indicated, then optional reduced rate |
| STEMI undergoing primary PCI | 0.75 mg/kg IV push | 1.75 mg/kg/hr | Same as general PCI; per ACC/AHA STEMI/PCI guidelines |
| HIT or HITTS undergoing PCI | 0.75 mg/kg IV push | 1.75 mg/kg/hr | Same as general PCI; preferred over argatroban for HIT patients needing PCI given ACT predictability |
| Renal impairment (CrCl 30–59 mL/min) | 0.75 mg/kg IV push (unchanged) | 1.75 mg/kg/hr (unchanged) | Monitor; per label adjustment not required for mild-moderate impairment |
| Renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min) | 0.75 mg/kg IV push (unchanged) | 1.0 mg/kg/hr (reduced) | Monitor ACT; further reduce as needed |
| Dialysis-dependent | 0.75 mg/kg IV push (unchanged) | 0.25 mg/kg/hr (reduced) | Monitor ACT closely; ~25% removable by hemodialysis |
Target coagulation lab range — ACT during PCI
| Lab | Therapeutic target | Timing | Dose-adjust nomogram |
|---|---|---|---|
| Activated clotting time (ACT) | 300–350 seconds during PCI | Check 5 minutes after bolus, then serial throughout procedure | If ACT <225 sec after bolus: re-bolus 0.3 mg/kg and recheck in 5 min. If ACT in target: continue 1.75 mg/kg/hr. If ACT excessively high: hold infusion 5–15 min and resume at reduced rate (typically 1.0–1.4 mg/kg/hr). |
| aPTT (rarely used for bivalirudin) | Not routinely used intra-procedure (ACT preferred for PCI) | If used post-PCI for prolonged infusion: 1.5–2.5× control | Not the primary monitoring lab for PCI bivalirudin; ACT is the standard |
| Anti-Xa | Not applicable | — | Bivalirudin is a direct thrombin (IIa) inhibitor; anti-Xa is not relevant |
Worked example — PCI in 80 kg patient (general or HIT/HITTS)
Bolus: 0.75 mg/kg × 80 kg = 60 mg IV push at cath start
Infusion rate: 1.75 mg/kg/hr × 80 kg = 140 mg/hr
90-min procedure: 60 mg + (140 × 1.5) = 60 + 210 = 270 mg total
Vials drawn: 2 × 250 mg = 500 mg drawn; 230 mg residual (typically discarded per single-dose-vial policy)
# What the claim looks like
Hospital outpatient PCI: J0583 carries OPPS SI=N — packaged into the PCI APC.
No separately payable line. Drug cost is embedded in APC reimbursement for the cath lab procedure.
Inpatient PCI: Bundled into MS-DRG payment (e.g., MS-DRG 246/247/248/249/250/251).
No separately payable Part B line. Drug cost is captured in the DRG.
# ASP context (for the rare separately-payable scenario only)
Q2 2026 ASP+6%: $0.131/mg
270 mg administered: $35.42 (drug only, if separately payable — typically it isn't)
NDC reference FDA NDC Directory verified May 2026
Originator Angiomax discontinued; multiple generic manufacturers. Representative NDCs below — verify against the dispensed product NDC from your pharmacy for every claim.
| NDC (representative) | Strength | Package size | Units/Vial | Manufacturer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
0781-3225-94 |
250 mg | Single-dose lyophilized vial; 10 vials/carton | 250 units (1 mg = 1 unit) | Sandoz |
0409-1218-01 |
250 mg | Single-dose lyophilized vial; 10 vials/carton | 250 units | Hospira (Pfizer) |
00781-9755-94 |
250 mg | Single-dose lyophilized vial; 10 vials/carton | 250 units | Sandoz (legacy NDC line) |
71288-0610-10 |
250 mg | Single-dose lyophilized vial; 10 vials/carton | 250 units | Meitheal Pharmaceuticals |
16729-0414-05 |
250 mg | Single-dose lyophilized vial; 10 vials/carton | 250 units | Accord Healthcare |
| Originator (discontinued) | 250 mg | Angiomax brand — The Medicines Company / Sandoz | — | Discontinued post patent expiration; no longer marketed |
Administration codes CPT verified May 2026
Bolus + continuous infusion typically map to 96374 (IV push) for the bolus and 96365/96366 (therapeutic IV infusion, non-chemo) for the hourly drip only in the rare scenario where the drug is not bundled into a procedural payment. In the dominant PCI use case, the cath lab procedure code (e.g., 92920–92944 PCI series for hospital outpatient or the ICD-10-PCS 027x codes for inpatient) drives payment and bivalirudin is packaged or bundled.
| Code | Description | When (rarely) used for bivalirudin |
|---|---|---|
96374 |
Therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic injection; IV push, single or initial substance/drug | Bolus dose, only if not bundled into a procedure. In PCI: the bolus is part of cath lab care and is not separately billable. |
96365 |
Therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic IV infusion; up to 1 hour, initial substance/drug | Continuous infusion first hour, only if not bundled into a procedure. In PCI: not separately billable. |
96366 |
IV infusion; each additional hour | Continuous infusion beyond 1 hour, only if not bundled. In PCI: not separately billable. |
92920–92944 (PCI series) |
Hospital outpatient PCI procedure codes (e.g., 92928 with stent, 92941 acute MI, 92943 chronic total occlusion) | This drives payment. Bivalirudin used during these procedures is OPPS SI=N (packaged into the APC for the PCI). The drug acquisition cost is embedded in the APC payment, not separately billable under J0583. |
| ICD-10-PCS 027x | Coronary artery dilation procedural codes for inpatient claims | This drives the MS-DRG. Inpatient bivalirudin during PCI is captured in the MS-DRG payment (typically MS-DRG 246–251) and is not separately billable under J0583. |
Modifiers CMS verified May 2026
Mostly N/A given OPPS SI=N + MS-DRG bundling. JW/JZ exist on paper but rarely matter for bivalirudin because the drug is packaged or bundled and no separately payable line is produced.
JW — in the rare separately-payable scenario
JW reports the discarded portion of a single-dose vial. If bivalirudin were genuinely billed standalone under J0583 outside a bundled procedural or inpatient context (rare — see site of care and FAQ for the narrow scenarios), partial-vial waste would be the norm because the 250 mg vial size rarely matches the weight-based dose. In the dominant PCI use case, JW is moot: there is no separately payable J0583 line on which to bill waste.
JZ — same caveat
JZ identifies no waste from a single-dose vial. Applies in the same narrow standalone-billing scenario as JW. The CMS July 2023 single-dose container policy requires one of JZ or JW on every separately payable J-code claim — but bivalirudin in PCI is not a separately payable claim, so the requirement is rarely engaged.
340B (JG / TB)
340B modifier reporting policies vary by setting and MAC. For hospital outpatient PCI where the drug is packaged (SI=N), 340B reporting is governed by current OPPS rules — consult your MAC and OPPS Addendum B current quarter for the applicable JG or TB requirement on packaged drugs, recognizing that the modifier does not change the payment outcome (still packaged).
ICD-10-CM by indication FY2026 verified May 2026
Cardiac diagnosis codes drive the PCI encounter; pair with HIT-specific D75.82 when bivalirudin is selected because of HIT or HITTS.
| Indication / context | ICD-10 code(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Acute STEMI — site-specific | I21.01–I21.4 | STEMI of LAD / other anterior wall / inferior wall / unspec wall / NSTEMI; pair with PCI procedure code |
| Subsequent / type 2 MI | I21.A1 / I21.A9 / I22.x | Type 2 MI (demand ischemia); subsequent MI |
| Unstable angina | I20.0 | Common PCI presentation |
| Other forms of angina | I20.1 / I20.8 / I20.9 | Prinzmetal / other / unspecified |
| Chronic ischemic heart disease | I25.10 / I25.110–I25.119 | Native coronary atherosclerosis without/with angina; stable IHD with PCI |
| Coronary atherosclerosis of bypass graft | I25.7x | Saphenous vein / arterial graft / other graft |
| HIT / HITTS — pair on every HIT-driven encounter | D75.82 | Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia; documents medical necessity for direct thrombin inhibitor over heparin |
| Therapeutic drug monitoring encounter (optional) | Z51.81 | For encounter where monitoring is the principal purpose — rarely the principal code for a PCI |
| Personal history of HIT | Z86.2 | For prior HIT now requiring PCI; supports DTI selection |
Site of care — bivalirudin is packaged in PCI CMS OPPS Q2 2026 + MS-DRG FY2026
Per the Wave 7D template adaptation for OPPS SI=N / DRG-bundled drugs, this section opens with the explicit not-separately-payable callout, then summarizes how each setting handles bivalirudin.
| Setting | POS | Claim form | Bivalirudin payment status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital outpatient (on-campus cath lab) — PCI | 22 | UB-04 / 837I | Packaged (OPPS SI=N) — drug cost in APC for PCI procedure; no separate J0583 payment |
| Hospital outpatient (off-campus PBD) — PCI | 19 | UB-04 / 837I | Packaged (OPPS SI=N); further OPPS site-neutral adjustments may apply to facility payment |
| Hospital inpatient — PCI admission | 21 | UB-04 / 837I (inpatient) | Bundled into MS-DRG (typically MS-DRG 246–251 PCI DRGs; specific DRG by MCC/CC and AMI status); no separate Part B line for J0583 |
| Ambulatory surgical center (ASC) — rare PCI | 24 | CMS-1500 / 837P (ASC) | Packaged into the ASC facility payment for the procedure; no separate ASC drug payment for bivalirudin |
| Physician office — non-procedural infusion (exceptional) | 11 | CMS-1500 / 837P | Potentially separately payable under Part B at ASP+6% — extremely rare in practice; verify with MAC; expect scrutiny |
| Patient home / DME infusion | 12 | — | Not a real-world scenario for bivalirudin (acute, monitored cath-lab drug) |
How MS-DRG bundling works for inpatient PCI
For an inpatient PCI admission, the entire stay — including pharmacy acquisition cost of bivalirudin used during the procedure — is paid via the MS-DRG. The relevant DRGs for fiscal year 2026 (effective October 1, 2025 – September 30, 2026) are:
- MS-DRG 246 — Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures with drug-eluting stent with MCC or 4+ vessels/stents
- MS-DRG 247 — Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures with drug-eluting stent without MCC
- MS-DRG 248 — Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures with non-drug-eluting stent with MCC or 4+ vessels/stents
- MS-DRG 249 — Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures with non-drug-eluting stent without MCC
- MS-DRG 250 — Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures without coronary artery stent with MCC
- MS-DRG 251 — Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures without coronary artery stent without MCC
AMI-driven PCI may instead map to MS-DRG 280–285 (AMI with/without major complications) when the principal diagnosis is the infarction and the PCI is a secondary procedure. Either way, bivalirudin is captured in the DRG; it does not appear as a separately payable line item.
How OPPS Status Indicator N works for hospital outpatient PCI
Each calendar year CMS publishes OPPS Addendum B, which assigns a Status Indicator to every HCPCS code used in hospital outpatient billing. Status Indicator N is defined as "Items and services packaged into APC rates" — CMS does not make a separate payment for the item; instead its cost is built into the APC payment for the procedure with which it is reported. For HCPCS J0583, SI=N means bivalirudin used during a PCI is paid for via the APC assigned to the PCI procedure (e.g., the APC for HCPCS 92928 PCI with stent), and any J0583 line submitted on the same claim will be processed but will not generate incremental payment.
Claim form field mapping CMS verified May 2026
For hospital outpatient PCI (UB-04) and the rare standalone-billing scenario (CMS-1500). In the dominant use case, the only meaningful J0583 entries are informational (revenue code 0250/0636 with packaged status), not payment-generating.
UB-04 / 837I (hospital outpatient and inpatient PCI)
| Information | UB-04 location | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue code (drug) | FL 42 | 0250 (general pharmacy) or 0636 (drugs requiring detailed coding) per facility chargemaster |
| HCPCS J0583 (informational) | FL 44 | Reported alongside the PCI procedure code; will be processed as packaged (SI=N) in OPPS for outpatient PCI; informational on inpatient claims for cost-reporting / DRG analytics |
| NDC qualifier + 11-digit NDC + UoM + qty | FL 43 (description) or 837I LIN/CTP loops | N4 + 11-digit NDC + UN/ML + units — payer-specific NDC reporting requirements |
| PCI procedure (outpatient HCPCS) | FL 44 | e.g., 92920 / 92928 / 92941 / 92943 — this drives the APC and embeds drug payment |
| ICD-10-PCS (inpatient procedure) | FL 74 | 027x coronary artery dilation codes; drives MS-DRG assignment |
| Principal diagnosis | FL 67 | I21.x / I20.0 / I25.10; pair with D75.82 if HIT-driven |
CMS-1500 / 837P (exceptional standalone outpatient infusion only)
| Information | CMS-1500 box | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| NPI | 17b / 24J | Rendering provider |
| NDC qualifier + 11-digit NDC + UoM + qty | 24A shaded area | N4 + dispensed product 11-digit NDC + ML + total volume infused |
| HCPCS J0583 | 24D | Units = total mg actually infused over the encounter |
| JW or JZ | 24D modifier | JW for waste, JZ for no waste (per CMS July 2023 single-dose container policy) |
| CPT 96374 (bolus IV push) and/or 96365/96366 (continuous infusion) | 24D (admin lines) | Only in the rare standalone scenario where no procedural bundle applies |
| ICD-10 | 21 | D75.82 (HIT) plus cardiac diagnosis as appropriate |
Payer policy snapshot Reviewed May 2026
Commercial payers broadly follow Medicare's packaging logic on bivalirudin in PCI: drug cost is part of the procedural rate, not a separately negotiated line. Coverage centers on the PCI procedure and on HIT-specific medical necessity.
| Payer | PA for J0583 line? | Coverage / packaging | HIT-specific notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicare (FFS) OPPS / IPPS |
No standalone PA (no separately payable line) | Hospital outpatient PCI: J0583 = SI=N (packaged into APC). Inpatient PCI: bundled in MS-DRG 246–251. Drug paid via the procedural payment. | HIT documentation (D75.82) supports DTI selection; does not unlock separate drug payment |
| Medicare Advantage Most plans |
Generally no | Follows FFS Medicare packaging conventions; some plans contractually pay the underlying procedure under a per-case or DRG-equivalent rate that includes drug | Same as FFS |
| UnitedHealthcare | No for J0583 in PCI bundle | PCI procedural code drives payment; drug is part of facility / procedural rate | HIT documentation supports DTI selection in cath lab; no separate UM on bivalirudin per se |
| Aetna | No for J0583 in PCI bundle | Per facility contract: PCI rate inclusive of pharmacy | HIT documentation supports DTI; no separate UM |
| BCBS plans | Plan-specific; generally no for J0583 in PCI | PCI procedural payment; drug bundled | Same pattern |
| Cigna | No for J0583 in PCI bundle | PCI procedural payment | Same pattern |
Step therapy
There is no meaningful step therapy on bivalirudin in PCI because the drug is selected at the bedside in the cath lab for the duration of the procedure, and payment is captured in the procedural bundle regardless of which anticoagulant is used. For HIT/HITTS patients undergoing PCI, bivalirudin and argatroban are clinically acceptable alternatives; selection is driven by physician preference, ACT predictability, and renal status rather than payer step-therapy logic.
Guideline support
Bivalirudin is supported in the ACC/AHA/SCAI PCI guidelines as an alternative to unfractionated heparin during PCI (with or without GP IIb/IIIa inhibitor "bailout"). For HIT or HITTS patients undergoing PCI, the CHEST and ACCP HIT/Antithrombotic guidelines and the ACC/AHA STEMI guidelines support a direct thrombin inhibitor (bivalirudin preferred for PCI; argatroban for non-procedural HIT). Guideline support does not change the payment mechanics (still packaged/bundled in PCI).
Medicare reimbursement CMS Q2 2026 (live)
ASP from the CMS Part B Drug ASP Pricing File. Refreshes automatically each quarter. ASP is relevant for the rare separately-payable scenario and for institutional cost analytics — in the dominant PCI use case, payment flows through the APC or MS-DRG, not the J-code line.
Q2 2026 payment snapshot — J0583
Effective April 1 – June 30, 2026 · Based on 4Q25 ASP submissions · OPPS SI=N (packaged) for hospital outpatient PCI
OPPS Status Indicator N — the operative rule
For HCPCS J0583, the CMS OPPS Addendum B assigns Status Indicator N — "Items and services packaged into APC rates." This means that for any hospital outpatient PCI encounter where bivalirudin is administered, the drug acquisition cost is captured in the APC payment assigned to the PCI procedure (e.g., the APC for HCPCS 92928 PCI with stent). A J0583 line on the same claim is processed but produces no incremental payment; CMS does not pay separately for SI=N drugs. This is the single most important fact about J0583 billing.
MS-DRG bundling — the inpatient operative rule
Under the Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS), bivalirudin used during an inpatient PCI is paid via the assigned MS-DRG (typically MS-DRG 246–251 for PCI-driven admissions, or MS-DRG 280–285 for AMI-driven admissions where PCI is secondary). There is no separately payable Part B line for J0583 on an inpatient claim — the J-code is reported only on the outpatient claim form, and on inpatient claims the drug is captured via revenue code with chargemaster pricing rolled into the DRG payment.
Sequestration
Where J0583 is separately payable (the rare standalone scenario), the standard ~2% sequestration reduction applies, bringing effective reimbursement to roughly ASP + 4.3%. For the packaged or bundled use cases, sequestration is applied at the procedural payment level (APC or MS-DRG), not the drug line.
Coverage and code history
- J0583 — permanent CMS HCPCS Level II code, "Injection, bivalirudin, 1 mg"
- No NCD specific to bivalirudin; coverage falls under cath lab procedural NCDs and MAC LCDs for PCI and acute coronary syndromes
- Code is stable; descriptor and unit basis have not changed since assignment
- Next ASP update: July 1, 2026 for Q3 2026 (Q3 ASP file release scheduled per CMS quarterly schedule)
Patient assistance Verified May 2026
Bivalirudin is a generic acute-care drug administered in the cath lab or inpatient setting; there is no manufacturer copay or PAP program in the conventional sense.
- No manufacturer patient assistance program (PAP) for bivalirudin. The originator brand Angiomax (The Medicines Company / Sandoz) is discontinued, and the U.S. market is now served entirely by multiple generic manufacturers. Generic acute-care injectables typically have no PAP because the drug is administered in a facility under a facility / professional payment, not dispensed at retail or specialty pharmacy.
- No copay card. No commercial copay assistance program exists for J0583. Patient out-of-pocket exposure flows through the facility coinsurance and deductible for the PCI procedure, not a drug-specific copay.
- Hospital financial assistance. For uninsured or underinsured patients, hospital-based financial assistance / charity care programs (required by 501(r) for non-profit hospitals) are the primary patient-facing safety net for PCI-related costs that include bivalirudin's bundled cost.
- Foundations (cardiac). PAN Foundation, HealthWell Foundation, and the American Heart Association's patient programs maintain disease-state funds for cardiac conditions intermittently; verify open funds quarterly. These do not pay for bivalirudin as a drug line but may offset patient OOP for the PCI admission or follow-up.
- 340B for the hospital. Hospitals participating in 340B may purchase generic bivalirudin at 340B-discounted pricing for inpatient and outpatient use, affecting facility economics rather than patient OOP.
Common denials & how to fix them Reviewed May 2026
Most "denials" here are expected denials — the system correctly rejects the J0583 line because it is packaged or bundled. The fix is to stop submitting the line, not to chase the appeal.
| Denial reason | Common cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| J0583 line denied / zero-paid on hospital outpatient PCI claim | J0583 carries OPPS Status Indicator N (packaged into APC); submitting it as a separately payable line will not generate incremental payment, and in many systems the line is suppressed or denied as packaged | Expected behavior. Drug is paid via the PCI APC. Do not appeal — suppress the line at the chargemaster / claim-edit level so it is reported informationally only (where required) or omitted per facility convention. |
| J0583 line denied on inpatient PCI Part B claim | Inpatient PCI is paid via MS-DRG (typically MS-DRG 246–251); there is no separately payable Part B drug line for J0583 on the inpatient stay | Expected behavior. Drug acquisition cost is in the DRG payment. Do not file J0583 on a Part B claim for an inpatient PCI; report drug usage via revenue code on the inpatient UB-04 for chargemaster / cost-reporting purposes. |
| Wrong modifier (JW added to a packaged line) | JW reported on a packaged-status drug under the assumption that "drug waste is always reportable" | JW does not change the payment outcome on an SI=N line. Remove the modifier from packaged PCI claims; reserve JW for the rare standalone separately-payable scenario. |
| Wrong / withdrawn NDC | Outdated NDC for a no-longer-marketed product (e.g., originator Angiomax NDC) on a claim where J0583 is separately payable | Verify and submit the 11-digit carton NDC of the actual product dispensed (Sandoz, Hospira, Maia, etc.) with N4 qualifier in 24A shaded area. |
| Wrong admin code on standalone claim (96401 chemo SC) | Chemo admin code billed instead of non-chemo therapeutic infusion code | Use 96374 for the bolus and 96365/96366 for the continuous infusion in the standalone scenario. Bivalirudin is not a cytotoxic drug. |
| HIT documentation missing on HIT-driven PCI | D75.82 (or Z86.2 for historical HIT) not coded; rationale for DTI over heparin not in chart | Add D75.82 to the claim and ensure the H&P, cath lab note, and discharge summary document the HIT diagnosis or history that drove DTI selection. Supports audit defense even though drug is bundled. |
| Attempt to unbundle into 96374 + 96365 on a PCI APC claim | Infusion administration codes submitted separately for a cath-lab encounter | CCI/OCE edits will package the admin codes into the PCI APC. Do not unbundle. |
| Renal dosing not applied (dialysis-dependent patient) | Standard 1.75 mg/kg/hr infusion run on a dialysis patient without dose reduction; bleeding risk + audit risk | Clinical fix: reduce infusion to 0.25 mg/kg/hr per FDA label for dialysis-dependent patients; document ACT monitoring and dose rationale. |
| Confusion with argatroban | Argatroban (J0883 non-ESRD / J0884 ESRD on dialysis) billed under J0583 or vice versa | Different drugs, different J-codes, different clinical contexts. Argatroban for non-procedural ICU HIT; bivalirudin for HIT patients in PCI. See argatroban (J0883/J0884) for the non-procedural HIT page. |
Frequently asked questions
Can I bill J0583 separately during PCI?
No. For hospital outpatient PCI, HCPCS J0583 carries OPPS Status Indicator N (packaged) — drug cost is embedded in the APC payment for the PCI procedure and a separate J0583 line will be denied or zero-paid. For inpatient PCI, bivalirudin acquisition cost is bundled into the MS-DRG payment (typically MS-DRG 246–251 PCI DRGs); there is no separately payable Part B line. Bivalirudin used during PCI is functionally never separately payable.
What if bivalirudin is used outside PCI — pure HIT anticoagulation?
Very rare. The FDA-labeled bivalirudin indication is for PCI, including in patients with HIT or HITTS undergoing PCI. Use outside the PCI procedural window is off-label and uncommon — most non-procedural HIT anticoagulation uses argatroban. If bivalirudin is genuinely infused outside any bundled procedural or inpatient stay context (extremely unusual), Part B separate payment under J0583 may apply, but verify with the MAC and confirm no procedure or DRG bundling encompasses the infusion.
Bivalirudin vs Argatroban in HIT — which one and when?
Argatroban (J0883 non-ESRD / J0884 ESRD on dialysis) is the standard direct thrombin inhibitor for non-procedural HIT anticoagulation in the ICU and ward setting, titrated to aPTT. Bivalirudin (J0583) is the standard direct thrombin inhibitor for HIT or HITTS patients undergoing PCI, given as a weight-based bolus plus infusion during the cath lab procedure and titrated to ACT. The two are not interchangeable — argatroban for ICU HIT, bivalirudin for HIT patients needing PCI.
What is OPPS Status Indicator N?
Status Indicator N in the OPPS Addendum B identifies an item or service whose payment is packaged into the payment for another service. For J0583, SI=N means the drug cost is embedded in the APC payment for the PCI procedure to which it is associated. CMS does not pay separately for SI=N items — submitting a separate J0583 line will be processed but will not generate incremental payment, and most institutions suppress the line.
What about ASC PCI billing?
Limited PCI is performed in ambulatory surgical centers, but where it occurs the ASC payment system applies similar packaging logic — bivalirudin used as a procedural ancillary is packaged into the ASC facility payment for the covered procedure. Office-based cath labs are essentially nonexistent in current practice. The packaging conclusion holds across hospital outpatient, hospital inpatient, and ASC settings.
Does the ACT target affect billing?
No. The ACT target of 300–350 seconds during PCI is purely a clinical and titration parameter — there is no billing trigger or modifier tied to coagulation lab values. Document ACT timings and values in the cath lab record for clinical and audit purposes, but do not attempt to use ACT data points on the claim form.
Is there ANY separately payable scenario for J0583?
Only when bivalirudin is administered outside of any bundled procedural or inpatient stay context — for example, a hypothetical isolated outpatient continuous infusion in a Part B–billing physician office for non-procedural anticoagulation in a HIT patient. This is exceptionally rare in real practice. Verify the absence of an encompassing APC, DRG, or other bundle before billing J0583 as a separately payable Part B drug claim line, and expect MAC scrutiny.
What HCPCS code is bivalirudin billed under and what is the unit basis?
HCPCS J0583 — "Injection, bivalirudin, 1 mg." One milligram equals one billable
unit. The code is a permanent CMS HCPCS Level II code and is used for the rare separately-payable
scenarios; it is the same code used for ASP reporting even when the drug is bundled in the actual
payment for the PCI procedure or admission.
What ICD-10 codes apply to bivalirudin use?
Indication-specific. PCI encounters are coded primarily by the cardiac diagnosis: I21.x
for acute STEMI/NSTEMI, I20.0 for unstable angina, I25.x for chronic
ischemic heart disease, and Z51.81 for encounter for therapeutic drug monitoring where
applicable. For HIT-specific use add D75.82 (heparin-induced thrombocytopenia). The
procedural ICD-10-PCS codes (027x for coronary artery dilation) drive the inpatient MS-DRG that
absorbs bivalirudin cost.
Source documents
- FDA — ANGIOMAX (bivalirudin) prescribing information (NDA 20-873)
- DailyMed — Bivalirudin Injection [Fresenius Kabi] Prescribing Information
- CMS — OPPS Addendum B (current quarter)
- CMS — Medicare Part B Drug ASP Pricing File
- CMS — MS-DRG Classifications and Software (FY2026)
- ACC/AHA/SCAI — 2021 Guideline for Coronary Artery Revascularization
- ACC/AHA — STEMI and NSTE-ACS guidelines
- CHEST — Antithrombotic Therapy / HIT guidelines
- CMS — HCPCS Level II Quarterly Updates
- FDA National Drug Code Directory
- CMS — JW/JZ modifier policy (CR 12056, eff. July 2023)
Refresh cadence
| Element | Cadence | How it's refreshed |
|---|---|---|
| Medicare ASP pricing | Quarterly | Auto-bound to CareCost ASP layer; updates on CMS file release. |
| OPPS Status Indicator | Quarterly | Reviewed against the current OPPS Addendum B; SI=N for J0583 has been stable. |
| MS-DRG list | Annual (FY) | Reviewed against the IPPS final rule each fiscal year (October 1 effective). |
| NDC, dosing, FDA label, indication list | Event-driven | Tied to current generic labels and FDA label revisions. |
Change log
- — SME audit pass: real DailyMed setid linked (Fresenius Kabi, revised September 15, 2025), reviewer block updated. HCPCS J0583, OPPS SI=N packaging, DRG bundling, and ACT-titrated PCI dosing pattern all verified. No factual corrections required.
- — Initial publication. ASP data: Q2 2026. OPPS SI=N (packaged) and MS-DRG 246–251 bundling documented per Wave 7D HIT-format research memo. Page authored as defensive billing reference per Wave 7D template adaptation for OPPS SI=N / DRG-bundled drugs.
Methodology
Every claim on this page is sourced inline. Pricing reflects the current CMS Part B Drug ASP Pricing File. OPPS Status Indicator assignment is read directly from the current OPPS Addendum B. MS-DRG list is read from the IPPS final rule for the current fiscal year. Indication list and dosing are verified against the current FDA label revision and current generic-product labels. We do not paraphrase from billing-software vendor blogs.
About this page
We maintain this page as a living defensive-billing reference. Medicare ASP pricing is bound to our underlying CareCost data layer and refreshes automatically when CMS publishes new quarterly files. OPPS Status Indicator assignment and MS-DRG list are reviewed each cycle. Coding and policy content is reviewed at least quarterly and updated whenever a source document changes.
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