Resident training in interventional pathology: Ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration and rapid on site evaluation-5 years of teaching experience in a single university hospital

Despite the established role of the interventional pathologist, their diagnostic performance is difficult to establish. At least in Spain training of pathology residents in ultrasound-guided interventional procedures for specimen collection is limited or absent in most institutions. We present our t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cytopathology (Oxford) 2024-01
Hauptverfasser: Torres-Rivas, Héctor-Enrique, Fernández Fernández, Luis Manuel, González Gutiérrez, María de la Paz, Berríos Hernández, Mario Luis, Pérez Fontán, José Fernando, Chandra, Ashish, Caputo, Alessandro, Dávila Lemos, Ana Belén, Villar Zarra, Karen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite the established role of the interventional pathologist, their diagnostic performance is difficult to establish. At least in Spain training of pathology residents in ultrasound-guided interventional procedures for specimen collection is limited or absent in most institutions. We present our teaching experience in the instruction of ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) to pathology residents in a tertiary-level hospital. The training of pathology residents who rotated through the interventional unit of the pathology department and the application of ultrasound-guided FNA and rapid on-site evaluation (U-ROSE) was documented over 5 years. The training period was broken down into learning phases and included the number of ultrasound-guided FNA performed, anatomical location, and their diagnostic performance, among other aspects. Nineteen (19) pathology residents were trained in U-ROSE, and performed a total of 4003 procedures, with a mean of 211 per resident. In 53% of cases only one pass was required for an adequated sample. The specimen was diagnostic in more than 97% of cases. The most frequently sampled anatomical sites were the thyroid gland (n = 2347), followed by lymph node (n = 667), soft tissues (n = 663) and salivary glands (n = 322). The results support the training programme followed by pathology residents in learning U-ROSE, which is essential to lay the foundations for the future interventional pathologist.
ISSN:0956-5507
1365-2303
DOI:10.1111/cyt.13355