Didactic Curriculum Conferences
Teaching conferences are an integral component of the educational activities of the division for the Case Western Reserve University/University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center Hematology and Oncology Fellowship. Within the framework of the following hematology oncology conferences, we present a comprehensive overview of important topics in hematology-oncology, completed within an 18-month cycle. Fellows have protected education time every Friday morning from 8:00 am -11:00 am.
Hematology and Oncology Fellows Curriculum Conference
This conference is the main forum for comprehensive curriculum review. It is often covered in consecutive sessions for maximal impact (e.g., two to three consecutive weeks of breast cancer, lymphoma or leukemia topics). These presentations combine faculty didactic sessions, fellow-led presentations (Case presentations, research talks, didactics and journal clubs) each coordinated with a faculty mentor during the development and prior to presentation. Board review sessions led by the chief fellows are also interspersed.
Disease-focused didactic presentations
These consist of a combination of internal and external faculty presentations, in their area of expertise, as well as fellow-directed presentations on selected topics in medical oncology, malignant and non-malignant hematology.
Fellow research presentations
Before graduating, fellows are required to give an annual presentation describing their own research or scholarly activity project.
Journal clubs
Journal clubs are assigned by paired faculty to fellows to review and present updates to hematology and oncology literature. Reviewed articles will run the gamut from landmark, practice-changing publications to basic science that sets the rationale for ongoing translational work and allow fellows to learn to critique the quality and implications of literature.
Cancer biology series
Every two years, a series of the didactic devoted to the basic science of cancer biology. The Cancer Biology didactic sessions are typically facilitated by one of our basic science faculty colleagues from the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, and mirrors education for graduate students pursing basic careers. T
Topics include the following, among others:
- Oncogenes and Growth Factors
- Tumor Suppressors
- Cell Death and Cancer
- Metastasis and Tumor Microenvironment
- Cancer Immunology
Bone marrow biopsy and aspiration training
In order to provide fellows a deep understanding of this important procedure, the fellowship program partners with Dr. Susan Wish-Baratz, PhD from the Department of Anatomy to present a comprehensive introduction to bone marrow biopsies using HoloAnatomy. We are the 1st program in the nation to incorporate this into our training. Fellows participate in a didactic session using augmented reality to review the pertinent pelvic anatomy necessary for understanding bone marrow biopsies. This is followed by didactics, demonstration and practice on a biopsy simulator at the VA’s Simulation Center Annex.
Hematology Conference
This is a weekly Monday conference from 12:00 p.m. -1:00 p.m. during which the hematology consult fellows on service at University Hospitals and the VA Medical Center bring interesting and complicated benign hematology cases for discussion with co-fellows, benign hematology faculty and hematopathologists.
NCI-based Oncotalk Program Retreat
In the Spring of each academic year, first-year fellows participate in a three-day retreat devoted to developing interpersonal and communication skills based upon the National Cancer Institute (NCI)-developed OncoTalk program that includes both didactic and role-playing methods of instruction. In 2022, the program was championed by Dr. Mona Gupta, the Director of Supportive Palliative Oncology Inpatient care at UH Seidman Cancer Center and Anne Kolenic, DNP, APRN, AOCNS, a UH Seidman Cancer Center ambulatory clinical nurse specialist.