Olivia L. Snir M.D.
- Health care profile
- snir@ohsu.edu (503) 494-8276
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- Assistant Professor of Pathology School of Medicine
- Co-Director, Pathology Student Fellowship Program
Areas of interest
- Gynecologic and breast pathology, with a focus on ovarian teratomas and related neoplasms.
Education
- B.S., Fordham University, Bronx New York United States 2003
- M.S., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Pennsylvania United States 2006
- M.D., Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia Pennsylvania United States 2013
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Residency:
- Anatomic and Clinical Pathology Residency, Yale University, School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, 2013-2016
- Chief Resident, Anatomic and Clinical Pathology, Yale University, School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, 2016-1017
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Fellowship:
- Breast and Gynecologic Surgical Pathology Fellowship, Yale University, School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, 2017-2018
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Certifications:
- Anatomic and Clinical Pathology (ABPath), 2017
Publications
1. Rabe K., Snir O.L., Bossuyt V., Harigopal M., Celli R., and Reisenbichler E.S. “Interobserver Variability in Breast Carcinoma Grading Results in Prognostic Stage Differences.” Hum Pathol (accepted).
2. Rottmann D., Snir O.L., Wu X., Wong S., Hui P., Santin A.D., and Buza N. “HER2 testing of gynecologic carcinosarcomas: tumor stratification for potential targeted therapy.” Mod Pathol (2019) Sept 2. doi: 10.1038/s41379-019-0358-x (Epub ahead of print).
3. Wu X., Snir O., Rottmann D., Wong S., Buza N., and Hui P. “Minimal microsatellite shift in microsatellite instability high endometrial cancer: a significant pitfall in diagnostic interpretation.” Mod Pathol (2019); 32(5), 650-658.
4. Snir O.L., DeJoseph M., Wong S., and Hui P. “Frequent Homozygosity in Both Mature and Immature Ovarian Teratomas: A Shared Genetic Basis of Tumorigenesis.” Mod Pathol (2017); 30(10), 1467-1475.
5. Snir O.L., Buza N., and Hui P. “Mucinous Epithelial Tumours Arising from Ovarian Mature Teratomas: a Tissue Genotyping Study.” Histopathology (2016); 69(3): 383-392.
6. Dennis M.K., Mantegassa A.R., Snir O.L., Tenza D., Acosta-Ruiz A., Delevoye C., Zorger R., Sitaram A., de Jesus-Rojas W., Ravichandran K., Rux J., Sviderskaya E.V., Bennett D.C., Raposo G., Marks M.S., and Setty S.R. “BLOC-2 targets recycling endosomal tubules to melanosomes for cargo delivery.” J Cell Biol (2015); 209(4): 563-577.