Spine Fellowship
Spine Fellowship overview
We aim to provide our fellows with the clinical and surgical skills to manage all aspects of a modern surgical spine practice. We strongly emphasize decision-making based on the principles of evidence-based medicine. Our fellows gain in-depth knowledge of primary and revision degenerative problems of the cervical and lumbar spine, adult spinal deformities and spinal trauma, including spinal cord injuries. Exposure to minimally invasive techniques and pediatric deformities is also available.
Protected time for study and research is assured. Fellows are expected to participate in at least one original research project supervised by an attending spine surgeon, and one review article, book chapter or similar. Fellows also participate in weekly educational conferences with the orthopaedics and neurosurgical residents. No general orthopaedic call is required. Fellows can expect to participate in over 300 surgical cases, including many complex revision procedures. Surgical involvement will increase as the fellow gains maturity, with the goal of operating independently and managing a complex surgical spine caseload by the end of the fellowship.
~ Dr. Clifford Lin, Spine Fellowship Director
Spine Fellowship program details
The Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation at Oregon Health & Science University seeks applicants for 12-month clinical fellowships. This program will only review applications from graduates of US and Canadian residency programs. To qualify, candidates must be eligible for employment in the United States and must have a US Social Security Number. The candidate must also have passed all 3 steps of the USMLE exams and be board-eligible.
Interview dates for the 2024-2025 fellowship:
- Monday, Jan. 9, 2023
- Monday, Jan. 23, 2023
- Monday, Feb. 6, 2023
All interviews will be virtual using Webex.
How to apply
Please apply through Spine Fellowship Match.
Dr. David Le was raised in the Dallas/Fort Worth area. He completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Texas at Austin where he majored in Biology. David attended medical school at University of North Texas - Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine.
He completed his orthopaedic surgery residency at Inspira Health in Vineland, NJ. After his residency, he did an orthopaedic oncology fellowship at University of Washington in Seattle. David is excited to be at OHSU and chose the program for its well-rounded academic curriculum and the extensive experience that it provides.
David enjoys spending time with his wife and 2 daughters. He loves to hike and watch college football during his free time.
Previous fellows
2023-2024 Peter Du, M.D. and Gurmit Singh, M.D.
2022-2023 Michael Moore, M.D.
2020-2021 Michael Wheeler, M.D. and Stephen Hoge, M.D.
2019-2020 Vikram Sampath, M.D.
2018-2019 Vivek Natarajan, M.D. and Thuy M. Nguyen, D.O.
2017-2018 Aaron Kunkle, DO
2017-2018 Chandrakanth Boddu, MD
2016-2017 Wesam Nasrallah, MD
2015-2016 Christopher Kong, MD
2015-2016 Ngoc-Lam Nguyen, MD
2014-2015 Renuka Kuruvalli, MD
2014-2015 Sourabh Mukherjee, MD
2013-2014 Satoshi Kawaguchi, MD
2012-2013 Max Berdichevsky, MD
2012-2013 Marc El Najjar, MD
2011-2012 Ahmed Mohamed, MD
2011-2012 Paolo Punsalan, MD
2010-2011 David Ferachi, MD
2010-2011 Brian Jones, DO
2009-2010 Kurtus Dafford, MD
2008-2009 Geoffrey Kaung, MD
2005-2006 Alex Ching, MD
As an extension of the faculty, fellows are responsible for participating in patient care, including operative care, inpatient care, call and clinics. Fellows are also responsible for resident education, and are required to participate in weekly basic scientific and clinical conferences, as well as clinical or basic research. The goal of the fellowship is to produce a well-rounded spine surgeon who can provide a valuable contribution to the medical community. The main priorities are: 1) surgery and patient care; 2) research and education.
Operative care
During the clinical year the fellows are the primary assistants to the attending physician during surgery. The fellows do not operate independently except as directed to do so by the attending physician. Cases include primary and revision degenerative problems of the cervical and lumbar spine, adult spinal deformity, spinal trauma including spinal cord injury patients, and fracture and tumor patients.
Inpatient care
The spine service is run by three full-time attending orthopaedic spine surgeons, with fellows functioning as junior consultants. Fellows are responsible for supervision of two orthopaedic residents assigned to the spine service (PGY-1 and PGY-4). Fellows and residents are responsible for ensuring adequate communication with the attending physician(s). While the primary responsibility for inpatient work rounds is carried by the residents, fellows are responsible for knowledge of and involvement with patient care on an ongoing basis.
Call
Spine call is divided equally between the orthopaedic and neurosurgical services. Call is taken in one-week blocks that begin on Mondays at 6 a.m. Fellows are responsible for devising a call schedule that ensures that there is a fellow covering each on-call block. The spine team PGY-4 also participates in the spine call schedule, taking up to two days of call in any week.
Clinic
Fellows are expected to be at all clinic sessions with the attending physician(s) as dictated by the trainee schedule. Fellows will become proficient in the diagnosis of clinical disorders of the spine, the pathogenesis of these disorders, the operative and nonoperative treatment modalities available for managing these disorders, and the results and complications of such treatment. This learning environment provides a unique opportunity to develop clinical judgment that will ultimately lead to the ability to function independently as the primary surgeon.
Conferences
Fellows are expected to attend and participate in the following weekly scheduled conferences at OHSU:
- Grand Rounds/M&M -- Presentation of service M&M summary will be done by the PGY-1 or PGY-4. Presentation of individual cases will either be by the senior resident or the fellows, depending on faculty assignment.
- Spine lecture series -- Fellows will alternate presenting 30-minute didactic lectures with the neurosurgery residents. Each fellow thus presents approximately one didactic lecture every other month. The PGY-4 on service will also present once during their rotation.
- Spine indications conference -- Fellows and residents will present operative elective cases for the upcoming week. Fellows are responsible for presenting or guiding the residents in presenting concise patient histories, including relevant radiographs.
Fellows are permitted to attend one approved course or national meeting during the fellowship year, with a $1500 travel stipend provided by the department. To ensure adequate coverage of the service, fellows to should plan to attend different meetings. Additional meetings may be approved on a case-by-case basis if the fellow has original research to present.
All fellows are expected to participate in at least one original research project, supervised by an attending spine surgeon, and one review article, book chapter or similar. Opportunities for both in-house and external grant funding exist for collaboration in valid clinical or basic science research projects. An epidemiologist and outside statistical consultant are available for research project design and analysis. In addition, two full-time research assistants support the spine service. Fellows are encouraged to begin their research project early, in order to prepare abstracts for submission by March or early April. The goal is to have a peer-review publication submitted by the end of the fellowship year.
Timeline for milestones is as follows:
- Review of research opportunities complete by Sept. 1
- Presentation of written research proposal with critique by faculty by Dec. 1
- Submission of first draft of the paper to faculty advisor(s) by March 1
Authorship: Fellows will be given first authorship on papers if they complete a nearly final draft prior to the conclusion of the fellowship. However, if the attending physician has to substantially complete the paper, or a major rewrite is needed, the fellows will forgo the privilege of first authorship.
Presentation: Costs for travel and registration to any North American meeting at which the fellows are presenting original research will be covered by the spine education fund. Abstract authorship and presentation will be handled as for paper authorship.