Summary & Overview
Acute Major Eye Infections with CC/MCC: Inpatient Reimbursement Overview
DRG 121 encompasses acute major eye infections with a Complication or Comorbidity or Major Complication or Comorbidity, including serious orbital, intraocular, and ocular surface infections requiring inpatient care. Accurate classification matters for inpatient reimbursement because complication status influences payment weight and resource allocation under Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services rules.
DRG 121 Overview
DRG 121 covers inpatient admissions for acute major eye infections that include a Complication or Comorbidity or a Major Complication or Comorbidity. These cases involve serious orbital, ocular surface, or intraocular infections requiring inpatient-level medical or surgical management. This Diagnosis-Related Group matters for Medicare payment because the presence of complications or major complications modifies relative resource use and impacts reimbursement under the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services inpatient prospective payment system.
National Payment Rates
Across payers the observed rate range spans from about $370 to $39K, with the widest spread between the lowest and highest payer values shown in the table and chart below. Anthem and BCBS show the largest dispersion toward the high end while Aetna and Cigna cluster higher in median values. Refer to the table and chart below for payer-specific quartiles and medians.
The CMS 2023 data represent national Medicare fee‑for‑service inpatient payments published under the CMS Provider Utilization and Payment Data program. The table below shows average total payment, average submitted covered charges, average Medicare payment amount, and total discharges for DRG 121. Values reflect Medicare FFS payment activity at the national level for the reporting year.
State Payment Rates
State: Alaska1 / 49
Alaska Benchmarks
Alaska reimbursement for DRG 121 ranges from $18K to $28K across reported payers, with Blue Cross Blue Shield and Anthem clustered at $18K and Cigna at $28K. The state’s primary deviation from national averages is Cigna’s elevated mean, which exceeds typical national medians for comparable payers. See the table and chart below for payer-specific distributions.
Key Insights for Alaska
- Highest payer: Cigna (mean $28K) is the highest-paying payer in Alaska; lowest payers: Blue Cross Blue Shield and Anthem (both mean $18K).
- Alaska’s Cigna mean ($28K) sits well above the national medians for major payers, creating a notable upward deviation compared with national benchmarks.
- The state exhibits a wide payer spread ($18K–$28K), driven primarily by Cigna’s higher mean relative to the other payers.
Clinical Trials
- Acute intervention trials testing rapid topical or systemic therapies for severe bacterial, fungal, or endophthalmitis cases: these studies enroll hospitalized patients presenting with acute major eye infections requiring urgent inpatient care (often post-operative endophthalmitis, severe bacterial keratitis with sight‑threatening features, or intraocular infections). They evaluate time-to-sterilization, need for immediate surgical intervention, and early vision outcomes to determine which acute management strategies reduce progression to vision loss. This research is directly relevant to providers and payers because it targets interventions that may shorten length of stay, lower rates of emergent surgery, and reduce high-cost complications.
- Comparative effectiveness studies of surgical versus medical-first management in sight-threatening intraocular infections: randomized or pragmatic cohort studies compare outcomes between patients managed primarily with urgent ophthalmic surgery (vitrectomy, drainage) versus intensive medical therapy (intraocular antibiotics, systemic antimicrobials) for defined clinical presentations. The patient population includes adults with acute endophthalmitis or severe orbital cellulitis at admission, and the studies focus on functional visual outcomes, rates of reoperation, and cumulative resource utilization. Findings inform clinicians and payers about which care pathways produce better long-term vision and lower total costs, guiding DRG-level resource allocation and care protocols.
- Post-discharge outcomes and readmission prevention studies examining rehabilitation, follow-up adherence, and infection recurrence: observational cohorts or intervention trials target the transition from inpatient to outpatient care for patients treated for major eye infections, assessing factors such as outpatient topical/systemic therapy adherence, access to ophthalmology follow-up, wound healing, and rates of readmission for recurrent infection or complications. These studies often stratify by social determinants (age, comorbid diabetes, immunosuppression) to identify high-risk groups who benefit from targeted care coordination. Results are important to payers and hospital systems because reducing readmissions, preventing complications that prompt costly re-hospitalization, and optimizing post-acute care pathways can improve outcomes within this high-cost DRG.
Trek Health ingests and normalizes Transparency in Coverage data and payer policy updates to give provider organizations a clear view of how commercial reimbursement behaves across markets, payers, and services. Our platform transforms raw payer disclosures into structured intelligence that supports contract evaluation, payer negotiations, and service line strategy. By combining market benchmarks with ongoing policy visibility, Trek helps teams identify variability, risk, and opportunity in commercial reimbursement. The result is faster insight, stronger negotiating positions, and more informed financial decisions.