Skip to main content
Ambetter × Surgery

How to appeal your Centene / Ambetter surgery denial

Surgical denials are issued before the procedure (prior authorization) or after (claim denial). This guide is specific to Centene / Ambetter appeals.

Why Centene / Ambetter denies surgery

Centene operates one of the largest Medicaid footprints in the U.S. and sells ACA marketplace coverage under the Ambetter brand. Marketplace plans drew elevated regulator and journalist scrutiny in 2024 for higher-than-average denial rates on in-network claims, and Centene-managed Medicaid lines vary plan-by-plan by state.

For surgery specifically: Surgical denials are issued before the procedure (prior authorization) or after (claim denial). Both have appeal paths. The strategy depends on which.

The law that controls this appeal

Medical-necessity review against the plan's own clinical criteria (MCG or InterQual), which the plan must disclose on request under ERISA § 503 and 45 C.F.R. § 147.136.

What Centene / Ambetter denies for surgery

The surgery services most often denied:

  • Bariatric surgery (gastric sleeve, bypass, RYGB)
  • Orthopedic, knee, hip, shoulder replacement
  • Spine surgery (fusion, decompression)
  • Cardiac (CABG, valve replacement, ablation)
  • Reconstructive and plastic surgery deemed cosmetic
  • Bilateral mastectomy and reconstruction

Why surgery claims get denied

A typical Centene / Ambetter surgery denial almost always cites one of these reasons. Each one maps to a specific rebuttal in the appeal:

  • Plan claims procedure is 'not medically necessary'
  • Conservative therapy (PT, weight loss, etc.) not documented
  • Wrong CPT/ICD coding submitted by surgeon's office
  • Carrier deems procedure 'experimental' or 'investigational'
  • Pre-existing condition exclusion (rare under ACA)

The Centene / Ambetter appeal process

Appeal levels: Marketplace: internal appeal then federal external review (IRO). Medicaid: plan appeal then state fair hearing. Medicare Advantage: federal 5-level ladder.

Carrier timing: 180 days from denial for marketplace internal appeals; 4 months / 120 days for federal external review. Medicaid fair-hearing deadlines vary by state, often as short as 90-120 days.

Surgery timing: Pre-service (prior auth) appeals: 30 days standard, 72 hours urgent. Post-service claim appeals: 30-60 days. Internal appeal must usually be filed within 180 days of denial.

What we know about Centene / Ambetter: We confirm the specific Centene subsidiary (Ambetter, Sunshine Health, Wellcare, etc.) before filing, because procedural rules and the supervising regulator change with the line of business.

Common Centene / Ambetter denial patterns for surgery

  • ACA marketplace in-network denials. Ambetter marketplace plans have been documented denying in-network medical claims at rates above the marketplace average. Federal ACA rules guarantee internal appeal plus external review via an Independent Review Organization (IRO), both are no-cost to the member.
  • Narrow networks driving care-access denials. Ambetter HMO products often run narrower networks than the local competition. Network-adequacy challenges (state DOI complaints citing inadequate specialist access) can convert an out-of-network denial into in-network coverage.
  • Medicaid managed care fair hearings. Centene-managed Medicaid plans (Sunshine Health, Buckeye, Peach State, etc.) operate under each state's Medicaid rules. After plan-level appeal, members have the right to a state fair hearing, a binding administrative process with strong reversal history.

How to win your Centene / Ambetter surgery appeal

Strategy for surgery: Force the carrier to disclose the clinical criteria they used. Have the surgeon write a letter of medical necessity addressing each criterion. Attach prior conservative-therapy documentation. Request a peer-to-peer review with the plan's medical director.

Filed against Centene / Ambetter, that strategy rides on this procedural spine:

  1. Procedural-rights anchor. Every Centene / Ambetter 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.
  2. Criteria-disclosure demand. Centene / Ambetter frequently denies on "not medically necessary" without disclosing the clinical criteria applied. Once disclosed, those criteria become the rebuttal map.
  3. Controlling-standard citation. Medical-necessity review against the plan's own clinical criteria (MCG or InterQual), which the plan must disclose on request under ERISA § 503 and 45 C.F.R. § 147.136.
  4. Treating-provider attestation. A letter from the treating physician addressing each criterion in Centene / Ambetter's own policy language. This is the single strongest evidentiary element.
  5. Requested action. A specific demand to reverse the surgery denial and approve the service, not a general "please reconsider."

Documents you'll need for your Centene / Ambetter surgery appeal

  • The denial letter
  • Insurance card (front + back)
  • Surgeon's pre-operative notes
  • Imaging reports (MRI, X-ray, CT)
  • Conservative-therapy records (PT, medication trials)

What a surgery appeal can recover

Typical recovery for surgery cases runs $5,000 - $150,000+ depending on procedure. The exact figure depends on the specific service and your plan's contracted rates.

Centene / Ambetter surgery appeals: frequently asked questions

Can I appeal your Centene / Ambetter surgery denial?

Yes. Pre-service (prior authorization) and post-service surgical denials are both appealable. Force Centene / Ambetter to disclose the clinical criteria (MCG or InterQual) it applied, then have your surgeon rebut each criterion in a letter of medical necessity.

How long do I have to appeal your Centene / Ambetter surgery denial?

Internal appeals are generally due within 180 days of the denial. Urgent pre-service appeals are decided in 72 hours, standard pre-service in 30 days, and post-service claim appeals in 30 to 60 days.

Why did Centene / Ambetter call my surgery 'not medically necessary'?

Most surgical denials cite unmet criteria or missing documentation of conservative therapy such as physical therapy, weight loss, or medication trials. Documenting those prior treatments and mapping them to the carrier's own criteria is the core of the appeal.

What documents strengthen your Centene / Ambetter surgery appeal?

The denial letter, your surgeon's pre-operative notes, imaging reports, and records of prior conservative therapy. A peer-to-peer review between your surgeon and the plan's medical director often resolves these before external review.

What Apellica does for Centene / Ambetter surgery appeals

We file appeals against Centene / Ambetter specifically configured to its internal review process. Every surgery 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 Centene / Ambetter appeals, if the appeal succeeds, we collect a percentage of the recovered claim value. If it fails, you owe nothing.

Start your Centene / Ambetter surgery appeal

Submit a 2-minute intake. A senior reviewer responds within one business day with the specific appeal strategy for your case.

Start free appeal review →

Related Centene / Ambetter guides

Surgery guides for other carriers

Start Free Case Review