Pathology Email List | 63,395 Verified Contacts | SparkDBi
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A pathology email list is a verified database of anatomic pathologists, clinical pathologists, cytopathologists, forensic pathologists, and pathology support staff, built from conference and CME partnerships, state and national medical associations, healthcare publication networks, and B2B2C matching and verification programs. SparkDBI maintains 63,395 verified US pathology contacts across 19 roles and subspecialties.
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SparkDBI's pathology email list covers 63,395 verified providers, spanning the physicians who diagnose disease from tissue and fluid samples and the technicians and directors who run the laboratories behind them. Records are sourced from conference and CME partnerships, state licensing boards, healthcare publication networks, and B2B2C matching and verification programs, then validated through email, phone, and address checks before delivery. The dataset refreshes monthly.
Pathology is one of the most subspecialized fields in medicine, with distinct board certifications for anatomic pathology, clinical pathology, forensic pathology, neuropathology, and molecular genetic pathology, among others. A diagnostics company launching a new molecular assay needs a very different contact list than a legal services firm needing forensic pathology expert witnesses, and this dataset's granular role tagging supports both.
Who Uses a Pathology Email List
In vitro diagnostics and molecular testing companies are the primary buyers, reaching anatomic and clinical pathologists directly for new assay adoption, since pathologists are the physicians who order, validate, and interpret most advanced diagnostic testing.
Laboratory equipment and digital pathology companies use this data for imaging platform and lab automation sales, targeting pathology directors and department heads who hold purchasing authority for capital equipment.
Legal and forensic services firms use the forensic pathologist segment specifically for expert witness recruitment and medical-legal consulting relationships, a use case unique to this specialty among SparkDBi's healthcare datasets.
Hospital and reference laboratory recruiters use pathology contact data given ongoing shortages in several pathology subspecialties, particularly neuropathology and molecular genetic pathology.
Roles and Subspecialty Breakdown
The pathology database spans 19 roles across physicians, healthcare professionals, and technologists. The complete breakdown:
| Role / Subspecialty | Provider Type | Verified Contacts |
|---|---|---|
| Pathology | Physician | 17,521 |
| Anatomic Pathologist & Clinical Pathologist | Physician | 6,303 |
| Anatomic Pathologist | Physician | 2,083 |
| Microbiologist | Healthcare Professional | 1,170 |
| Histologist | Technologists/Technicians | 1,930 |
| Blood Banking & Transfusion Medicine | Technologists/Technicians | 1,285 |
| Clinical Pathologist/Laboratory Medicine | Physician | 993 |
| Cytopathologist | Physician | 919 |
| Medical Microbiologist | Physician | 832 |
| Clinical Pathologist | Physician | 617 |
| Blood Bank Director | Healthcare Professional | 642 |
| Neuropathologist | Physician | 397 |
| Pathology Technician | Technologists/Technicians | 373 |
| Clinical Laboratory Director, Non-physician | Healthcare Professional | 292 |
| Forensic Pathologist | Physician | 208 |
| Molecular Genetic Pathologist | Physician | 75 |
| Pediatrics - Pathologist | Physician | 98 |
| Immunopathologist | Physician | 39 |
| Chemical Pathologist | Physician | 31 |
Need anatomic, clinical, or forensic pathologists specifically?
Every role above can be pulled as a standalone list with your target geography.
How This Data Is Sourced and Verified
SparkDBi builds the pathology database from conference and CME partnerships with pathology education providers, member directories maintained by national pathology and laboratory medicine associations, subscriber data from pathology trade publications, and B2B2C data matching and verification partnerships.
CMS and NPPES records are used only as a secondary cross-reference, not as the primary data source. Pathology's granular subspecialty taxonomy in NPPES is inconsistently self-reported, so SparkDBi cross-checks against association membership and hospital department directories to confirm each provider's actual practicing subspecialty.
Every contact is validated through email inbox verification, confirming a live, accepting mailbox at the receiving mail server without sending a test message, along with phone validation and physical address confirmation. Records that fail validation are removed and re-checked in the following month's refresh.
The pathology list achieves a 95.2% verified email rate, reflecting the specialty's concentration in hospital and academic laboratory settings with consistent institutional directories.
Why Subspecialty Precision Matters in Pathology
Unlike specialties where subspecialization is a career-stage nuance, pathology subspecialties represent genuinely different practice areas with little overlap. A neuropathologist and a forensic pathologist rarely share a referral network or purchasing decision. SparkDBi maintains granular role tags specifically so campaigns don't get diluted by irrelevant subspecialty overlap.
NPI Taxonomy Codes for Pathology
NPPES assigns distinct taxonomy codes across pathology subspecialties, reflecting the field's high degree of formal subspecialization. Reference codes used in our system:
| Taxonomy Code | Role Classification |
|---|---|
| 207ZP0102X | Pathology, Anatomic Pathology & Clinical Pathology |
| 207ZP0101X | Pathology, Anatomic Pathology |
These taxonomy codes were verified against live NPPES registry records at time of publication and should be re-checked against the official NUCC taxonomy list before use in compliance-sensitive workflows.
Practice Setting Breakdown
Pathology practice is concentrated in hospital-based laboratories, academic medical centers, and large independent reference laboratories. Forensic pathologists are the notable exception, working primarily in medical examiner and coroner offices rather than clinical laboratory settings.
SparkDBi tags each record with practice setting where determinable, letting you separate hospital-based, reference-lab, and medical-examiner-affiliated contacts for campaigns where that distinction changes messaging or purchasing authority.
Geographic and International Coverage
Coverage spans all 50 states and Washington DC, with contact density following the distribution of major hospital systems and reference laboratory operations, concentrated in California, Texas, New York, and Florida.
For international campaigns, SparkDBi can supply supplementary pathology contact data for the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia as a purchase alongside the core US dataset, sourced from each market's national pathology registries.
Email Deliverability Considerations
Hospital and academic laboratory email systems are typically centralized and IT-managed, producing consistent deliverability behavior across most of this specialty. Reference laboratory contacts, often at larger commercial lab operators, generally follow similar institutional filtering patterns.
SparkDBi recommends standard commercial sending practices for this specialty, with attention to authentication settings for large institutional and reference-lab domains.
Data Enrichment and Email Append for Pathology
If you hold an existing pathology contact list, SparkDBi offers enrichment services including:
- NPI number verification and appending for physician records
- Subspecialty verification against board certification records
- Hospital and laboratory affiliation matching
- Practice address verification and standardization
- Direct email address appending to name-only records
Match rates for pathology enrichment average 73% against our database. Unmatched records are flagged clearly so you know where manual research is needed.
Available Data Fields
Compliance and Data Licensing
The SparkDBi pathology email list contains professional contact data only. No patient data, diagnostic results, or Protected Health Information is included at any level. Data sourcing is HIPAA-aligned, and a Business Associate Agreement is available on request. All data is provided for B2B marketing, recruitment, or research purposes under legitimate interest provisions consistent with CAN-SPAM requirements.
Frequently Asked Questions
A pathology email list is a verified database of anatomic pathologists, clinical pathologists, cytopathologists, forensic pathologists, and pathology support staff, built from conference and CME partnerships, state and national medical associations, healthcare publication networks, and B2B2C matching and verification programs.
Pathology (general) is the largest single segment with 17,521 verified contacts, followed by Anatomic Pathologist & Clinical Pathologist at 6,303 contacts.
Yes. Forensic Pathologist (208 contacts) is tracked as a distinct segment, useful for buyers in medical examiner offices, legal, or forensic toxicology markets.
Clinical Pathologist/Laboratory Medicine physicians (993 contacts) appear in both this dataset and the Laboratory Medicine specialty page. Broader laboratory operations roles like phlebotomists and lab technicians are tracked separately under Laboratory Medicine.
Yes. SparkDBi provides 50 verified pathology sample records for your target role and geography before any commercial commitment, so you can evaluate quality and format fit before purchasing.
Monthly. Providers who relocate, change practice affiliation, or produce email delivery failures are identified and updated in the following month's verification cycle.
Yes. The list contains professional contact information for licensed providers sourced from public registries and professional directories. No patient data or Protected Health Information is included. Sourcing is HIPAA-aligned and CAN-SPAM compliant.
Anatomic pathologists, clinical pathologists, cytopathologists, forensic pathologists, chemical pathologists, immunopathologists, neuropathologists, medical microbiologists, molecular genetic pathologists, blood bank directors, histologists, and pathology technicians.