🎓 100% Free — No subscription, no login required. Download your free CPC Study Kit →

Sepsis coding is one of the most frequently tested and commonly misunderstood topics in medical coding. The ICD-10-CM guidelines for sepsis are detailed, specific, and slightly different from how many coders initially approach the condition. This guide breaks down sepsis coding step-by-step so you understand how to identify sepsis, code it correctly, and assign the proper site-of-infection diagnosis.

What is Sepsis?

Sepsis is a life-threatening condition caused by the body’s response to infection. It occurs when microorganisms (bacteria, viruses, or fungi) spread into the bloodstream and trigger a systemic inflammatory response. Sepsis progresses in severity:

⭐ Important Note: In ICD-10-CM, the terminology “severe sepsis” still appears in the guidelines and in clinical documentation. However, the coding structure has evolved to be more precise about organ dysfunction. Always look for documentation of organ failure or dysfunction when coding sepsis.

How to Code Sepsis in ICD-10-CM

Step 1: Identify the Infecting Organism

The first step in coding sepsis is to identify the organism causing the infection. ICD-10-CM requires you to code the specific organism whenever possible. The infecting organism is coded with a code from category A40 (Streptococcal sepsis) or A41 (Other sepsis).

Organism TypeICD-10-CM Code Range
Streptococcal sepsisA40.0–A40.9
Staphylococcal sepsisA41.0–A41.1
Streptococcal pneumoniaeA40.3
E. coli sepsisA41.5
Pseudomonas sepsisA41.5
Sepsis, unspecified organismA41.9

Step 2: Code the Site of Infection

Once you’ve identified the organism, you must code the site where the infection originated. This is crucial because the source of infection affects treatment and patient outcomes. Common sites include:

💡 Key Rule: You must code both the sepsis (A40/A41) AND the underlying site of infection. Coding only the sepsis code without the infection site is incomplete. The infection site tells the story of how the sepsis started.

Step 3: Code Associated Organ Dysfunction

If the patient develops severe sepsis or septic shock with acute organ failure, you must code the organ dysfunction. This includes:

The Sepsis Coding Sequence

🏥 Inpatient Sepsis Coding

🏢 Outpatient Sepsis Coding

AdvertisementGoogle AdSense Ad — 728×90 or Responsive

Real-World Sepsis Coding Examples

Example 1: Sepsis with Pneumonia

Clinical Scenario: 68-year-old admitted with fever, shortness of breath, and low blood pressure. Chest X-ray shows left lower lobe pneumonia. Blood cultures grow Staphylococcus aureus. Patient requires mechanical ventilation.

Codes to Assign:

Why These Codes? The sepsis code comes first because sepsis was the reason for admission. The pneumonia code identifies where the infection originated. The respiratory failure code documents the acute organ dysfunction requiring mechanical ventilation.

Example 2: Urosepsis (Urinary Tract Sepsis)

Clinical Scenario: 82-year-old female with E. coli sepsis secondary to urinary tract infection. Patient has acute kidney injury requiring dialysis.

Codes to Assign:

Why These Codes? E. coli is a Gram-negative organism, so A41.5 applies. The UTI code shows the source. The acute kidney injury code documents the serious complication.

Example 3: Post-Surgical Sepsis

Clinical Scenario: Patient develops streptococcal sepsis on post-op day 3 after abdominal surgery. Source is intra-abdominal abscess from surgical site infection.

Codes to Assign:

Why These Codes? Streptococcal sepsis becomes the principal diagnosis. The peritonitis code identifies the infected site. The procedural complication code shows this is a post-operative infection.

Common Sepsis Coding Mistakes

❌ Mistake #1: Coding only the sepsis code without the site of infection. The site must always be coded as a secondary diagnosis to tell the complete clinical story.

❌ Mistake #2: Using “SIRS” (systemic inflammatory response syndrome) codes instead of sepsis codes. SIRS codes are used only when there is no confirmed infection. If infection is documented, code sepsis, not SIRS.

❌ Mistake #3: Forgetting to code organ dysfunction. If the patient has septic shock, respiratory failure, kidney injury, or coagulopathy — these must be coded separately with their own codes.

❌ Mistake #4: Using a non-specific sepsis code when a specific organism is documented. If E. coli, Staph, or Strep is identified — use the specific code, not A41.9 (unspecified).

Sepsis and Septic Shock — The Key Distinction

ConditionDefinitionICD-10-CM Code
SepsisSIRS with confirmed or suspected infectionA40–A41
Severe SepsisSepsis with acute organ dysfunction (still used in documentation)A40–A41 + organ dysfunction codes
Septic ShockSepsis with persistent hypotension requiring vasopressor supportR57.2 (Septic shock)

When a patient has septic shock, you code both the sepsis code (A40 or A41) AND the septic shock code (R57.2). Septic shock is always a serious complication and the codes work together to paint the complete clinical picture.

⭐ CPC Exam Tip: Sepsis questions on the exam frequently test whether you remember to code the site of infection. A question will describe sepsis and you must identify not just that sepsis occurred, but what the source was. Read carefully for infection sites — UTI, pneumonia, wound infection, abdominal infection, etc.

AdvertisementGoogle AdSense Ad — 728×90 or Responsive

Summary: The Sepsis Coding Checklist

When you encounter sepsis in a medical record, ask yourself these questions:

  1. Is infection confirmed or suspected? → Code A40 or A41
  2. What organism is documented? → Use specific code (Staph, Strep, Gram-negative, etc.)
  3. What is the source/site of infection? → Code site separately (UTI, pneumonia, abscess, etc.)
  4. Are there complications? → Code respiratory failure, kidney injury, shock, coagulopathy, etc.
  5. Is this severe sepsis or septic shock? → Add appropriate severity/shock codes
  6. What is the principal/first-listed diagnosis? → Usually sepsis if that’s why patient was admitted

📥 Free Study Kit

Get Your Free CPC Study Kit

6 free study guides delivered to your inbox. CPT cheat sheets, ICD-10 summary, and 90-day planner — all in one kit.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Not affiliated with AAPC®.