

Price: $399.99 for the base PANRE Review Course
Duration: 30 months of on-demand access
Deliverables: 100 Hours of AAPA Category 1 Self-Assessment CME and 1,672 board-style questions
Successfully passing the PANCE or PANRE requires more than just high-volume reading. The sheer volume of the NCCPA Blueprint can be overwhelming for any Physician Assistant or student. While many enroll in multiple pance prep courses, the most common mistake is passive consumption of material. To increase your scores immediately, you must move from passive reading to active, blueprint-focused retrieval.
The following "simple trick" is the highest-yield adjustment you can make to your study routine: The Missed-Question Blueprint Loop.
The Missed-Question Blueprint Loop
Most students take a practice test, check their score, and move on. This is a wasted opportunity. To improve your scores, you must treat every missed question as a diagnostic tool for your knowledge gaps based on the NCCPA Blueprint.
- Categorize Your Errors: Every time you miss a question in your PANRE Review Course, immediately identify which section of the NCCPA Blueprint it falls under (e.g., Cardiology, GI, or Pulmonary).
- The "One Fact" Rule: For every missed question, find the one clinical fact you lacked to get it right. Is it the first-line treatment for a PID? The specific EKG finding for a PE?
- Active Recall Re-testing: Instead of re-reading the whole chapter, test yourself specifically on that "One Fact" 24 hours later, then 72 hours later.
By focusing strictly on the topics the NCCPA emphasizes, you stop wasting time on "low-yield" trivia and start mastering the core competencies required for certification.


Applying the Blueprint to Clinical Scenarios
Practical application is the only way to solidify these concepts. Below are clinical vignettes designed to test your knowledge of high-yield NCCPA Blueprint topics. Use these to practice your active recall right now.
Practice Questions
Question 1
Your patient is a 54-year-old male with a history of HTN and tobacco use who presents to the emergency department with sudden-onset, "tearing" chest pain that radiates to his back. His vitals are: HR 110, BP 175/95 (left arm) and 150/80 (right arm), SaO2 96% on RA. A chest X-ray reveals a widened mediastinum. What is the most appropriate initial diagnostic study for a stable patient?
A. Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE)
B. CT angiography of the chest and abdomen
C. Aortic angiography
D. MRA of the chest
Question 2
Your patient is a 28-year-old female presenting with pelvic pain and vaginal discharge. On physical exam, there is significant cervical motion tenderness (Chandelier sign) and adnexal tenderness. Her temperature is 101.2°F. You suspect PID. According to current guidelines, what is the recommended outpatient antibiotic regimen?
A. Ceftriaxone 500mg IM + Doxycycline 100mg BID for 14 days + Metronidazole 500mg BID for 14 days
B. Ciprofloxacin 500mg BID for 10 days
C. Azithromycin 1g single dose
D. Penicillin G 2.4 million units IM
Question 3
Your patient is a 62-year-old male presenting with acute shortness of breath and pleuritic chest pain. He recently underwent a total hip arthroplasty. On exam, he is tachycardic (HR 115) and tachypneic. His SaO2 is 89% on RA. You suspect a pulmonary embolism (PE). What EKG finding, while not most common, is most classic for this condition?
A. Normal Sinus Rhythm
B. S1Q3T3 pattern
C. Right Bundle Branch Block
D. Diffuse ST-elevation


Explanations
Question 1: The correct answer is B. CT angiography of the chest and abdomen.
In a hemodynamically stable patient with suspected aortic dissection (suggested by "tearing" pain and asymmetric blood pressures), CT angiography is the gold standard for rapid and accurate diagnosis. It allows for the visualization of the intimal flap and the extent of the dissection. TEE (Choice A) is excellent for unstable patients or those with renal failure, but CT is preferred for initial mapping in stable cases. Aortic angiography (Choice C) was once the standard but has been largely replaced by non-invasive imaging.
Question 2: The correct answer is A. Ceftriaxone 500mg IM + Doxycycline 100mg BID for 14 days + Metronidazole 500mg BID for 14 days.
Current CDC guidelines for outpatient management of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) recommend a combination of Ceftriaxone for N. gonorrhoeae, Doxycycline for C. trachomatis, and Metronidazole to cover anaerobic organisms. Monotherapy with Ciprofloxacin (Choice B) is no longer recommended due to resistance. Azithromycin (Choice C) is insufficient for PID. Penicillin G (Choice D) is the treatment for syphilis, not PID.
Question 3: The correct answer is B. S1Q3T3 pattern.
While sinus tachycardia is the most common EKG finding in PE, the S1Q3T3 pattern (large S wave in lead I, Q wave in lead III, and inverted T wave in lead III) is the "classic" finding associated with acute right heart strain. Right Bundle Branch Block (Choice C) can occur but is less specific. Diffuse ST-elevation (Choice D) is more indicative of pericarditis.
Optimize Your CME Budget
Preparing for the PANCE or PANRE is a significant investment of time and resources. We offer an efficient way to use your CME money by providing high-quality content written by physician assistants for physician assistants.
Our PANRE Review Course provides 100 hours of AAPA Category 1 Credit. This is a critical distinction; when you log these 100 self-assessment credits with the NCCPA, they are automatically weighted at 150%, fulfilling a massive portion of your requirements in one step.
We also understand the value of professional incentives. Our CME with Amazon and Apple Gift Card add-ons allow you to bundle $100 to $1,500 into your purchase. This allows you to further enrich your education while maximizing your employer-provided CME allowance.


Comprehensive Review Materials
To truly excel, you need resources that mirror the actual exam environment. Our PANRE Review Course with Gift Card includes 17 hours of video lectures and over 1,600 questions.
If you are focusing specifically on prescriptive authority, our Pharmacology CME Review with Gift Card Package offers 12 hours of Category 1 credit. Please note that while our courses provide Category 1 credit for PAs, physicians may find value in these packages as Category 2 CME. Nurse practitioners should verify state-specific acceptance of AAPA credits.


Summary of the Simple Trick
To raise your scores today, stop reading and start testing. Use the NCCPA Blueprint as your map, and use our board-style questions to find your "unknown unknowns." By cycling through your missed questions and understanding the clinical reasoning behind the correct answers, you ensure that test day is just another day of practice.
For more resources, view the full NCCPA Blueprint Content Areas or browse our CME with Gift Card options.













