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Pathologists Providing Direct Patient Care in Thoracic Transplant

journal contribution
posted on 2025-07-30, 06:05 authored by Melanie C Bois, Marie-Christine Aubry, Anja C Roden, Jennifer M Boland, Diane M Meyer, Rachel K Askelson, Kevin M Praska, Alfredo Clavell, Cassie Kennedy, John P Scott, Rebecca K Ameduri, Jonathan M Morris, Ying-Chun Lo, Nicole LarsonNicole Larson, Kelsey L Ness, Kally M Gleichner, Kristina Peters, Andrew J Layman, Eunhee S Yi, Joseph J Maleszewski
Context.— Cardiac and pulmonary allograft recipients represent a unique population, frequently interacting with support groups and exhibiting intense curiosity about their pathology. Like other solid organ transplant patients, they have enduring and frequent interaction with the laboratory for routine allograft surveillance. Objective.— To address patient requests to understand what happens to their explanted organ and to better understand their disease while simultaneously improving awareness of pathologists’ roles in their continuing care. Design.— At routine follow-up appointments, transplant nurse coordinators offer each allograft recipient the opportunity to interact with a pathologist in our “On My Path” program. Organ viewing occurs in a private setting, in a specialized room. Relevant pathology is discussed, and questions are answered, with documentation in the medical record. The patient is subsequently gifted a 3-dimensional model of their explanted organ. Transplant coordinators were surveyed for their feedback on the experience. Results.— One hundred fifty-eight interactions have been documented (2017–2022) at our institution, including patients who underwent cardiac transplant (96, 61%), single or bilateral lung transplant (54, 34%), or combination lung and heart transplant (8, 5%). Transplant coordinators reported an increase in patient understanding of their disease and emotional closure related to the disease through the On My Path program. Conclusions.— Pathologists providing direct patient care is a feasible model that addresses currently unmet desires of the transplant population to better understand their pathology. Providing a 3-dimensional model helps to empower patients and drives satisfaction. These interactions also improve awareness about pathology as a discipline and its importance in the continued care of transplant recipients.

History

Related Materials

Location

Chicago, Ill.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

Volume

149

Pagination

673-678

ISSN

0003-9985

eISSN

1543-2165

Issue

7

Publisher

College of American Pathologists