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passed ap last year, have been practicing ap only & now need to get blankin' cp out of the way. how much of the first few robbins chapters are on cp, what cell biology stuff do i need to know? should have taken them together!
passed ap last year, have been practicing ap only & now need to get blankin' cp out of the way. how much of the first few robbins chapters are on cp, what cell biology stuff do i need to know? should have taken them together!
oh, did not realize i was for once doing something brilliant by separating the two!
have osler material for both ap & cp, not sure where the division is between the two exam materials or how accurate that osler division is.
again, just want to know how much of those first chapters i need to re-learn (yes, immunopath, nutrition, environment i know, but what about neoplasia, genetics?)
huh? taking em separately is the way to go. The material is totally different and testing totally differently.
go to a review course and get the outlines.
As far as the "you have to pass every section in order to pass" statement that keeps coming up, I still have not heard solid evidence that this means you have to pass each subspecialty of CP. Reading the ABpath website, it seems you just have to pass 1) the written and 2) the practical. It doesn't say anything else. I haven't heard from anyone who failed to know whether it tells you exactly how you failed. It also seems as though certain aspects of the boards have changed in the past few years, so what was true 5-10 years ago may not necessarily be true now.
I may be able to provide some insight on this since I failed CP last year. Luckily, I passed it this year. Oddly enough, being a diplomate doesn't feel any different.
You can pass the written & practical sections separately. However, if you fail, you must repeat both. They give you a breakdown for each subspecialty, either lower, middle or upper 1/3. I was in the middle 1/3 for all but 1, where I was lower 1/3. I'm thinking if I had gotten 1 more question correct in that subspecialty, I would've passed. My overall score was 499, of which 500 is passing.

I may be able to provide some insight on this since I failed CP last year. Luckily, I passed it this year. Oddly enough, being a diplomate doesn't feel any different.
You can pass the written & practical sections separately. However, if you fail, you must repeat both. They give you a breakdown for each subspecialty, either lower, middle or upper 1/3. I was in the middle 1/3 for all but 1, where I was lower 1/3. I'm thinking if I had gotten 1 more question correct in that subspecialty, I would've passed. My overall score was 499, of which 500 is passing.
----- Antony
If there's other people out there who failed, or know of someone who did, and would care to share their margin of failure, I'd be very interested.
passed ap last year, have been practicing ap only & now need to get blankin' cp out of the way. how much of the first few robbins chapters are on cp, what cell biology stuff do i need to know? should have taken them together!
I didn't know about that rescoring for $50 thing. Why even bother? I thought that was why they took 6 weeks to score it, so that there wouldn't be any of these silly scoring mistakes that they overlook.
I didn't know about that rescoring for $50 thing. Why even bother? I thought that was why they took 6 weeks to score it, so that there wouldn't be any of these silly scoring mistakes that they overlook.
There's an elephant in the room here...
Not everyone who gets into an AP/CP residency leaves fit to practice independently after 4 years. Sorry if that hurts anyone's feelings, but this is serious business. It's a fact that some programs are not good and some residents are not good....
By the way, I've heard from other residents who've taken the exam that they not only want you to know CML is t(9;22) (obviously easy), but that it's t(9;22)(q34;q11). One resident said her exam had several choices that had t(9;22), but different actual sites listed. I'm assuming this may be true for other common translocations.
I agree with lollydi.
I'm not quite sure how important it is for me to know, off the top of my head, some of the obscure genetic translocations they want me to know for the boards. It's a running joke in my residency:
"Quick, Dr. Pathology, this patient is about to die unless you tell me the translocation for synovial sarcoma!"
🙄
I guess it's just easy-to-test material.
By the way, I've heard from other residents who've taken the exam that they not only want you to know CML is t(9;22) (obviously easy), but that it's t(9;22)(q34;q11). One resident said her exam had several choices that had t(9;22), but different actual sites listed. I'm assuming this may be true for other common translocations.
There's an elephant in the room here...
Not everyone who gets into an AP/CP residency leaves fit to practice independently after 4 years. Sorry if that hurts anyone's feelings, but this is serious business. It's a fact that some programs are not good and some residents are not good....
I do not agree with this statement at all. Here is the harsh reality, kids. Nobody is fit to practice independently after a 4 year AP/CP residency. I don't care if you have the highest board score in the APB's history and you're the greatest resident in the history of great residents from Fancy Pants University Hospital, you are not anywhere close to being ready to practice independently when you finish a residency (or fellowship for that matter).
It takes years of attending experience before one can practice independently, and even then, its risky. And when I say years, I do not mean 3 or 4. I mean more on the order of 7-10.
I am speaking from experience when I say that the adjustment from trainee to attending is the most difficult one you all will face in your careers. And the one from junior newbie attending to senior experienced one isn't much easier.
THis is another argument on why we should move to pure subspecialization in pathology. It takes 10 years of post-training practice to master AP, but if you just solely focus on one subspecialty like lung or renal or liver, you can be basically be a master in a couple years.
I can't believe I am going to be ap/cp/hp/dp boarded
i passed CP boards and only studied remembrances. I remeber Dr. Miller at university of chicago said i had to read over 6000 pages of textbooks as part of my cp education, well i blew off every cp rotation and am now cp mother f boarded and i read zero pages. Remembranes are money.
I can't believe I am going to be ap/cp/hp/dp boarded
Wow, you're just an amazing superstar stud, man. Tell you what, when you do finally finish all your training and look for a job, can you come back and tell us the details? I would like to compare my AP/CP only, non boarded fellowship offers to yours.
By the way, I passed CP boards without studying, and I walked out on the last section 2 hours early. I was also drunk.





I can't believe I am going to be ap/cp/hp/dp boarded
I can't believe I am going to be ap/cp/hp/dp boarded
Wow, you're just an amazing superstar stud, man. Tell you what, when you do finally finish all your training and look for a job, can you come back and tell us the details? I would like to compare my AP/CP only, non boarded fellowship offers to yours.
By the way, I passed CP boards without studying, and I walked out on the last section 2 hours early. I was also drunk.
i passed CP boards and only studied remembrances. I remeber Dr. Miller at university of chicago said i had to read over 6000 pages of textbooks as part of my cp education, well i blew off every cp rotation and am now cp mother f boarded and i read zero pages. Remembranes are money.
I can't believe I am going to be ap/cp/hp/dp boarded
Wow, you're just an amazing superstar stud, man. Tell you what, when you do finally finish all your training and look for a job, can you come back and tell us the details? I would like to compare my AP/CP only, non boarded fellowship offers to yours.
By the way, I passed CP boards without studying, and I walked out on the last section 2 hours early. I was also drunk.

Yes he is the stud man, funny havent heard from him in a while, guess he was busy racking up another hard to get fellowship. But yet the DP lover has not gotten a single job offer. Maybe he paid his med school debt by makin woppers at the local burger king while he studied for his dermpath boards. He probably saved money on the flight to tampa by flapping his arms really hard and flew there himself.![]()
There used to be a poster on this forum, whose name was was Dermpathchick...
What happens when Dermpathlover meets Dermpathchick?
I'm rooting for a spontaneous abortion.

Betwixt all the dp love, just wanted to say - my guess is that all three are true, with modifications:I know several people who will have AP/CP PLUS TWO MORE FELLOWSHIP BOARD CERTIFICATIONS. This trend worries me. Is it because (1) people can't find jobs and keep doing fellowships, or (2) there is so much to learn that people need fellowships, or (3) people are filling up time between the end of their AP/CP training and the start of the fellowship they truly want.
I ain't trying to brag. I am only saying that remembrances are key and are sufficient in order to pass boards
I did multiple fellowships because I had to burn a year before I was scheduled to DP. It's no big deal. Being quadruple boarded is kind of cool, but will I retake all the exams every ten years? Maybe, maybe not.
Could you elaborate what you mean by 'remembrances'? Semantics aside, most of things what I've been learning past 8 years are, well, remembrances.
What other people 'remember' from the test. Collect as many as you can.