Early Subspecialization Alignment: How Residents Tailor Experiences Before Fellowship
Recommended Citation
Manivasagam SS, Mercedes R, Lemack GE, Clifton MM, Klausner AP, Mehta A, Atiemo H, Lee R, Sorensen MD, Smith R, Buckley J, Thompson RH, Breyer BN, Badalato GM, Wallen EM, Raman JD. Early Subspecialization Alignment: How Residents Tailor Experiences Before Fellowship. Urol Pract. 2026;101097.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-31-2026
Publication Title
Urol Pract
Keywords
Case log analysis; Fellowship training; Operative experience; Surgical education; Urology residency
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Urology residency is designed to equip trainees with the skills necessary for independent practice. Over recent decades, however, the educational landscape has evolved, with fellowship trained urologists constituting > 45% of the workforce. We examine whether residents perform a greater number of cases aligned with their intended fellowship and whether, after matching, they tailor their chief resident year to reinforce their chosen subspecialty.
METHODS: We conducted a multi-institutional, retrospective analysis of ACGME case logs from residents of 14 programs from 2010-2022. Cases were categorized into five domains: Endourology, Reconstruction, Oncology, Pediatrics, and General. Residents who pursued fellowship training were identified, and case volumes were compared between those who matched into a given subspecialty and those who entered directly into practice/other fellowships.
RESULTS: Of 340 residents, 199 (58.5%) pursued fellowship. Residents entering fellowship logged significantly more cases in their aligned domains: Oncology (Median 274 vs. 259, p = 0.034), Pediatrics (259 vs. 186, p < 0.001), and Endourology (260 vs. 229, p = 0.027). No significant difference was observed in Reconstructive Surgery (160.5 vs. 154.5, p = 0.489). During the chief year, residents continued to align case selection with fellowship: Oncology (173 vs. 136.5, p < 0.001), Pediatrics (13 vs 4, p = 0.025), and Endourology (48 vs. 32, p = 0.003). Reconstructive case volume did not follow this trend (47.5 vs. 43, p = 0.383).
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that, for most specialties, sub-specialization appears to begin during residency, with residents aligning their operative experience with future fellowship plans. Chief year case selection appears to reflect strategic preparation for fellowship.
PubMed ID
41915756
ePublication
ePub ahead of print
First Page
101097
Last Page
101097
