Summary & Overview
Inguinal and Femoral Hernia Procedures with CC: Inpatient Reimbursement Overview
DRG 351 applies to inpatient admissions for inguinal and femoral hernia procedures when a Complication or Comorbidity is present, reflecting higher clinical complexity than uncomplicated hernia repairs. It matters for inpatient reimbursement because the Diagnosis-Related Group assignment drives Medicare base payments that account for the additional resources required for cases with complicating conditions.
DRG 351 Overview
DRG 351 covers inpatient admissions for adult patients undergoing repair of inguinal or femoral hernias when a Complication or Comorbidity is present. This grouping captures cases with higher resource use than straightforward hernia repairs due to added clinical complexity or comorbid conditions. It matters for Medicare payment because the Diagnosis-Related Group assignment determines base payment rates that account for the increased hospital resources associated with these complicating diagnoses. Accurate coding of the hernia procedure and any Complication or Comorbidity affects reimbursement and hospital case-mix classification.
Clinical Trials
- Acute surgical technique and perioperative management trials: randomized or prospective cohort studies comparing operative approaches (open vs laparoscopic/robotic) or variations in repair technique for inguinal and femoral hernias complicated by comorbid conditions (eg, incarcerated hernia, obstructive symptoms, or significant cardiopulmonary disease). These studies enroll hospitalized adults presenting for urgent or scheduled repair and evaluate perioperative outcomes such as operative time, intraoperative complications, need for bowel resection, length of stay, and early postoperative morbidity. Results inform surgeons and hospital administrators which approaches minimize acute complications and resource use for patients classified under DRG 351, guiding operative planning and short-term cost containment.
- Comparative effectiveness and risk-stratification studies in medically complex patients: observational or pragmatic trials assessing outcomes of different perioperative care pathways (eg, enhanced recovery protocols, anesthesia types, or antibiotic prophylaxis strategies) specifically in older adults or patients with significant comorbidities that qualify as a CC. These studies focus on real-world patient populations with higher baseline risk for complications and examine readmission rates, postoperative infections, thromboembolism, and incremental costs across care models. Payers and care managers use this evidence to direct preoperative optimization, decide on payment bundles, and identify care pathways that reduce complications and downstream spending for DRG 351 cases.
- Post-discharge functional recovery and quality-of-life/outcomes research: prospective cohort studies or trials measuring long-term outcomes after hospitalization for complicated inguinal or femoral hernia repair, including functional status, chronic pain, recurrence rates, and health-related quality of life up to one year. These studies often stratify by intraoperative findings (eg, bowel resection), hernia type, and presence of CCs to determine predictors of prolonged recovery and resource utilization such as home health or rehabilitation needs. Findings are relevant to discharge planners, rehabilitation services, and payers because they identify which patients require extended post-acute support and help forecast post-discharge costs and readmission risk associated with DRG 351.
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