The company, the largest U.S. health insurer, on Thursday also put to rest concerns of an impact from the Delta variant in 2021 by raising its profit outlook.

A surge in infections in July and August caused by the more infectious variant had increased hospital costs, but cases have declined since then.

Chief Financial Officer John Rex said current market estimates were "beginning to calibrate" the company's 2022 outlook. Analysts expect UnitedHealth to post adjusted earnings per share of $21.60, according to Refinitiv data.

"Investors were waiting to get that visibility into the company's framework around 2022 and clearly the company provided a confident initial outlook for next year," Stephens analyst Scott Fidel said.

While not every health insurer has had the same momentum as UnitedHealth, its comments bode well for the rest of the sector, he added.

UnitedHealth shares surged 6%, while rivals Humana Inc, Cigna Corp and Centene Corp were between 2% and 3% higher.

UnitedHealth said it expected 2021 adjusted earnings per share between $18.65 and $18.90, compared with $18.30 to $18.80 previously. It maintained its forecast for a COVID-related hit at $1.80 per share.

The insurer said the profit outlook accounted for a possible surge in high-cost procedures that had been delayed during the Delta surge and were slowly returning to normal levels.

The postponement of the procedures helped it beat earnings expectations for the quarter ended Sept. 30.

The company reiterated its long-term earnings per share growth outlook of 13% to 16%.

(Reporting by Manojna Maddipatla in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Aditya Soni)

By Manojna Maddipatla