Just finished medical oncology boards, which I studied for very intensely due to how many gaps I had in my clinical training (subspecialized academic program, saw no malignant heme apart from 2 months in year 1, little breast, etc).
Here are my impressions, without giving away details, having left the test center 90 minutes ago.
1. Everything people say about HOQ QBank and ASCO SEP (and NCCN guidelines PRN) is correct. It’s all you need. I remember multiple questions where I could think back to the exact SEP or HOQ Qbank question that helped me answer it. The exam is fair in that way - I didn’t feel there were topics on the exam that weren’t present in the questions banks (even the rarer sarcoma, gyn, and neuro endocrine questions were present *somewhere* in the question banks.
2. That being said, the one thing I kept thinking throughout the exam is that it’s not actually like either one in style. The question stems are very short or often leave out information you would expect to have. The answers are often very “impressionistic” - rather than list out a chemo regimen and options for it, they’re more like “chemo alone” or “chemo with IO.” It’s testing the same concepts, but it did throw me off a bit. The content is similar to the questions banks but style is different.
3. In the same vein of the exam being “impressionistic,” there was some memorization (do you know one of the rarer side effects of this med) but the exam was also very conceptual - that is, here’s a clinical situation, exam taker. Do you know whether you need more workup or you can start chemo or need surgery? Some of the answers for treatment options were not “classic” answers that you would immediately recognize, and that also was a bit confusing.
4. Study your weak areas. Needless to say, ignore breast and malignant heme at your peril. Prostate was everywhere. Thyroid, neuroendocrine, gyn, and sarcoma were definitely represented on my exam well. The medical oncology blueprint from the ABIM was really helpful as I put together a study plan, and the percentages allotted to each topic were very reflective of my exam.
Best of luck to people searching online for info before their exam - basically, do HOQ QBank and ASCO SEP over and over, look at NCCN guidelines as needed, and you’ll be fine.
Here are my impressions, without giving away details, having left the test center 90 minutes ago.
1. Everything people say about HOQ QBank and ASCO SEP (and NCCN guidelines PRN) is correct. It’s all you need. I remember multiple questions where I could think back to the exact SEP or HOQ Qbank question that helped me answer it. The exam is fair in that way - I didn’t feel there were topics on the exam that weren’t present in the questions banks (even the rarer sarcoma, gyn, and neuro endocrine questions were present *somewhere* in the question banks.
2. That being said, the one thing I kept thinking throughout the exam is that it’s not actually like either one in style. The question stems are very short or often leave out information you would expect to have. The answers are often very “impressionistic” - rather than list out a chemo regimen and options for it, they’re more like “chemo alone” or “chemo with IO.” It’s testing the same concepts, but it did throw me off a bit. The content is similar to the questions banks but style is different.
3. In the same vein of the exam being “impressionistic,” there was some memorization (do you know one of the rarer side effects of this med) but the exam was also very conceptual - that is, here’s a clinical situation, exam taker. Do you know whether you need more workup or you can start chemo or need surgery? Some of the answers for treatment options were not “classic” answers that you would immediately recognize, and that also was a bit confusing.
4. Study your weak areas. Needless to say, ignore breast and malignant heme at your peril. Prostate was everywhere. Thyroid, neuroendocrine, gyn, and sarcoma were definitely represented on my exam well. The medical oncology blueprint from the ABIM was really helpful as I put together a study plan, and the percentages allotted to each topic were very reflective of my exam.
Best of luck to people searching online for info before their exam - basically, do HOQ QBank and ASCO SEP over and over, look at NCCN guidelines as needed, and you’ll be fine.
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