Subscribe to RSS
DOI: 10.1055/a-2616-4716
Career Paths After Microsurgery Fellowship: A 10-Year Analysis
Funding None.

Abstract
Background
Over the past 10 years, microsurgery fellowship programs and positions have increased by 50%, underscoring the need to understand graduate career paths and provide trainees context about future practice. This study analyzed who pursues microsurgery fellowships and factors associated with academic careers.
Methods
This cross-sectional analysis examined graduates from the past 10 years from fellowships recognized by the American Society of Reconstructive Microsurgery or graduates of international fellowships who completed residency in the United States. Demographic variables included gender, race, residency location, and integrated versus independent plastic surgery residency. bibliometric indices at the time of graduation and October 2024 were measured. Initial and current practice settings were categorized as academic (full-time faculty), “private affiliated” (involved in teaching but not full-time faculty), or private practice.
Results
Overall, 423 graduates were identified. The majority were male (62.9%) and White (63.4%). Most completed Integrated residency (72.6%). Five fellowships accounted for 48.0% of graduates: MD Anderson (80), Memorial Sloan Kettering (46), University of Pennsylvania (38), Stanford University (23), and The Buncke Clinic (16). After fellowship, 68.0% of graduates entered academia, and 63.2% of graduates are in academia currently out of 419 analyzed. Fellowship location was associated with initial academic practice (p = 0.01), many graduates from International (80.0%), and Southern (78.4%) fellowships entering academia. Graduates in initial academic practice had higher median initial g-index (13 vs. 10, p = 0.03) and median initial publications (15 vs. 11, p = 0.02). Multiple logistic regression found initial publications and fellowship location to be the best predictors of initial academic practice.
Conclusion
While most graduates pursue academia, a significant number enter private practice, indicating it is a viable option. Southern or International fellowships send more graduates into academia, but this is likely influenced by popular fellowships. Nuanced factors like personal preference, financial considerations, and networking likely play a significant role in career choices.
Author Contributions
The project was conceived by E.L., A.P., and K.R. Data collection was performed by E.L., T.P., V.Y., A.F., S.C., and M.T. Statistical analyses were conceptualized by E.L., A.P., and K.R., and performed by E.L. The initial manuscript was drafted by E.L. The final manuscript was written with the input and approval of all authors.
Publication History
Received: 18 December 2024
Accepted: 12 May 2025
Accepted Manuscript online:
20 May 2025
Article published online:
13 June 2025
© 2025. Thieme. All rights reserved.
Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.
333 Seventh Avenue, 18th Floor, New York, NY 10001, USA
-
References
- 1 San Francisco Match. Microsurgery Fellowship Data Report. SF Match. Available at:
https://www.sfmatch.org/specialty/microsurgery-fellowship/data-report . Accessed October 1, 2024
- 2 San Francisco Match. Craniofacial Surgery Fellowship Data Report. SF Match. Available
at: https://sfmatch.org/specialty/craniofacial-surgery-fellowship/data-report . Accessed October 1, 2024
- 3 Cooper MN, Daneshgaran G, Yu R. et al. Analysis of the microsurgery match from 2014 to 2018 reveals increased competition for microsurgery fellowship positions. J Reconstr Microsurg 2019; 35 (09) 662-668
- 4 McGraw JR, Sulkar RS, Amro C. et al. Analysis of the microsurgery fellowship match: 2019-2022 update. Microsurgery 2024; 44 (06) e31217
- 5 Luby AO, Ranganathan K, Matusko N, Buchman SR. Assessing the key predictors of an academic career after craniofacial surgery fellowship. Plast Reconstr Surg 2020; 146 (06) 759e-767e
- 6 Fereydooni A, Fisher AT, Mullis DM, Smith BK, Sgroi MD. Impact of integrated vascular surgery residency training pathway and professional development time on career choice and research productivity. J Surg Educ 2024; 81 (02) 295-303
- 7 Vohra V, Watley DC, Yan CH. et al. Predictors of academic career placement and scholarly impact in fellowship-trained rhinologists. Int Forum Allergy Rhinol 2022; 12 (01) 62-70
- 8 Fellowship Search - Fellowships | ASRM/Microsurg. Accessed December 10, 2024 at:
https://www.microsurg.org/education/fellowships/fellowship-search/
- 9 Geographic division or region - Health, United States. July 30, 2024. Accessed November
21, 2024 at: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/hus/sources-definitions/geographic-region.htm
- 10 Anne-Wil Harzing. Publish or Perish. Published online 2007. Accessed October 1, 2024
at: https://harzing.com/resources/publish-or-perish
- 11 Egghe L. Theory and practise of the g-index. Scientometrics 2006; 69 (01) 131-152
- 12 Python. Published online April 9, 2024 at: http://www.python.org/
- 13 Unique Populations. AAMC. Accessed December 10, 2024 at: https://www.aamc.org/professional-development/affinity-groups/gfa/unique-populations
- 14 Cucinotta D, Vanelli M. WHO declares COVID-19 a pandemic. Acta Biomed 2020; 91 (01) 157-160
- 15 Lin E, Tian WM, Harris R, Patel A, Rezak KM. Paucity of online information about gender-affirming surgery fellowships in the United States. Ann Plast Surg 2024; 93 (01) 3-8
- 16 Maisner RS, Babu A, Ayyala HS, Ramanadham S. How comprehensive are aesthetic surgery fellowship websites?. Ann Plast Surg 2021; 86 (06) 615-617
- 17 Cohen SA, Xiao M, Curtin CM, Yao J. Analysis of website accessibility and content for all 92 accredited hand surgery fellowship programs in the United States: an update. J Hand Surg Glob Online 2022; 4 (05) 269-275
- 18 Silvestre J, Vargas CR, Ho O, Lee BT. Evaluation of the content and accessibility of microsurgery fellowship program websites. Microsurgery 2015; 35 (07) 560-564
- 19 Smith BT, Egro FM, Murphy CP, Stavros AG, Nguyen VT. An evaluation of race disparities in academic plastic surgery. Plast Reconstr Surg 2020; 145 (01) 268-277
- 20 Persad-Paisley EM, Uriarte SA, Kuruvilla AS. et al. Examining racial and gender diversity in the plastic surgery pipeline: where is the leak?. Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open 2024; 12 (01) e5552
- 21 2023 FACTS: Enrollment, Graduates, and MD-PhD Data. AAMC. Accessed December 10, 2024
at: https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/students-residents/data/2023-facts-enrollment-graduates-and-md-phd-data
- 22 Brotherton SE, Etzel SI. Graduate Medical Education, 2021-2022. JAMA 2022; 328 (11) 1123-1146
- 23 Hall JA, Chen W, Bhayana K. et al. Quantifying the pipeline of ethnically underrepresented in medicine physicians in academic plastic surgery leadership. Ann Plast Surg 2021; 87 (04) e51-e61
- 24 Oberoi MK, Reghunathan M, Aref Y, Dinis JJ, Balumuka D, Gosman A. Racial/ethnic and gender disparities over the last decade within microsurgery and craniofacial fellowship training. Ann Plast Surg 2023; 90 (5S, suppl 3): S281-S286
- 25 Campbell TJ, Greige N, Yan Y, Lu YH, Ricci JA, Weichman KE. Women in microsurgery fellowships: trends and impact on future practice patterns. J Reconstr Microsurg 2024; 40 (05) 357-362
- 26 Women are changing the face of medicine in America. AAMC. Accessed December 10, 2024
at: https://www.aamc.org/news/women-are-changing-face-medicine-america
- 27
Caan N.
Achieving gender parity: Women's role in plastic surgery. American Society of Plastic
Surgeons. March 26, 2024. Accessed December 10, 2024 at: https://www.plasticsurgery.org/news/articles/achieving-gender-parity-womens-role-in-plastic-surgery
- 28 Abdou SA, Sharif-Askary B, Sayyed AA. et al. Can mentorship shatter the glass ceiling in academic microsurgery? A national survey of microsurgery fellowship-trained women. Plast Reconstr Surg 2023; 152 (06) 1143e-1153e
- 29 Contag SP, Golub JS, Teknos TN. et al. Professional burnout among microvascular and reconstructive free-flap head and neck surgeons in the United States. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 2010; 136 (10) 950-956
- 30 Cheesborough JE, Gray SS, Bajaj AK. Striking a better integration of work and life: challenges and solutions. Plast Reconstr Surg 2017; 139 (02) 495-500
- 31 Halperin TJ, Werler MM, Mulliken JB. Gender differences in the professional and private lives of plastic surgeons. Ann Plast Surg 2010; 64 (06) 775-779
- 32 Fishman EK, Lugo-Fagundo E, Chu LC, Rizk RC. The gap year for college students interested in medicine: can they contribute to your mission?. Curr Probl Diagn Radiol 2024; 53 (04) 452-454
- 33 Guang SA, Eltorai AEM, Durand WM, Daniels AH. Medical student burnout: impact of the gap year in burnout prevention. Work 2020; 66 (03) 611-616
- 34 Wang CY, Mellia JA, Levy L. et al. The association of a research year with matching into an integrated plastic surgery residency. J Surg Res 2024; 303: 22-31
- 35 Galbraith LG, Avasarala VS, Jinka SKA, Collar J, Prassinos A. Plastic surgery research year: an equalizer or disparity?. Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open 2023; 11 (08) e5102
- 36 Mauch JT, Byrnes YM, Kotian AA, Catzen HZ, Byrnes ME, Myers PL. Microsurgeon development, attrition, and hope for the future: a qualitative analysis. J Reconstr Microsurg 2024
- 37 Howell CR, Tierney MG, Westerfield A, Silva AK. Career paths of young fellowship-trained microsurgeons. J Reconstr Microsurg 2025
- 38 Bovill JD, Haffner ZK, Huffman SS. et al. Trends in fellowship training across United States Plastic and reconstructive surgery academic faculty. Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open 2022; 10 (10) e4611
- 39 Davison SP, Evans G, Ball E, Newman A, Sotile W. Control versus choice in deciding career pathway in plastic surgery: the perfect ratio. Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open 2024; 12 (10) e6240
- 40 Wade JW, Stephens JA, Bragham RF, Carbo JD. Microsurgery in private practice: is it feasible economically?. Ann Plast Surg 2001; 46 (03) 255-259 , discussion 259–260
- 41 Mehrzad R, Akiki R, Liu PY, Schmidt S, Woo AS. Changes in academic plastic surgery programs during the COVID-19 pandemic. Ann Plast Surg 2021; 87 (1s, suppl 1): S52-S56
- 42 Crowley JS, Reghunathan M, Kadakia N, Barttelbort S, Gosman A. Financial decisions and reopening a practice during the COVID-19 pandemic: a survey of California plastic surgeons. Ann Plast Surg 2021; 86 (5S, suppl 3): S354-S359
- 43 Ruan QZ, Ricci JA, Silvestre J, Ho OA, Lee BT. Academic productivity of faculty associated with microsurgery fellowships. Microsurgery 2017; 37 (06) 641-646
- 44 Fladie I, Wise A, Carr M. et al. An evaluation of research publications for general surgery residents and its influence on the future pursuit of fellowship or academic career. J Surg Educ 2023; 80 (03) 352-359
- 45 Carr M, Anderson JM, Shepard S. et al. An analysis of publication trends of orthopedic surgery residency graduates in relation to academic achievement. J Osteopath Med 2022; 122 (04) 195-202
- 46 Johnson AL, Corcoran A, Ferrell M. et al. Scholarly research productivity among otolaryngology residency graduates and its relationship to future academic achievement. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol 2021; 130 (11) 1276-1284