How to appeal your Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization denial
Most 'denials' people receive are actually prior-authorization refusals, issued before care is delivered. This guide is specific to Aetna (CVS Health) appeals.
Why Aetna (CVS Health) denies prior authorization
Aetna, owned by CVS Health since 2018, runs commercial group plans, Medicare Advantage, and a large pharmacy benefit footprint via Caremark. GLP-1, specialty drug, and behavioral health denials are the highest-volume categories.
For prior authorization specifically: Most 'denials' people receive are actually prior-authorization refusals, issued before care is delivered. The legal framework, timeline, and leverage are different from post-service claim denials.
The plan must disclose the clinical criteria it applied and meet ERISA § 503 decision timelines (72 hours urgent, 30 days standard).
What Aetna (CVS Health) denies for prior authorization
The prior authorization services most often denied:
- Imaging (MRI, CT, PET)
- Specialty drug prescriptions
- Surgical procedures
- Mental health intensive outpatient or inpatient
- Home health and durable medical equipment
- Out-of-network referrals
Why prior authorization claims get denied
A typical Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization denial almost always cites one of these reasons. Each one maps to a specific rebuttal in the appeal:
- Documentation submitted by provider was incomplete
- Plan deems criteria not met (often without disclosing them)
- Step therapy or conservative-care requirements not documented
- Wrong CPT or ICD codes
The Aetna (CVS Health) appeal process
Appeal levels: Internal level 1 (30 days standard / 72h urgent), then external IRO review (45 days standard).
Carrier timing: 180 days from denial for internal appeal; 60 days from final internal denial for external review.
Prior auth timing: Urgent: 72 hours. Standard: 30 days. Most plans: 60-180 day filing window.
What we know about Aetna (CVS Health): Aetna's internal appeals respond well to peer-to-peer review requests filed alongside the written appeal.
Common Aetna (CVS Health) denial patterns for prior authorization
- GLP-1 / Wegovy denials citing BMI. Aetna denies most weight-loss GLP-1 prescriptions citing BMI thresholds or 'lifestyle modification first' criteria. Switching the prescription path to a T2D-approved molecule (Ozempic, Mounjaro) when comorbidities exist often produces a same-week reversal.
- Caremark formulary denials. Aetna's pharmacy benefit (Caremark) issues formulary denials separate from medical benefit denials. Each requires its own appeal track, confusing the two costs weeks.
- Internal appeal then external review. Aetna's first appeal is internal and must be filed within 180 days. After internal denial, an external review by an Independent Review Organization (IRO) is available within 60 days, a separately strong reversal lane.
How to win your Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization appeal
Strategy for prior authorization: Mark urgent if the provider can sign off, drops 30-day window to 72 hours. Request peer-to-peer review with the medical director. Force the carrier to disclose the criteria, then have the provider's letter address each criterion.
Filed against Aetna (CVS Health), that strategy rides on this procedural spine:
- Procedural-rights anchor. Every Aetna (CVS Health) denial triggers ERISA § 503 or 45 C.F.R. § 147.136 procedural rights. The cover letter invokes these in the opening paragraph to lock the timeline and force criteria disclosure.
- Criteria-disclosure demand. Aetna (CVS Health) frequently denies on "not medically necessary" without disclosing the clinical criteria applied. Once disclosed, those criteria become the rebuttal map.
- Controlling-standard citation. The plan must disclose the clinical criteria it applied and meet ERISA § 503 decision timelines (72 hours urgent, 30 days standard).
- Treating-provider attestation. A letter from the treating physician addressing each criterion in Aetna (CVS Health)'s own policy language. This is the single strongest evidentiary element.
- Requested action. A specific demand to reverse the prior authorization denial and approve the service, not a general "please reconsider."
Documents you'll need for your Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization appeal
- Denial letter
- Original prior-auth request
- Provider's clinical notes
- Records of any prior conservative therapy
What a prior authorization appeal can recover
Typical recovery for prior authorization cases runs $500 - $100,000+ depending on care being authorized. The exact figure depends on the specific service and your plan's contracted rates.
Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization appeals: frequently asked questions
Can I appeal your Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization denial?
Yes. Most denials people receive are prior-authorization refusals issued before care. Mark the appeal urgent if your provider signs off, which drops the 30-day window to 72 hours, and request a peer-to-peer with the medical director.
How long does Aetna (CVS Health) have to decide a prior-auth appeal?
Urgent appeals must be decided within 72 hours and standard appeals within 30 days. Most plans give you a 60 to 180 day window to file.
Why was my prior authorization denied?
Common causes are incomplete documentation from the provider, criteria the plan deems unmet (often without disclosing them), undocumented step therapy, or wrong CPT or ICD codes. Forcing criteria disclosure under ERISA turns the denial into a checklist you can rebut.
What is a peer-to-peer review and does it help?
It is a direct call between your treating provider and the plan's medical director. For prior-auth denials it is frequently the fastest path to reversal because your provider can address the exact criterion in real time.
What Apellica does for Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization appeals
We file appeals against Aetna (CVS Health) specifically configured to its internal review process. Every prior authorization appeal embeds the criteria-disclosure demand, the procedural-rights anchor, the controlling-standard citation above, treating-provider attestation language, and the peer-reviewed evidence relevant to the denied service.
Cost: $0 upfront. We work on contingency for Aetna (CVS Health) appeals, if the appeal succeeds, we collect a percentage of the recovered claim value. If it fails, you owe nothing.
Start your Aetna (CVS Health) prior authorization appeal
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