Pathology
Comprehensive, expert-backed pathology services
Mayo Clinic Laboratories offers the world’s most sophisticated laboratory test menu and pathology practice for cancer care. Spanning all areas of pathology and utilizing an array of diagnostic, theranostic, and prognostic approaches, our testing is supported by expertise from specialists in every type and stage of cancer. Our comprehensive menu of molecular and genetic tests supports diagnostic workup and clinical treatment guidelines.
Highlights
In a Fierce Healthcare article, Dr. William Morice highlights AI, digital pathology, and mass spectrometry as key advancements revolutionizing healthcare diagnostics and treatment.
Mayo Clinic laboratory experts share case studies that challenge you to test your knowledge of anatomic and clinical pathology.
Mayo Clinic laboratory experts share case studies that challenge you to test your knowledge of anatomic and clinical pathology in January's Pathways Case Studies.
December's Pathways Case Studies: Short, interactive case studies from Mayo Clinic physicians, scientists, and allied health staff.
November's Pathways Case Studies explores cases in cytopathology, gastroenterology pathology, gynecological pathology, renal pathology, and surgical pathology.
Learn from Mayo Clinic experts in September's Pathways Case Studies.
Test your knowledge of anatomic and clinical pathology.
Mayo Clinic laboratory experts share case studies that challenge you to test your knowledge of anatomic and clinical pathology. Check out this month’s Pathways Case Studies.
Check out this month’s Pathways Case Studies with cases in cytopathology, genitourinary pathology, gynecological pathology, neuropathology, renal pathology, surgical pathology, clinical chemistry, hematopathology, and transfusion medicine.
Almost four years ago, Mayo Clinic launched the Digital Pathology Program, a major pathology initiative. Phase 2 of this multi-phase rollout has recently been completed, which involved the implementation of cutting-edge digital equipment and software, and converting glass slides of patient samples into digital images. The conversion enables pathologists and laboratory technologists to view, store, retrieve, and share medical images more universally, without waiting for glass slides to be retrieved and delivered. This has significantly improved patient care because pathologists can now discuss cases with clinicians and surgeons in real time.
In this episode of “Answers From the Lab,” host Bobbi Pritt, M.D., chair of the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology at Mayo Clinic, sits down with Joaquin Garcia, M.D., chair of Mayo Clinic’s Division of Anatomic Pathology and digital pathology program to discuss how the advent of digital pathology is changing patient care at Mayo Clinic.
As Mayo Clinic’s Anatomic Pathology moves from traditional glass slides to digital images, the advance in technology is achieving clear benefits in collaboration, learning, and patient care.