Advertise your Pathology Conferences and Webinars with us!
To advertise on this popular page, email your text, graphics and contact information to Ads@PathologyOutlines.com. If no response within 1 business day, please resend and CC Rosie@PathologyOutlines.com. Ads are posted until the conference / webinar date. Email us once you have the date and we will create a Save the Date ad to use until you get your official ad; there is no additional charge for changes or for rescheduling due to the COVID-19 pandemic. After posting, we will send you a confirmation email and invoice; please use the link at the bottom of the invoice to pay. Prepayment may be required.
We have these options for posting:
(a) $700 for a highlighted listing (most of the ads below are highlighted listings) with graphics, text and links
(b) $400 for a one line listing (date, location, title and link)
(c) $1,000 to add a standard E-blast (example) or social media posting
(d) $750 to add a banner for one month on the Conferences page (top: 728x90, side: 300x250)
(e) Package of 6 highlighted listings plus one E-blast or social media posting plus an Organization listing, contact us
(f) Contact us for additional promotional packages at (248) 646-0325 or Ads@PathologyOutlines.com.
Links to all recent posts are included in an E-blast sent biweekly to 6,527 subscribers for no additional charge. Frequently asked questions Testimonials
Map of US with regions
USCAP Presents:
Breast Pathology for All Ages:
Diagnostic Pearls and Pitfalls (And How to Stay Out of Trouble)
Based on multi-institutional practices handling large volumes of breast pathology cases at established cancer centers and cumulative consultation cases, this expert faculty has identified areas that pose diagnostic and interpretative challenges in recurrent problematic areas deserving attention: intraductal epithelial proliferations and microinvasive carcinoma, lobular neoplasia including LCIS variants, papillary lesions, and benign vs malignant spindle cell lesions. The interpretation of immunohistochemical stains (IHC) with focus on predictive markers can also be challenging. This interactive microscopy course is designed to illustrate distinct challenging entities and problematic issues, with practical approaches to their resolution in real time, in the context of intimate mentoring.
Course Location: Palm Springs, CA
Course Director:
Edi Brogi, MD, PhD
USCAP Presents:
Liver Pathology P’s and Q’s: The Perplexing and the Quotidian
This comprehensive approach to pathology of the liver, gallbladder and biliary tree is designed for junior and experienced pathologists who encounter these specimens in daily practice. Medical advances in management of patients with liver disease have dramatically changed the histologic patterns encountered in liver biopsies which are increasingly obtained from patients with multiple medical problems who take multiple medications. Classification of tumors of the liver, biliary tree and gallbladder has also become increasingly complex.
This course is intended to provide clarity on the common and uncommon patterns of injury seen in liver biopsies. Usual and unusual causes of acute hepatitis, chronic hepatitis and cholestatic liver disease will be discussed. Tools to solve challenging metabolic and pediatric liver disease will be provided. Guidance will be given on how to interpret liver biopsies from patients with complex systemic diseases. A substantial portion of the course will address how to approach tumors involving the liver, biliary tree and gallbladder. Correct classification requires recognition of specific morphologic features, judicious use of immunohistochemistry and selective application of molecular diagnostics.
This superb faculty will synthesize and deliver this information in the context of intimate mentoring and personalized attention to detail.
Course Location: Palm Springs, CA
Course Director: Rish K. Pai, MD, PhD
USCAP Presents:
A Colorful Cornucopia of Digestive Tract Pathology
The gastrointestinal tract remains one of the most common sources for surgical pathology specimens. As a result, the difficulties and gray areas in this subspecialty are encountered quite often by pathologists each day. The existence of interobserver variability in many gastrointestinal diagnoses compounds this issue. In contrast, the liver and pancreas give rise to a broad spectrum of uncommon disease entities, making it difficult for pathologists who don’t specialize in these organs to gain diagnostic proficiency. Finally, the WHO recently released the newest edition of their Digestive Tract Tumours blue book which contains key updates and subtle changes that may be unfamiliar to many practicing pathologists.
This course will tackle the professional practice gaps that exist in gastrointestinal pathology, focusing on uncommon findings, obfuscated differential diagnoses, new entities and changes to existing entities.
It is a perfect complement to the preceding course, Liver Pathology’s P’s and Q’s: The Perplexing and the Quotidian (January 25-27, 2021).
Course Location: Palm Springs, CA
Course Director: Rish K. Pai, MD, PhD