The Portfolio Pathway (CESR) in Cardiology allows physicians trained outside the UK to achieve GMC specialist registration by demonstrating equivalence to a UK CCT-trained cardiologist. This pathway requires strong evidence of clinical cardiology, diagnostic skills, procedural competence, and multidisciplinary care.
– Cardiologists with 5–10+ years of postgraduate training or experience
– Independent clinical decision-making in cardiology
– Experience in inpatient, outpatient, and emergency cardiac care
– Exposure to cardiac procedures and investigations
This was the best course I have ever attended for CESR. Mr. Nanjappa is a genius and a master of his craft. He explained everything in a clear and concise manner, and gave us invaluable tips and tricks. He also provided us with a lot of resources and support. I feel much more confident and motivated after attending his workshop. I highly recommend this course to anyone who is serious about CESR.
“Mr. Nanjappa is an amazing teacher and mentor. He has a wealth of knowledge and experience in CESR, and he shared it with us generously. He was very approachable and friendly, and answered all our questions patiently. He also gave us honest and constructive feedback on our portfolios and interviews. He made the whole process seem easy and fun. I learned a lot from him and I am very grateful for his guidance.”
“I attended Mr. Nanjappa’s workshop after struggling with my CESR application for months. I was feeling lost and frustrated, and I didn’t know where to start or what to do. But after attending his workshop, everything changed. He showed me the right way to approach CESR, and he gave me a clear plan and direction. He also inspired me with his success story and his passion for general surgery. He is a true role model and a leader in his field. I am so glad I joined his programme.”
– Management of acute and chronic cardiac conditions
– Inpatient and outpatient cardiology care
– Heart failure, arrhythmia, and ischemic heart disease management
– ECG interpretation
– Echocardiography (basic to advanced depending on role)
– Stress testing and ambulatory monitoring
– Cardiac imaging exposure (CT/MRI desirable)
– Cardiac catheterisation (if applicable)
– Temporary pacing
– Pericardiocentesis (where applicable)
– Evidence of competence and progression
– Interventional cardiology (basic exposure)
– Heart failure services
– Electrophysiology (basic exposure)
– Preventive cardiology
– Acute coronary syndromes
– Arrhythmias and cardiac emergencies
– Critical care interface
– Cardiology MDT meetings
– Heart team discussions (PCI/surgery decisions)
– Documentation of clinical decisions
– Teaching junior doctors and trainees
– Structured sessions with feedback
– Completed audits (cycle preferred)
– Clinical governance and outcome monitoring
– Breadth across diagnostic and procedural cardiology
– Demonstrating independent clinical decision-making
– Documentation of investigations and outcomes
– Evidence of MDT and acute care involvement
– Poor documentation of diagnostic competence
– Limited procedural evidence
– Missing MDT and acute care documentation
– Weak audit and governance evidence
– Structured portfolio planning aligned with UK cardiology standards
– Guidance on documenting clinical and procedural evidence
– Gap analysis of competencies
– One-to-one mentorship throughout CESR preparation
– Initial eligibility assessment
– 3–6 months of structured documentation building
– Final review and submission preparation
Most candidates complete preparation within 6–12 months.
CESR is a pathway for cardiologists to gain UK specialist registration by demonstrating equivalent competencies to UK-trained consultants.
Yes, but your evidence must reflect UK standards of cardiology practice.
Not mandatory for all roles, but strengthens your application.
Yes, echo competence is an important component.
Yes, audit and quality improvement are essential.
Yes, many applicants prepare their CESR portfolio outside the UK.