Am J Perinatol. 2025 Sep 8. doi: 10.1055/a-2697-3426. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES: No multicenter study has examined the relationship between subspecialty in-training examination (SITE) scores and certification exam (CE) outcomes in pediatric subspecialties. This study addresses this gap by investigating whether performance on the Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine (NPM) SITE predicts first-attempt results on the NPM CE administered by the American Board of Pediatrics.
STUDY DESIGN: A multicenter, retrospective cohort study was conducted across NPM fellowship programs in the United States. Data from 326 fellows across 15 programs who took the NPM CE between 2014 and 2024 were analyzed. De-identified SITE scores and CE results were collected via REDCap. Year-specific Z-scores for SITE performance were calculated, and mixed-model generalized linear equations and logistic regression were used to assess the odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for CE failure, adjusting for clustering within programs and program characteristics.
RESULTS: Out of 326 fellows in this cohort, 36 failed the CE. Fellows with an average SITE score of <55% correct answers in the first two years of training had 4 times higher odds of failing the NPM CE compared with those with 55% (OR 4.28; 95% CI 1.77, 10.33; P<0.001). Similarly, those with an average SITE Z-score ≤-1.0 had 12 times higher odds of CE failure compared to those with Z-scores >-1.0 (OR 12.12; 95% CI 5.39, 27.25; P<0.001). Fellowship program characteristics did not significantly influence CE outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: Performance on the NPM SITE during the first two years of fellowship predicts first-attempt NPM CE results. Early identification of at-risk fellows through SITE performance may enable targeted educational interventions to improve certification outcomes. This study highlights the utility of SITE as a predictive tool in pediatric subspecialty training.
PMID:40921206 | DOI:10.1055/a-2697-3426