Reduce CARC 197 (missing-authorization) denial volume by 50 to 65%
CARC 197 is the most common preventable denial in outpatient billing. A pre-submission scrubber + auth log discipline pulls the volume down, while a denial classifier wins back the ones that still slip through.
The leak
CARC 197 in the X12 standard reads “Precertification/authorization/notification/pre-treatment absent.” It is the single most common preventable denial in outpatient billing. Industry benchmark is 4 to 8 per 1,000 claims. Most operations we talk to run higher.
Two flavors:
- Track A: auth was genuinely never obtained.
- Track B: auth was obtained, but the payer cannot match it to the claim.
Both are recoverable. Track B at >75% win rate with the right template. Track A at 35 to 55% if retroactive authorization is available (most commercial plans, most Medicaid MCOs, some Medicare Advantage with documentation).
The agent
Three things working together:
- Pre-submission scrubber reads CPT codes on outbound claims, checks them against payer-published auth-required lists, and flags claims missing an auth number before submission. Catches 60 to 75% of preventable 197s.
- Auth log keeps every authorization in a structured field (auth #, payer, DOS span, CPT codes, expiration) so Track B appeals can pull the auth from a single source instead of free-text notes.
- Reauth calendar drives standing-order reauths for chronic-care services (PT, infusion, chemo) two weeks before expiration, so claims do not deny for an expired auth.
For 197s that still slip through, the denial classifier separates Track A from Track B automatically, picks the right template, and drafts the appeal letter with the auth number (or the retroactive-auth request) already attached.
Before / after
| Today | With NxtPivot | |
|---|---|---|
| Outbound auth check | Sample-basis or none | Every claim, every payer |
| Auth log format | Free-text notes | Structured fields |
| Track A vs Track B | Mixed in worklist | Auto-classified |
| Appeal letter time | 22 min per appeal | 4 min (biller reviews) |
| 90-day 197 volume change | Flat | 50 to 65% reduction |
The math
A clinic running 5,000 claims a month at a 6 per-1000 197 rate sees 30 of these denials monthly. At a $200 average claim value with a 65% combined recovery rate (across both tracks), you are recovering ~$3,900 per month per clinic.
Cut the volume by 60% over 90 days and you have 12 denials a month instead of 30. The 12 you still see still go through the recovery flow. The 18 you no longer see were preventable, and prevention is cheaper per dollar than recovery.
What to track
Two metrics:
- 197 denials per 1,000 claims. If yours is above 10, the scrubber + auth-log workflow is the cheapest fix.
- 197 appeal win rate by track. If Track B is below 75%, the template is the fix.