Webinars and Sponsored Roundtables — Register Now

Tuesday, April 28, 2026, 12:00 PM–1:00 PM ET
Discover how next-day comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) is possible with the Oncomine Comprehensive Assay Plus on the Genexus System—delivering both speed and accuracy.

Webinar presenters Jane Bayani, MHSc, PhD, Assistant Professor and Co-Director, Diagnostic Development, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Canada, and Nicola Normanno, MD, Scientific Director, IRCCS Romagnolo Institute for the Study of Tumors, Italy, and Morten Grauslund, PhD, Molecular Biologist, Department of Pathology, Rigshospitalet/Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

CAP TODAY does not endorse any of the products or services named within. The webinar is made possible by a special educational grant from Thermo Fisher Scientific. For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic applications. 

Thursday, April 30, 2026, 11:00 AM–12:00 PM ET
Hear an expert discuss how Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) is utilizing
the oncoReveal® Nexus 21-gene panel to redefine turnaround time and actionable insights
in cancer care. Dr. Ewalt shares a perceptive look at the clinical need for rapid, front-line NGS sequencing, and how a unique, purpose built targeted NGS panel (Pillar Biosciences’ oncoReveal Nexus 21 gene Panel) was developed, validated and implemented clinically by Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK-REACT) to complement their current comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) approach.

Webinar presenter Mark Ewalt, MD, Associate Medical Director for Laboratory Operations for Diagnostic Molecular Pathology in the Molecular Diagnostics Service, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, MSKCC.

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

CAP TODAY does not endorse any of the products or services named within. The webinar is made possible by a special educational grant from Pillar Biosciences.

Thursday, May 28, 2026, 1:00–2:00 PM ET
This session is designed to improve understanding and application of recent updates to synoptic pathology reporting protocols such as the latest Reporting Template for Reporting Results of Biomarker Testing of Specimens from Patients with Carcinoma of the Breast. These changes reflect evolving clinical guidelines that directly influence diagnostic accuracy and treatment selection in breast cancer care.

Webinar presenters Thaer Khoury, MD, FCAP, Chair, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Cente, and Colin Murphy,  CEO of mTuitive.

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

Subspecialties

Interactive Product Guides

Clinical Pathology

New starts: rapid-molecular pullback, fentanyl screen

January 2023—Respiratory viruses were up in most states when Compass Group members met online Dec. 6 with CAP TODAY publisher Bob McGonnagle, and some were looking to centralize their now decentralized rapid molecular testing. At least one system had already done so. In California, a new law requires fentanyl screening be included in drug screens in all general acute-care hospital lab settings.

The way forward for prehospital transfusion

December 2022—Ask Leonard Weiss, MD, what his favorite part of his schedule is, and he’s quick to answer that it’s the fieldwork: the helicopter and ambulance dispatches he accompanies once or twice a month as associate medical director of emergency medical services at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Dr. Weiss, who is also assistant professor of emergency medicine and assistant medical director of Pittsburgh’s Stat Medevac service, says one of the UPMC emergency services he strongly supports is the prehospital transfusion of blood products. “Until recently, there wasn’t a lot of evidence to deploy its use on the ground as it is in the air, but thanks to extensive use by the military and scientific evidence of the value of prehospital transfusion,” he says, it is more likely to become part of some hospitals’ emergency medicine programs. The 911 ground-based transfusion program at UPMC and city of Pittsburgh EMS began in 2020. As Dr. Weiss and his UPMC colleagues acknowledge, however, myriad complexities come into play.

Bright prognosis for brain injury biomarkers

November 2022—The lack of tools for assessing traumatic brain injury has long bedeviled physicians. There’s CT. And then? “This has been an unmet medical need for years,” says Ramon Diaz-Arrastia, MD, PhD, the John McCrea Dickson, MD, professor of neurology and director of the Clinical Traumatic Brain Injury Research Center, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. “As many of us know, it’s one of the major barriers that has hindered clinically advanced development of new therapies in TBI. And I think it’s pretty clear that the clinical evaluation alone leaves a lot to be desired.” “I am always frustrated that we have limited tools,” agrees Frederick Korley, MD, PhD, associate professor and associate chair for research in emergency medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, and scientific director, Massey TBI Grand Challenge, Weil Institute, University of Michigan. That’s now on the cusp of changing. Blood-based biomarkers for brain injury may not be bellying up to the bar just yet, but they are starting to raise the bar for how physicians assess TBI.

Is apolipoprotein B the best measure of CVD risk?

November 2022—The evidence in favor of measuring apolipoprotein B routinely, with other lipid parameters, is now so overwhelming, says cardiologist Allan Sniderman, MD, that he believes it’s unreasonable to deny patients the advantage of apoB. “If evidence is what counts,” he says, “then the care Americans receive should include apoB.”

Sodium measurement—when the method matters

October 2022—William E. Winter, MD, D(ABCC), is blunt about whether to report a corrected sodium: He would worry if his name were on such a report. “I think you have to be careful about formulas,” he said in his “hot topic” talk at the AACC meeting in July.

Purchased for the pandemic? Rethinking instrumentation

October 2022—Who’s doing what with instruments purchased at the peak of the pandemic? That and next-generation sequencing are what CAP TODAY publisher Bob McGonnagle asked Compass Group members about when they met virtually on Sept. 6. The Compass Group is an organization of not-for-profit IDN system laboratory leaders who collaborate to identify and share best practices and strategies.

As blood supply tightens, so too does mitigation

September 2022—Picture a performer juggling tenpins while walking a high wire, knowing that a hurricane looms. Add a safety net that could disappear at any time. That’s a sense of what hospital transfusion services experience in maintaining enough blood products to meet patients’ needs.

U.S. blood supply steadier but still short

August 2022—Blood is a precious resource and shouldn’t be treated as a commodity. That’s the consensus in the blood banking community, in line with a longstanding conviction that volunteer donations should remain at the blood system’s core. But as the worst of the pandemic appears to have passed, discussion of blood shortages has increasingly drawn on the vocabulary of commerce, and the warnings about the blood supply have been rife with references to supply chain problems that go beyond the need for more donations. Crises in the blood supply are nothing new, and while the health care system strives to stay prepared, the pandemic threw novel commercial and logistical factors into the mix, in some ways jumbling the expected order of a crisis for blood services. Hospitals scrambled to cope with a surge of COVID-19 patients while the spread of infection caused thousands of blood drives to be canceled, so there was a steep drop in supply of blood products, says Pampee Young, MD, PhD, chief medical officer, biomedical services, American Red Cross.

Looking for lab staff here, there, and overseas

August 2022—Higher wages help to fill open positions, when they can be offered, but in a labor market that’s as tight as ever, they’re often just a start. That’s why many laboratories are casting wider nets, though the hiring solutions tend to be long term.