Procrit Denied by Insurance?
How to Appeal & Get Approved
Generic: epoetin alfa
Learn why Procrit gets denied and how to appeal successfully.
- Used for
- Anemia — CKD, chemotherapy, surgery
- Route
- SC
- Specialty
- Oncology
- PA Required
- Yes — 89% of prescriptions
Common Denial Reasons
Procrit is frequently denied for step therapy, documentation, and formulary reasons. Decode your specific denial →
require prior authorization before your pharmacy can fill them. If you've been denied, you're not alone — and most denials can be overturned on appeal.
Step Therapy Requirements
"Fail first" — what insurers require before approving Procrit
Most insurers require you to try alternative medications before approving Procrit. See your insurer's requirements →
Let Ellen Fight Your Procrit Denial
Ellen generates a personalized appeal letter for Procrit using your denial reason, insurer, and clinical situation.
- ✓Instant denial decoding — understand why you were denied
- ✓Payer-specific appeal language that matches your insurer's criteria
- ✓Clinical evidence suggestions your doctor can use
Insurance Coverage
Ellen tracks Procrit coverage across 5+ major insurers including formulary status, step therapy requirements, and common denial patterns.
Check your insurer's Procritpolicy →Frequently Asked Questions
›Why was Procrit denied by my insurance?
Procrit may be denied due to step therapy requirements, formulary restrictions, or medical necessity disputes. Common reasons include incomplete documentation, not trying required alternatives first, or the drug not being on your plan's preferred tier. Use Ellen's free decoder to find out exactly why and what to do next.
›How do I appeal a Procrit denial?
To appeal a Procrit denial, ask your doctor for a letter of medical necessity, gather clinical evidence supporting the medication, and file an internal appeal within the deadline stated in your denial letter. Ellen can decode your specific denial and generate personalized appeal steps.
›What is step therapy for Procrit?
Step therapy (also called "fail first") means your insurer may require you to try cheaper alternatives before approving Procrit. If those alternatives don't work or aren't appropriate for you, your doctor can request an exception.