Webinars and Sponsored Roundtables — Register Now

Tuesday, June 9, 2026, 1:00–2:00 PM ET
In this webinar, we will examine how immune recognition after allogeneic HCT can influence leukemia relapse and disease progression. The session will highlight the clinical relevance of HLA loss of heterozygosity (LOH), approaches used for its detection, and how LOH findings may support transplant strategies, including considerations for donor selection in subsequent transplantation.

Webinar presenter Alberto Cardoso Martins Lima, PhD, Clinical consulting scientist in histocompatibility,
specializing in allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) at IGEN/AFIP São Paulo and CHC/UFPR in Curitiba, Brazil

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

Wednesday, June 24, 2026, 12:00–1:00 PM ET
Hear an expert discuss the expanded clinical utility of HER2 IHC scoring in metastatic breast cancer and its impact on your practice

Webinar presenter Michelle Shiller, DO, AP, CP, MGP, FACP, Baylor University Medical Center.

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

Wednesday, July 15, 2026, 1:00-2:00 PM ET
Hear an expert discuss how to integrate Kappa and Lambda in situ hybridization testing into your standard hematopathology workflow to accurately assess B-cell and plasma cell clonality. You will also gain the skills to recognize testing pitfalls in challenging reactive versus neoplastic proliferations and apply ancillary tools to resolve complex cases.

Webinar presenter Xiaojun Wu, MD, PhD, Assistant professor, Director of Hematopathology Section at NCR of Johns Hopkins Medicine Department of Pathology, SOM at Johns Hopkins University

Moderated by: Bob McGonnagle, Publisher, CAP TODAY

Subspecialties

Interactive Product Guides

Subspecialties

Diagnostics, access, therapies on minds ahead of ASCO

April 2025—Rebecca Previs, MD, MS, gynecologic oncologist and director of medical affairs at Labcorp, captures the vibe ahead of the ASCO conference next month in Chicago in just a few words. “It’s exciting,” she says. “This is unprecedented territory.” With the field undergoing “a major shift toward biology-driven rather than tissue-of-origin-driven oncology treatment,” Dr. Previs is far from the only industry representative who is optimistic about the future—though the many challenges ahead temper that excitement.

Liquid biopsy’s promise and complexities

March 2025—Like an inspired Adam in the Garden of Eden, molecular experts have been busy with the naming process as it applies to liquid biopsy. It’s lost to the myths of time whether Adam revised his nomenclature, but pathologists and other experts are eager to identify new assays as they push this field forward, from circulating cell-free DNA to circulating tumor DNA to circulating tumor RNA. Soon another assay, one that combines ctDNA and ctRNA, could begin to make its mark as well, says Keyur P. Patel, MD, PhD, medical director of the molecular diagnostics laboratory, Division of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. He and his colleagues plan to launch an assay to look for circulating total nucleic acid. “DNA plus RNA equals TNA—that’s the mathematical equation,” jokes Dr. Patel, who is also professor, Department of Hematopathology, Division of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. And like that first zookeeper, there’s even an actual beast for experts to name.

Interpreting patient PEth post-transfusion

March 2025—Theresa Kinard, MD, knew little about phosphatidylethanol (PEth), a blood-based biomarker of alcohol use, when she noticed that patients who adamantly denied drinking were testing positive in their liver pretransplant evaluations.

Staining, scoring tips for claudin 18 assay

March 2025—The Ventana CLDN18 (43-14A) RxDx Assay, the companion diagnostic for zolbetuximab, detects the claudin 18 protein in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded gastric adenocarcinoma including gastroesophageal junction tissue specimens. Gastric intestinal metaplasia can be used as a positive tissue control and system level control and should display weak to moderate membrane staining.

In clinical path practice, generative AI’s many uses

March 2025—For clinical pathology practice, generative artificial intelligence can open new efficiencies and opportunities, and the authors of an article published in Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine set out how it can be used and its risks.

What oncology patients say about pathology reports

March 2025—A study of oncology patients at the Medical College of Wisconsin sheds light on how they perceive the content and timing of pathology report review. The study findings were gathered through in-person and telehealth interviews with patients with breast, endocrine, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, and thoracic malignancies. Medical student Amber Y. Bo, MD, in 2022 and 2023 conducted 230 interviews with patients who had a prior opportunity to review their reports in the patient portal.

Changes to note in all common, lab general checklists

March 2025—Revised requirements in the 2024 edition of the CAP accreditation all common and laboratory general checklists address the activity menu, alternative performance assessment, the quality management system, and infectious disease reporting, among other things. “When we make revisions in the requirements, we do it for good reason,” says Stephen J. Sarewitz, MD, advisor to and immediate past chair of the CAP Checklists Committee. “In many cases it is to clarify something that was unclear” and raised questions. “In other cases, a change addresses an area in which laboratories get deficiencies, which we are trying to prevent. We also want to reflect state-of-the-art laboratory medicine. As it advances, the checklists are revised accordingly.”

On value, preanalytics, and personnel in urinalysis

March 2025—Urinalysis reflex rules, reimbursement, instruments, research, and specimen handling and transport are some of what came up in the Jan. 15 roundtable with eight participants online and CAP TODAY publisher Bob McGonnagle leading the discussion.

Room to grow: tumor-germline sequencing

February 2025—Genetic profiling has long had proven winners in oncology: somatic testing of tumors, and germline testing for surveillance and to identify potentially affected relatives.

The shift from cotesting to primary HPV screening

February 2025—Eric Huang, MD, PhD, is the first to admit that when it came time to switch to primary HPV testing, his laboratory at the University of Washington faced fewer obstacles than most. Dr. Huang joined the university in 2018 as director of the cytopathology laboratory.