CAP education session about breast core needle biopsies
April 8, 2015
In this 2015 video, Dr. SenGupta talks about breast core needle biopsies, including the correlation of specimen size with upgrade rates
Watch as Dr. Sandip SenGupta talks about breast core needle biopsies, including the correlation of specimen size with upgrade rates. He also talks about the following topics:
- The importance of imaging and pathology correlations
- Selected diagnostic and management problems
- What to include in the surgical pathology report
- Quality assurance and improvement in breast pathology
CAP education session about breast core needle biopsies
About the presenter, Dr. Sandip SenGupta
Sandip SenGupta, MD, FRCPC, FCAP, CCPE, is the Deputy Head and Professor of the Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. In 1983, he completed his undergraduate medical education at the University of Ottawa and his postgraduate education in General Pathology at Queen’s and has been a full-time faculty member in the Faculty of Health Sciences since 1988. Since 2012, he’s held a cross-appointment in the Department of Oncology. Dr. SenGupta has served as the President of the KGH-HDH Medical Staff Association, President of the Ontario Association of Pathologists and President of the Canadian Association of Pathologists. He is the Chair of the Breast National Cancer Pathology and Staging Multidisciplinary Expert Panel at the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer.
About the CAP education sessions
The Partnership, the Canadian Association of Pathologists (CAP-ACP), and Cancer Care Ontario (CCO) have organized this College of American Pathologists (CAP) education session.
In July 2009, the CAP-ACP endorsed the cancer protocols developed by CAP as the Canada-wide standard for all cancer-pathology reporting. To date, CAP protocols have been implemented in six Canadian provinces with the CAP-ACP’s support.
The protocols help pathologists to report effectively about diagnostic and prognostic findings, which are critical to patient care and the collection of collaborative stage data. The protocols were developed by multidisciplinary teams and are supported by CAP in both paper and electronic formats.