Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future Direction

Training anatomic and clinical pathology residents in the principles of bioinformatics is a challenging endeavor. Most residents receive little to no formal exposure to bioinformatics during medical education, and most of the pathology training is spent interpreting histopathology slides using light...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael R Clay, Kevin E Fisher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-04-01
Series:Cancer Informatics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1176935117703389
id doaj-0872db3335ac4291bfd6bc36bd1cf90a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0872db3335ac4291bfd6bc36bd1cf90a2020-11-25T03:32:03ZengSAGE PublishingCancer Informatics1176-93512017-04-011610.1177/117693511770338910.1177_1176935117703389Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future DirectionMichael R Clay0Kevin E Fisher1Department of Pathology, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, USADepartment of Pathology, Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, TX, USATraining anatomic and clinical pathology residents in the principles of bioinformatics is a challenging endeavor. Most residents receive little to no formal exposure to bioinformatics during medical education, and most of the pathology training is spent interpreting histopathology slides using light microscopy or focused on laboratory regulation, management, and interpretation of discrete laboratory data. At a minimum, residents should be familiar with data structure, data pipelines, data manipulation, and data regulations within clinical laboratories. Fellowship-level training should incorporate advanced principles unique to each subspecialty. Barriers to bioinformatics education include the clinical apprenticeship training model, ill-defined educational milestones, inadequate faculty expertise, and limited exposure during medical training. Online educational resources, case-based learning, and incorporation into molecular genomics education could serve as effective educational strategies. Overall, pathology bioinformatics training can be incorporated into pathology resident curricula, provided there is motivation to incorporate, institutional support, educational resources, and adequate faculty expertise.https://doi.org/10.1177/1176935117703389
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael R Clay
Kevin E Fisher
spellingShingle Michael R Clay
Kevin E Fisher
Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future Direction
Cancer Informatics
author_facet Michael R Clay
Kevin E Fisher
author_sort Michael R Clay
title Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future Direction
title_short Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future Direction
title_full Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future Direction
title_fullStr Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future Direction
title_full_unstemmed Bioinformatics Education in Pathology Training: Current Scope and Future Direction
title_sort bioinformatics education in pathology training: current scope and future direction
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Cancer Informatics
issn 1176-9351
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Training anatomic and clinical pathology residents in the principles of bioinformatics is a challenging endeavor. Most residents receive little to no formal exposure to bioinformatics during medical education, and most of the pathology training is spent interpreting histopathology slides using light microscopy or focused on laboratory regulation, management, and interpretation of discrete laboratory data. At a minimum, residents should be familiar with data structure, data pipelines, data manipulation, and data regulations within clinical laboratories. Fellowship-level training should incorporate advanced principles unique to each subspecialty. Barriers to bioinformatics education include the clinical apprenticeship training model, ill-defined educational milestones, inadequate faculty expertise, and limited exposure during medical training. Online educational resources, case-based learning, and incorporation into molecular genomics education could serve as effective educational strategies. Overall, pathology bioinformatics training can be incorporated into pathology resident curricula, provided there is motivation to incorporate, institutional support, educational resources, and adequate faculty expertise.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1176935117703389
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelrclay bioinformaticseducationinpathologytrainingcurrentscopeandfuturedirection
AT kevinefisher bioinformaticseducationinpathologytrainingcurrentscopeandfuturedirection
_version_ 1724570057934110720