CVE Vulnerabilities

CVE-2026-25147

Authorization Bypass Through User-Controlled Key

Published: Feb 27, 2026 | Modified: Mar 03, 2026
CVSS 3.x
N/A
Source:
NVD
CVSS 2.x
RedHat/V2
RedHat/V3
Ubuntu
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OpenEMR is a free and open source electronic health records and medical practice management application. Prior to version 8.0.0, in portal/portal_payment.php, the patient id used for the page is taken from the request ($pid = $_REQUEST[pid] ?? $pid and $pid = ($_REQUEST[hidden_patient_code] ?? null) > 0 ? $_REQUEST[hidden_patient_code] : $pid) instead of being fixed to the authenticated portal user. The portal session already has a valid $pid for the logged-in patient. Overwriting it with user-supplied values and using it without authorization allows a portal user to view and interact with another patients demographics, invoices, and payment history—horizontal privilege escalation and IDOR. Version 8.0.0 contains a fix for the issue.

Weakness

The system’s authorization functionality does not prevent one user from gaining access to another user’s data or record by modifying the key value identifying the data.

Affected Software

NameVendorStart VersionEnd Version
OpenemrOpen-emr*8.0.0 (excluding)

Extended Description

Retrieval of a user record occurs in the system based on some key value that is under user control. The key would typically identify a user-related record stored in the system and would be used to lookup that record for presentation to the user. It is likely that an attacker would have to be an authenticated user in the system. However, the authorization process would not properly check the data access operation to ensure that the authenticated user performing the operation has sufficient entitlements to perform the requested data access, hence bypassing any other authorization checks present in the system. For example, attackers can look at places where user specific data is retrieved (e.g. search screens) and determine whether the key for the item being looked up is controllable externally. The key may be a hidden field in the HTML form field, might be passed as a URL parameter or as an unencrypted cookie variable, then in each of these cases it will be possible to tamper with the key value. One manifestation of this weakness is when a system uses sequential or otherwise easily-guessable session IDs that would allow one user to easily switch to another user’s session and read/modify their data.

Potential Mitigations

References