Urology Coding Alert

Reader Question:

Stop Looking for V and E Codes in ICD-10

Question: I’ve heard that ICD-10 doesn’t have an equivalent to V codes and E codes, so how can we report external causes and other factors influencing health status under the new code set?

Codify Forum Member

Answer: You’ve heard right — ICD-10 doesn’t break out the information represented by ICD-9 V and E codes. Instead, ICD-10 incorporates the information into the main classification. That’s part of the reason that ICD-10 codes are alpha-numeric and contain up to seven characters, compared to ICD-9 codes that contain up to five characters. 

The fact that ICD-10 incorporates information for external causes and health status into the main classification has the following implications for the codes:

  • Placeholders (X) are required to hold places followed by additional characters
  • Seventh characters are required for obstetrics, injuries, and external causes of injuries
  • Post-operative complications will now be located with the procedure-specific body system.

Also notice that while ICD-9 classifies injury by type only, ICD-10 classifies injuries first by specific site and then by type.

Helpful: With the extended information provided by a single code under ICD-10, looking back to the parent code to get the whole picture could be difficult. That’s why ICD-10 includes full code titles for all codes, so it is not necessary to reference back to common fourth and fifth digit categories. 

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