A17.89
BillableOther tuberculosis of nervous system
Last updated: FY2026 ICD-10-CM (Oct 1, 2025 – Sep 30, 2026) | CMS-HCC V28 (100% phase-in, PY2026)
Is A17.89 an HCC code?
No. A17.89 is a billable ICD-10-CM code but does not map to any HCC category in V28, V24, ESRD, or RxHCC.
This code does not map to an HCC category in any model (V28, V24, ESRD, RxHCC).
What This Code Means
A17.89 is the ICD-10-CM diagnosis code for other tuberculosis of nervous system. This code describes tuberculosis infection that affects the nervous system in ways other than the more common forms like meningitis or spinal tuberculosis. It represents less typical presentations of TB that have spread to or affected the brain, spinal cord, or nerves. A17.89 sits in the ICD-10-CM chapter for certain infectious and parasitic diseases (a00-b99), within the section covering tuberculosis (a15-a19).
A17.89 is a billable ICD-10-CM code but does not map to a payment HCC under the CMS-HCC V28, V24, ESRD, or RxHCC risk adjustment models. It can be reported on Medicare Advantage encounter data submissions but it does not contribute to a beneficiary's RAF score and therefore does not affect risk-adjusted payments to the plan.
Use this code only when the TB infection of the nervous system doesn't fit into more specific categories like A17.0 (TB meningitis) or A17.1 (TB of spine); always verify the specific site affected in the clinical documentation.
HCC Buddy maintains structured V28 and V24 mapping, RAF weights, and MEAT documentation criteria for A17.89 sourced directly from the CMS-HCC risk adjustment model files and the CMS ICD-10-CM code set.
Coding Tips
- •Use this code only when the TB infection of the nervous system doesn't fit into more specific categories like A17.0 (TB meningitis) or A17.1 (TB of spine); always verify the specific site affected in the clinical documentation
- •This is a manifestation code that typically requires a primary TB code (usually from A15-A16 series) to indicate the initial TB infection site; ensure both codes are reported together for complete clinical picture