Compare 25 cardiothoracic surgeons in Kansas City, MO. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
25
Cardiothoracic Surgeons
100%
Accepting patients
88%
Most common: MD
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Kansas City's healthcare market is defined by its geography: the metro straddles the Missouri-Kansas state line, which means insurance networks, Medicaid eligibility, and hospital systems can change depending on which side of State Line Road you live on. Saint Luke's, Children's Mercy, and the University of Kansas Medical Center (just across the border in Kansas) form the core of the region's specialty and academic care.
Kansas City has 25 cardiothoracic surgeons. The most common credential is MD (88%). 100% are currently accepting new patients. Practitioners see patients in neighborhoods including Country Club Plaza, Westport, Crossroads Arts District, and Brookside.
Hospital campuses are spread across the metro. Saint Luke's main campus is on the Country Club Plaza, Children's Mercy is in the Crossroads area south of downtown, and the University of Kansas Medical Center is in Kansas City, Kansas. Truman Medical Centers (now University Health) serves the safety-net population from its downtown and Lakewood campuses. Most patients drive, and I-35 and I-435 are the main corridors connecting hospital systems. KC Streetcar connects downtown to the Plaza area.
Nearby hospitals include Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City, Truman Medical Centers (University Health), and Children's Mercy Kansas City. Local training programs run through University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Medicine and University of Kansas Medical Center (nearby). Children's Mercy Kansas City is consistently ranked among the top children's hospitals and is the region's only freestanding pediatric health system.
Blue Cross Blue Shield (separate Kansas and Missouri entities) and UnitedHealthcare dominate employer-sponsored coverage across the metro. Ambetter and Aetna are the main ACA marketplace carriers on both sides. The two-state Medicaid split creates coverage gaps for some residents near the state line. Employer plans from large regional employers like Cerner, Sprint/T-Mobile, and Hallmark typically include broad metro-wide networks. 40% accept Medicare.
The consultation includes a review of your cardiac or thoracic imaging, lab work, and previous testing (echocardiograms, cardiac catheterization, CT scans). The surgeon will explain the recommended procedure, expected outcomes, risks, and recovery timeline. For heart surgery, pre-operative testing may include dental clearance, blood typing, and a meeting with the anesthesia team. Recovery from open-heart surgery typically involves several days in the ICU and a total hospital stay of five to seven days.
If you live in Missouri, confirm your provider is licensed in Missouri and accepts Missouri-based insurance. If your provider is across the state line in Kansas, check whether your plan covers out-of-state providers. This is one of the most common surprises for new KC residents.
See a cardiothoracic surgeon for coronary artery disease requiring bypass surgery, heart valve disease (aortic stenosis, mitral regurgitation), aortic aneurysms involving the thoracic aorta, lung cancer, esophageal cancer, mediastinal tumors, and pleural conditions. Your cardiologist, pulmonologist, or oncologist will typically make the referral when surgery is being considered.
Consultation copay: $30-75 · Bypass surgery (CABG): $70,000-200,000 · Valve replacement: $50,000-170,000 · VATS lobectomy: $30,000-80,000
Kansas City, MO has 25 licensed cardiothoracic surgeons. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of cardiothoracic surgeons in Kansas City, MO are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Missouri residents use HealthCare.gov for ACA marketplace plans, with options from Ambetter, Anthem, and Aetna. Kansas residents also use HealthCare.gov, with plans from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas, Ambetter, and Aetna. Medicaid differs by state: MO HealthNet in Missouri and KanCare in Kansas have different eligibility rules and provider panels.
A consultation copay is $50 to $100. Coronary artery bypass costs $70,000 to $200,000. Heart valve replacement costs $80,000 to $170,000. Lung lobectomy costs $30,000 to $80,000. Actual costs in Kansas City, MO depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Cardiothoracic surgery involves the highest costs in surgery. Hospital stays average five to ten days. Bills include the surgeon, assistant surgeon, anesthesia, perfusionist (heart-lung machine operator), ICU charges, and implants. Confirm all providers are in-network before the procedure.
The Kansas City metro spans two states, which affects provider networks. Saint Luke's, HCA (Research Medical Center), and University Health operate primarily on the Missouri side. The University of Kansas Medical Center and AdventHealth are on the Kansas side. Children's Mercy serves the entire metro. Always check whether a provider is in-network for your specific state's insurance plan.
MD stands for Doctor of Medicine and DO stands for Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine. Both are equivalent qualifications. In Kansas City, MO, 88% hold the MD credential and 8% hold DO. The difference is in training pathway, not quality of care.
40% of cardiothoracic surgeons in Kansas City, MO accept Medicare. Medicare covers medically necessary cardiothoracic procedures including coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), valve replacement, and lung cancer surgery. Cardiac rehabilitation after surgery is also covered. You can filter for Medicare-accepting providers on FindClarity.
Yes. Missouri and Kansas have different insurance marketplaces, Medicaid programs, and sometimes different provider networks within the same insurance company. If you live on one side and your preferred doctor is on the other, verify your plan covers cross-state care before scheduling. Many major systems like Children's Mercy and Saint Luke's serve the full metro regardless of state.
The University of Kansas Medical Center is in Kansas City, Kansas, just west of the state line. It is the region's primary academic medical center for adult specialty care, transplants, and cancer treatment. On the Missouri side, UMKC partners with Truman Medical Centers (University Health) for medical education and safety-net care.
Top accepted carriers in Kansas City, MO include unitedhealthcare, qhp-94248, qhp-44228, medicare, and qhp-53461.
Cardiothoracic surgery is covered under medical insurance for medically indicated conditions. These are complex, expensive procedures that always require prior authorization. Cardiac rehabilitation after surgery is covered by Medicare and most insurance plans (typically 36 sessions). Verify that all members of the surgical team and the hospital are in-network. Hospital stays for heart surgery commonly exceed $100,000 before insurance.