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2026 ACCP/ASHP Oncology Pharmacy Preparatory Review and Recertification Course


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The ACCP/ASHP Oncology Pharmacy Preparatory Review and Recertification Course is ideal for pharmacy professionals who are preparing for the Oncology Pharmacy Specialty Certification Examination administered by the Board of Pharmacy Specialties (BPS) and for those seeking a self-paced review and refresher of disease states and therapeutics. 

Developed by Board Certified Pharmacists and clinical experts, the course content is based on the domains, tasks, and knowledge statements outlined in the BPS Oncology Pharmacy content outline. The course content provides a comprehensive review of the knowledge domains covered in the specialty certification examination. The course uses a case-based approach, with strong emphasis on the thought processes needed to solve patient care problems in each therapeutic area. 

Release Date: June 10, 2026
BCOP Deadline: June 08, 2027
ACPE Deadline: June 10, 2029

Technical Requirements:

Contents

Adult Acute Leukemia, Chronic Leukemia, Pharmacogenomics in Oncology

Adult Acute Leukemias and Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Chronic Leukemias

Pharmacogenomics in Oncology

Research Design, Statistics, and Evaluating Oncology Literature; Gynecologic Malignancies; Upper Gastro and Hepatocellular Carcinomas

Research Design, Statistics, and Evaluating Oncology Literature 

Gynecologic Malignancies 

Upper Gastrointestinal and Hepatocellular Carcinomas 

Breast Cancer; Multiple Myeloma

Breast Cancer 

Multiple Myeloma 

Oncology Practice Mgmt, Lymphomas, Melanoma and Non-Melanoma Skin Cancers

Oncology Practice Management 

Lymphomas 

Melanoma and Non-Melanoma Skin Cancers

Lung Cancer; Head, Neck, Adult Central Nervous System, and Thyroid Cancers; Bladder, Renal, and Testicular Cancers

Lung Cancer 

Head, Neck, Adult Central Nervous System, and Thyroid Cancers 

Bladder, Renal, and Testicular Cancers 

Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation; Prostate Cancer; Lower Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Cancers

Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation 

Prostate Cancer 

Lower Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Cancers

Pediatric Malignancies and Supportive Care; Cancer-related Infectious Diseases; Adult Sarcomas

Pediatric Malignancies and Supportive Care 

Cancer-related Infectious Diseases 

Adult Sarcomas

Adult Acute Leukemia, Chronic Leukemia, Pharmacogenomics in Oncology

*Content Matter Expert

Faculty

Anthony J. Perissinotti, Pharm.D., BCOP*
Hematology Clinical Pharmacist Specialist
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Karen M. Fancher, Pharm.D., BCOP*
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Duquesne University School of Pharmacy
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Passavant
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Christine M. Walko, Pharm.D., BCOP, FCCP, FASCO*
Senior Member, Department of Pathology, Precision Medicine
Moffitt Cancer Center
Tampa, Florida

Research Design, Statistics, and Evaluating Oncology Literature; Gynecologic Malignancies; Upper Gastro and Hepatocellular Carcinomas

Faculty

Elyse MacDonald, Pharm.D., MS, BCPS, FASH
Director, Investigational Drug Service and Infusion Pharmacy Services
Stanford Health Care
Stanford, California
Alexis R. Jones, Pharm.D., BCOP, CPP
Gynecologic Oncology Clinical Pharmacist
University of North Carolina Medical Center
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Courtney Cavalieri, Pharm.D., BCOP
Clinical Oncology Pharmacist, Gastrointestinal, Thoracic, and Head & Neck Malignancies
Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah

Breast Cancer; Multiple Myeloma

Faculty

Danielle L. Roman, Pharm.D., BCOP
Manager, Oncology Clinical Pharmacy Services; Oncology Clinical Pharmacy Specialist
Allegheny Health Network
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Donald C. Moore, III, Pharm.D., BCPS, BCOP, DPLA, FCCP, FASHP
Clinical Oncology Pharmacy Manager
Atrium Health Levine Cancer Center
Charlotte, North Carolina

Oncology Practice Mgmt, Lymphomas, Melanoma and Non-Melanoma Skin Cancers

Faculty

Christopher A. Fausel, Pharm.D., MHA, BCOP
Director of Pharmacy, Precision Genomics
Indiana University Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center
Chairman of the Board
Hoosier Cancer Research Network
Indianapolis, Indiana
Karen M. Fancher, Pharm.D., BCOP*
Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice
Duquesne University School of Pharmacy
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Passavant
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Ryan G. Bycroft, Pharm.D., BCOP, DPLA
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Hematology/Oncology
University of Louisville Hospital, Brown Cancer Center
Louisville, Kentucky

Lung Cancer; Head, Neck, Adult Central Nervous System, and Thyroid Cancers; Bladder, Renal, and Testicular Cancers

Faculty

Janelle E. Mann, Pharm.D., BCOP
Pharmacy Manager/Clinical Pharmacist Specialist - Outpatient Oncology
Barnes Jewish Hospital/Washington University School of Medicine
St. Louis, Missouri
Christine M. Walko, Pharm.D., BCOP, FCCP, FASCO*
Senior Member, Department of Pathology, Precision Medicine
Moffitt Cancer Center
Tampa, Florida
John Bossaer, Pharm.D., BCOP
Professor
East Tennessee State University
Bill Gatton College of Pharmacy
Johnson City, Tennessee

Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation; Prostate Cancer; Lower Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Cancers

Faculty

Lauren Ice, Pharm.D., BCOP, BCPS*
Pharmacy Supervisor
Corewell Health
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Sherry L. Vogt, Pharm.D., BCOP
System Clinical Pharmacy Manager and Clinical Specialist Pharmacist – Oncology
Hollings Cancer Center
Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, South Carolina
Courtney C. Cavalieri, Pharm.D., BCOP
Clinical Oncology Pharmacist, Gastrointestinal, Thoracic, and Head & Neck Malignancies
Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah

Pediatric Malignancies and Supportive Care; Cancer-related Infectious Diseases; Adult Sarcomas

Faculty

Jennifer Young, Pharm.D., BCOP
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, Ohio
Jessica J. Auten, Pharm.D., BCOP
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Malignant Hematology
University of North Carolina Medical Center
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Colleen C. MCCabe, Pharm.D., BCOP
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Oncology
Emory University Hospital/Winship Cancer Institute
Atlanta, Georgia

CPE Credit

The American College of Clinical Pharmacy is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education.

The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education with Commendation.

The American College of Clinical Pharmacy and the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists are approved by BPS as a provider for the recertification of BCOP.

BPS is an autonomous division of the American Pharmacists Association. To maintain its strict, independent standards for certification, BPS does NOT endorse or provide review information, preparatory courses, or study guides for board certification examinations. BPS, through its specialty councils, is responsible for specialty examination content, administration, scoring, and all other aspects of its certification programs. BPS is totally separate and distinct from ACCP. For information about BPS specialty recertification the BPS recertification process, go to: www.bpsweb.org/

To receive recertification credit, posttests must be submitted prior to the recertification posttest deadline (see above). Only completed tests are eligible for credit; no partial or incomplete tests will be processed. You may complete one or all available posttests for credit.

The passing point to earn recertification credit is based on an expert analysis of the assessment items in each posttest. Any posttest submitted before the recertification test deadline that meets this passing point will earn recertification credits. These credits will be assigned as of the date of test submission and reported within 48 hours to BPS. For statements of recertification credit, visit www.bpsweb.org.

In accordance with BPS guidelines concerning remediation for products launched in 2024 and after, posttests that do not reach the passing point for recertification credit will generate a second-chance test option. This test will automatically appear in the learner’s My Account page and will have assessment items presented in a different order. To qualify for recertification credit, the second-chance test must be submitted before the recertification deadline stated above.

The ACCP Recertification Dashboard is a free online tool that can track recertification credits as they are earned through ACCP and schedule new opportunities for credits from upcoming ACCP professional development programs. Questions regarding the number of hours required for recertification should be directed to BPS at www.bpsweb.org.

Target Audience: Oncology Pharmacy Preparatory Review and Recertification Course is designed to help pharmacists who are preparing for the Board of Pharmacy Specialties certification examination in Oncology Pharmacy as well as those seeking a general review and refresher on disease states and therapeutics.

Contents

Adult Acute Leukemia, Chronic Leukemia, Pharmacogenomics in Oncology

Activity Number: 0204-9999-26-910-H01-P
Contact Hour(s): 3.75
Activity Type: Application Based
Learning Objectives

Adult Acute Leukemia, Chronic Leukemia, Pharmacogenomics in Oncology

Adult Acute Leukemias and Myelodysplastic Syndromes

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for adults with acute leukemia or myelodysplastic neoplasms.
  2. Assess the prognostic impact of relevant cancer-related molecular biology testing for an adult with acute leukemia or myelodysplastic neoplasms.
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating adverse reactions from pharmacotherapy for acute leukemia and myelodysplastic neoplasms in an adult, including tumor lysis syndrome, neurotoxicity, differentiation syndrome, and cardiac toxicity from arsenic trioxide, and other agents as appropriate.
  4. Determine appropriate pharmacotherapy for acute leukemia or myelodysplastic neoplasms in an adult based on genomic test results.

Chronic Leukemias

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration relevant molecular biology testing, genomic information, efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials, and current treatment guidelines for patients with chronic leukemia.
  2. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating infusion-related reactions from monoclonal antibodies used in the treatment of hematologic malignancies.
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating adverse reactions associated with pharmacotherapy for the treatment of cancers, including toxicities from tyrosine kinase inhibitors used to treat hematologic cancers.

Pharmacogenomics in Oncology

  1. Identify appropriate considerations for genetic interpretation in both the germline and somatic settings utilizing a variety of next generation sequencing techniques.
  2. Apply the results from germline and somatic genetic testing into therapeutic recommendations based on prognostic, predictive and patient characteristics.
  3. Recognize the place in therapeutic decision making for companion diagnostic testing.

 

Research Design, Statistics, and Evaluating Oncology Literature; Gynecologic Malignancies; Upper Gastro and Hepatocellular Carcinomas

Activity Number: 0204-9999-26-911-H01-P
Contact Hour(s): 3.75
Activity Type: Application Based
Learning Objectives

Research Design, Statistics, and Evaluating Oncology Literature; Gynecologic Malignancies; Upper Gastro and Hepatocellular Carcinomas

Research Design, Statistics, and Evaluating Oncology Literature

  1. Evaluate the oncology literature, including study design, identification of sources of bias, methodology, statistical analysis, and applicability of results to clinical practice for the oncology patient population.
  2. Interpret the validity and results of various types of oncology studies (e.g., meta-analyses, noninferiority trials).
  3. Interpret findings from the use of study endpoints (e.g., objective response, time to progression, adverse events, quality of life, overall survival) in oncology research.
  4. Interpret sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, measures of effect, correlation, and regression for an oncology study.

Gynecologic Malignancies

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, management, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes of clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for a patient with a gynecologic malignancy.
  2. Discuss short- and long-term goals including post-therapy and survivorship, with a patient with a gynecologic malignancy and her caregiver.
  3. Select relevant information and provide guidance for the public regarding gynecologic malignancy‐related issues (e.g., risk factors, prevention and screening).

Upper Gastrointestinal and Hepatocellular Carcinomas

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, management, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with esophageal, gastric, or hepatic malignancies.
  2. Assess the impact of pharmacogenomics on the efficacy and toxicity of relevant anticancer agents used for gastrointestinal malignancies.
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating radiation recall and other complications of radiation therapy.

 

Breast Cancer; Multiple Myeloma

Activity Number: 0204-9999-26-912-H01-P
Contact Hour(s): 4.00
Activity Type: Application Based
Learning Objectives

Breast Cancer; Multiple Myeloma

Breast Cancer

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with breast cancer.
  2. Discuss short- and long-term treatment goals, including post-therapy and survivorship, with a patient with breast cancer and her or his caregiver.
  3. Determine appropriate pharmacotherapy for a patient with breast cancer based on genomic test results
  4. Identify appropriate diagnostic and prognostic tests related to breast cancer.
  5. Select relevant information and guidance for the public regarding breast cancer-related issues (e.g., cancer risk factors, prevention, screening).

Multiple Myeloma

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current guidelines for patients with multiple myeloma.
  2. Evaluate oncology pharmacy services for compliance with established REMS regulations and standards.
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and managing common problems associated with the treatment of cancers, including bone metastases in multiple myeloma patients and thromboembolism, hypercalcemia of malignancy, and spinal cord compression.

 

Oncology Practice Mgmt, Lymphomas, Melanoma and Non-Melanoma Skin Cancers

Activity Number: 0204-9999-26-913-H01-P
Contact Hour(s): 4.00
Activity Type: Application Based
Learning Objectives

Oncology Practice Mgmt, Lymphomas, Melanoma and Non-Melanoma Skin Cancers

Oncology Practice Management

  1. Evaluate oncology pharmacy services for compliance with established regulations, professional practice standards, and procedures for handling, administration, and disposal of hazardous drugs.
  2. Select quality-improvement activities that enhance the safety and effectiveness of the medication-use processes in oncology patient care.
  3. Explain methods to optimize medication inventory management for oncology patients.
  4. Evaluate policies and procedures related to conducting research involving of investigational drugs, including drug management in patients with cancer.

Lymphomas

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan to include effectiveness, toxicities and outcomes, based on the most current guidelines for patients with lymphoma.
  2. Assess the prognostic impact of relevant cancer-related molecular biology testing.
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating adverse reactions associated with pharmacotherapy for lymphoma and other cancers, including chemotherapy-induced pulmonary toxicities and extravasation.

Melanoma and Non-Melanoma Skin Cancers

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with melanoma or non-melanoma skin cancer.
  2. Discuss short- and long-term goals, including post-therapy and survivorship, with a patient with melanoma or non-melanoma skin cancer and his or her caregiver.
  3. Select relevant information and guidance for the public regarding melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancer-related issues (e.g., risk factors, prevention, screening).
  4. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating adverse reactions associated with the treatment of melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers, including thyroid level monitoring for chemotherapy agents, immune-mediated toxicities, and toxicity from BRAF inhibitors.

 

Lung Cancer; Head, Neck, Adult Central Nervous System, and Thyroid Cancers; Bladder, Renal, and Testicular Cancers

Activity Number: 0204-9999-26-914-H01-P
Contact Hour(s): 3.75
Activity Type: Application Based
Learning Objectives

Lung Cancer; Head, Neck, Adult Central Nervous System, and Thyroid Cancers; Bladder, Renal, and Testicular Cancers

Lung Cancer

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with lung cancer.
  2. Select relevant information and guidance for the public regarding lung cancer-related issues (e.g., risk factors, prevention, screening).
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating adverse reactions associated with pharmacotherapy for lung cancer.
  4. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and managing adverse reactions associated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors and mTOR inhibitors.

Head, Neck, Adult Central Nervous System, and Thyroid Cancers

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, management, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with head, neck, adult central nervous system (CNS), or thyroid cancers.
  2. Select relevant information and guidance for the public regarding head and neck cancer-related issues (e.g., risk factors, prevention, screening).
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating adverse reactions associated with the treatment of cancers including cancer cachexia, mucositis, and xerostomia.

Bladder, Renal, and Testicular Cancers

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with bladder, renal cell, or testicular carcinomas.
  2. Discuss short- and long-term treatment goals, including post-therapy and survivorship, with a patient with bladder, renal cell, or testicular carcinomas and his or her caregiver.
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and managing QT interval prolongation associated with antineoplastics and oncology supportive care agents.

 

Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation; Prostate Cancer; Lower Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Cancers

Activity Number: 0204-9999-26-915-H01-P
Contact Hour(s): 3.75
Activity Type: Application Based
Learning Objectives

Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation; Prostate Cancer; Lower Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Cancers

Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current guidelines for patients undergoing hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT).
  2. Apply appropriate strategies to prevent and treat toxicity from chemotherapy agents employed in HCT conditioning regimens.
  3. Create a plan for prevention and management of acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) using appropriate systemic and ancillary therapies.
  4. Discuss short- and long-term treatment goals, including post-therapy and survivorship, with the patient undergoing HCT and his or her caregiver.

Prostate Cancer

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with prostate cancer.
  2. Discuss short- and long-term treatment goals, including post-therapy and survivorship, with a patient with prostate cancer and his caregiver.
  3. Select relevant information and guidance for the public regarding prostate cancer-related issues (e.g., risk factors, prevention, screening).

Lower Gastrointestinal and Pancreatic Cancers

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for patients with lower gastrointestinal (GI) or pancreatic cancers.
  2. Discuss short- and long-term treatment goals, including post-therapy and survivorship, with a patient with lower GI or pancreatic cancers and his or her caregiver.
  3. Select relevant information and guidance for the public regarding lower GI and pancreatic cancer-related issues (e.g., risk factors, prevention, screening).
  4. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring, and treating adverse reactions associated with pharmacotherapy for lower GI or pancreatic cancers, including chemotherapy-induced diarrhea, hand-foot syndrome, hand foot skin reaction, neurotoxicity from oxaliplatin, and dermatologic toxicities from epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors.

 

Pediatric Malignancies and Supportive Care; Cancer-related Infectious Diseases; Adult Sarcomas

Activity Number: 0204-9999-26-916-H01-P
Contact Hour(s): 3.00
Activity Type: Application Based
Learning Objectives

Pediatric Malignancies and Supportive Care; Cancer-related Infectious Diseases; Adult Sarcomas

Pediatric Malignancies and Supportive Care

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, supportive care, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for pediatric patients with cancer.
  2. Assess the prognostic impact of relevant cancer-related molecular biology testing for a pediatric patient with cancer.
  3. Discuss with a pediatric patient who has cancer and his or her caregiver the short- and long-term treatment goals, including post-therapy and survivorship.
  4. Assess the regulatory, ethical, and patient rights issues related to conducting research, including informed consent and confidentiality.

Cancer-related Infectious Diseases

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific management and monitoring plan to address potential infection-related problems that may arise during and following cancer treatment based on current guidelines for treating cancer-related infectious diseases.
  2. Discuss short- and long-term treatment goals, including post-therapy, with a patient with cancer-related infectious disease and his or her caregiver.

Adult Sarcomas

  1. Design an appropriate patient-specific treatment, management, and monitoring plan taking into consideration efficacy and safety outcomes from clinical trials and current treatment guidelines for adult patients with sarcoma.
  2. Adjust treatment and monitoring plans as needed based on tumor genetics and pharmacokinetics of anticancer and supportive-care agents (e.g., methotrexate).
  3. Develop an appropriate plan for preventing, monitoring and managing common problems associated with the treatment of adult patients with cancer including neurotoxicity from ifosfamide and hemorrhagic cystitis.

 


Commercial Support

The American College of Clinical Pharmacy does not solicit or accept external commercial/financial support for its continuing pharmacy education activities. No commercial/financial support has been solicited or accepted for this activity.