Insurance bilateral mastectomy question

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blondie45
blondie45 Member Posts: 580
edited August 2017 in Breast Reconstruction

I am getting close to the time (finally) that I will be able to change insurances with open enrollment at my job and then have the new insurance starting January 1. I am wondering if anyone has Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield and had a bilateral mastectomy even though only one side showed disease. I had my unilateral mastectomy back in April 2009. My current insurance (a local insurance) would not let me outside of network to have a DIEP since they say they offer TRAM in my network. Anyhow, after 1-1/2 years of thinking I think I still want the other one removed when I have the DIEP (current insurance would not cover it at time of unilateral because it was not diseased). Any info would be greatly appreciated.

Comments

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,891
    edited October 2010

    I have anthem bcbs and had a BMX.  I only had cancer in one breast but elected to have both removed.  I did not have a tram or diep, I chose to go the implant route.  My insurance covered everything 100%.  No questions, no problems. 

    Good luck!!

  • heatherbless
    heatherbless Member Posts: 295
    edited October 2010

    I have anthem and I think you should be able to get everything covered.  There is no reason for insurance to deny a BLM--even if you only had breast cancer in one breast.  I had a DIEP and a follow-up SGAP in Charleston, SC with Dr. Craigie at East Cooper Plastic Surgery.  BCBS covers them and I did not have to pay anything out of pocket.  Let me know if you need any advice.  Going to Charleston for reconstruction was one of the best things I ever did.  PM me if you have any questions.  Best, heather

  • momof3sofar
    momof3sofar Member Posts: 123
    edited October 2010

    That has been a question on my mind as well.  We have a PPO insurance but when I said something to my "navigator" about possibly doing a BMX since the left breast has hyperplasia cells as well, and her first response well you'd have to check with your insurance first.  I was taken aback by that comment.  I don't know if she was just trying to  get me to reconsider and go for the lumpectomy instead of a MX on the right on the cancer side or what.  I have not felt very comfortable with her since which is sad because she is supposed to be the one helping me through all this tangled web.

    I didn't mean to hijack your thread but the comment from one of the pp said there is no reason to deny a BMX even if only 1 breast is diseased got me wondering again.

    Good luck in your decision and getting insurance to pay.

    Dawn 

  • blondie45
    blondie45 Member Posts: 580
    edited October 2010

    Yes I agree there is no reason to deny a bilateral but they did. I even checked with the insurance commissioner for my state and they said HMOs can pretty much do whatever they want as they have it detailed and written in such a way that they get away with it. They denied my choice of bilateral so I only had unilateral at time of diagnosis and they also denied me wanting to have a DIEP as they say the TRAM is offered in network, yeah from a doctor that does breast augmentations as his main type of surgery every day, no thank you.

    No problem Dawn, you didn't hijack the thread.

    Thanks though to everyone that seems to have been able to have a bilateral with Anthem BC/BS

  • glanter
    glanter Member Posts: 78
    edited August 2013

    Let's go to the source.  Here is the link to Anthem's coverage guideline for contralateral prophylactic mastectomy.  You should have no problem getting your mastectomy covered in the non-diseased breast because of your history if you change to Anthem.

    http://www.anthem.com/medicalguidelines/va/f5/s10/t2/pw_a036255.pdf

     Hope this helps...best wishes.

    Gail

  • Marjas02
    Marjas02 Member Posts: 6
    edited December 2010

    Hi everybody,

    I'm glad I ran across this discussion as I just scheduled a bilateral mx for Jan 14.  It never dawned on me that insurance may not cover the breast that is disease-free.  Would my breast surgeon confirm with insurance before scheduling?  I'm going to call surgeon on Monday to see if a prior-auth is necessary.  I currently has a local insurance company but come Jan 1 I will be covered under United Healthcare. 

  • Marymac5522
    Marymac5522 Member Posts: 14
    edited August 2017

    I know this is an old thread but I am going through this as well. I want to do this bilateral because even though I don't have the BRCA gene, there is adequate history to show that it is likely to reoccur. Out of 5 aunts and cousins who had breast cancer (father's side), the there was one at age 40 with it in both sides, and two who chose radiation who had recurrence.. and two more who had lateral mastectomies (1 side) and no recurrance On top of that I am triple negative! It was found very early, very small, but it is fast growing/high mitosis. Invasive was first missed but recently retested by a second pathologist and invasive was found. I have BCBS PPO (the highest,most expensive government plan... so not medicare, not HMO, not high deductible (although I will surely meet my out of pocket maximum this year)). The doctors have said I am very high risk (maybe not quite BRCA, but definitely a genetic thing going on). They have previously recommended that another cousin get bilateral mx just as preventative. There is also LOTS of other cancer in the family line including related cancers like prostate, colon, uterine.

    I am one day from the surgery and I find out they won't pay for the second side... really? Is radiation/chemo, mammograms, follow up MRI's every 6 months etc... really that much less expensive?

    I am venting now. Tomorrow I will get to work making phone calls trying to figure out what needs to be done.

  • candles1
    candles1 Member Posts: 77
    edited August 2017

    it was my understanding that an insurance company is obligated to pay for the other side if for no other reason than you want symmetry.

    Is the denial because you chose this option at the last minute and so the proper approvals were not obtained? If that's the case, you may need to cancel this surgery and wait for the proper approval, then reschedule.

  • Houston2016
    Houston2016 Member Posts: 317
    edited August 2017

    Hello,

    I had UMX on the left breast covered by United Healthcare, in 11/16. My insurance will change to BCBS in 09/01/17, I'm planning to have a lift on the right breast and removing the TE from my left At the same time. My question is would the breast lift be covered by insurance, even though I may do recon later? Thanks for your inputs.

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