American Society of Hirudotherapy

Clinician FAQ

Frequently asked questions for healthcare professionals

Last Updated: March 1, 2026Reviewed by: Andrei Dokukin, MD

Common clinical questions about hirudotherapy, answered with references to published guidelines and the ASH knowledge base. This FAQ is intended for healthcare professionals considering or currently performing leech therapy.

Infection Prevention

What is the Aeromonas infection risk?

Without prophylaxis: 7-20%. With appropriate prophylaxis: <5%, approaching 0% in well-controlled series (Nguyen et al., 2012). Aeromonas hydrophila and related species are obligate endosymbionts of the leech gut — the infection risk is inherent to the therapy. Infection can manifest up to 26 days post-treatment and reduces tissue salvage from 88.3% to 37.4% (Whitaker et al., 2012).

What antibiotic prophylaxis should I use?

First-line: Ciprofloxacin 500 mg BID or TMP-SMX DS BID. Recommended: Combination (both) per Herlin et al. (2017), given emerging ciprofloxacin resistance (43% in environmental isolates). Begin before first application; continue throughout course + 24-48h after last application. Never use first-generation cephalosporins (intrinsic resistance). For high-volume centers: batch-level surveillance cultures recommended.

Is prophylaxis failure possible?

Yes. Five published cases of ciprofloxacin-resistant Aeromonas infection following leech therapy (2013-2025). Plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance (PMQR) genes found in 42% of environmental Aeromonas isolates. Combination prophylaxis and batch surveillance reduce this risk.

Clinical Practice

How much blood does each leech remove?

5-15 mL during feeding + 10-50 mL post-detachment oozing = 15-65 mL total per leech. For a session with 6 leeches, anticipate 90-390 mL. In serial surgical therapy (3-6 leeches every 4 hours for 5 days), cumulative loss may reach 2-5 liters. 49.75% of microsurgical leech patients require transfusion (Whitaker et al., 2012).

What if the leech won’t attach?

Ensure skin is warm, clean, and free of chemicals (no alcohol, betadine, perfume). Prick skin with sterile needle to produce a blood droplet (most reliable attractant). Try a different leech. Use the syringe guide method for precision. Persistent refusal by multiple leeches to attach to a specific tissue area may indicate nonviable tissue — an ominous prognostic sign in surgical contexts.

What are the absolute contraindications?

Arterial insufficiency at the application site, hemophilia or hemorrhagic diathesis, hematological malignancies, severe anemia (Hgb <8 g/dL without transfusion plan), active sepsis, HIV infection, and decompensated hepatobiliary disease. Relative contraindications include pregnancy, immunosuppression, keloid tendency, and therapeutic anticoagulation without surgical coordination.

Insurance & Reimbursement

What CPT code should I use?

CPT 17999 (unlisted procedure, skin/mucous membrane/subcutaneous tissue) is the primary code. Requires procedure notes and cover letter. HCPCS C1765 for leech supply in hospital outpatient. There is no dedicated CPT code for leech therapy — reimbursement is case-by-case.

Will insurance cover leech therapy?

For the FDA-cleared indication (venous congestion in flaps/replants): likely yes. Aetna CPB 0556 explicitly covers flap/replant salvage. For off-label indications (OA, thrombophlebitis, etc.): unlikely. Most payers consider non-surgical use experimental. The self-pay market (~$200/session, $1,400-$1,800 per course) is the primary revenue model for outpatient practices.

Training & Startup

What training do I need?

There is no government-recognized certification. The C.H.P. credential from the Academy of Hirudotherapy (200+ hours didactic, 100-200 hours clinical, ~$10,000) is the most structured program. Hospital-based surgeons and nurses typically train through institutional protocols. Eight core competency domains should be demonstrated before treating patients (see Practitioner Training page).

What does it cost to start a hirudotherapy practice?

$2,000-$5,000 for equipment and supplies (excluding leeches and facility costs). Initial leech stock (50-100): $350-$1,500. Monthly ongoing: biohazard waste pickup ($50-$150/month), leech reorders, disposables. Revenue from self-pay sessions (~$200 each) provides the primary income for outpatient practices.

Related Resources

This website provides educational information and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Medicinal leech therapy carries clinically meaningful risks and should be performed only by qualified clinicians under institutionally approved protocols. FDA 510(k) clearance for medicinal leeches is limited to specific indications; investigational and off-label discussions are labeled accordingly. For patient-specific guidance, consult a qualified healthcare provider.