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back to Fellowships in Orthopaedic Surgery
Musculoskeletal Oncology Fellowship
The Orthopaedic Oncology Fellowship at Vanderbilt University Medical Center began its first year in August, 2006. The program will have one fellow per year. The fellowship will last for 1 year. It will occur at a single institution, which is the parent institution, Vanderbilt. Herbert S. Schwartz, M.D. is the Program Director. He and Ginger E. Holt, M.D. supervise the fellowship. The fellowship preserves the right to send the fellow, with mutual agreement, for weeks to other institutions for specific laboratory or clinical educational experience. The total elective time away from Vanderbilt will be no more than 2-3 months.
The educational goals of the Musculoskeletal Oncology Fellowship are to expose the fellow to a diverse experience of musculoskeletal neoplasia clinically, operatively and in the laboratory. The goal is to create an academic orthopaedic oncologist. Our goal is not to create an orthopaedic surgeon who has a minor interest in orthopaedic oncology. The fellowship may not take a fellow each year. The fellow is selected by Herbert S. Schwartz, M.D. and Ginger E. Holt, M.D. from qualified applications based on academic potential.
The fellowship contains five critical components within the educational experience.
- The surgical exposure to all aspects of musculoskeletal neoplasia and bone disorders. This includes the group of entities of skeletal sarcomas, soft tissue sarcomas, benign soft tissue tumors, benign bone tumors, metastatic disease to the bone and soft tissues, and metabolic bone disease. The surgical exposure will deal with the pathologies listed above and will involve a wide range of patient ages. Approximately 15% of the orthopaedic oncology practice at Vanderbilt involves children. There exists a free-standing children’s hospital on campus at which almost all children less than 18 years of years of age are operated upon and are hospitalized. Ages of patients operated upon range from infants to nanogenerians. Traditionally all sites of the body are operated upon. These include the sites of the axial skeleton and appendicular skeleton. They also involve the retroperitoneum and extra compartmental areas of the axilla, groin and popliteal fossa. Surgeries also include the chest wall and abdominal wall.
- The second area of clinical exposure is the clinical venue. This involves seeing patients in the outpatient setting as well as rounding on inpatients. Typical inpatient census is 5-7. Radiograph and image interpretation is a regular feature and educational interaction that occurs in the outpatient setting. All x-rays are brought to the operating room.
- The third area involves laboratory research. This involves clinical and pre-clinical studies as well as basic science research. One day of each week will be allocated for protected time in these academic pursuits.
- The fourth area of educational experience involves pathology interpretation. At least one time per week, current and past pathology glass slides are reviewed. We are thus able to correlate images of a particular patient with surgical anatomy and histopathology. This cements the conceptual and biological behavior of the tumor.
- The fifth area of education experience involves teaching. The fellow will be responsible for giving a portion of the annual tumor course which may consist of a couple of lectures. Approximately, two grand rounds will be given each year by the fellow. There probably will be book chapters that require writing assigned to the fellow during the course of the fellowship year.
The educational methodology is the classic apprenticeship model. There are two full-time orthopaedic oncologists at Vanderbilt whose practice is at least 90% devoted to the specialty. The fellow will be with one of those physicians at all times. Direct supervision of the fellow will be a regular and prominent feature.
For Additional Information Contact:
Marla Johnson
Program Coordinator
marla.johnson@vanderbilt.edu
 
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