MASTER the ABIM
Longitudinal Knowledge Assessment Confidently
with The Pass Machine Review Courses
On-Demand, Searchable Lectures
Evidence-based lectures taught by expert clinician-educators, searchable so you can find authoritative answers when you need them.
Blueprint-perfect QBanks
Our ABIM-aligned MCQs with detailed and referenced explanations will keep you up to date on the topics you’ll face each quarter.
CME Credits Included
Unlike textbooks and search tools, with The Pass Machine you get AMA PRA Category 1 CME Credits™ with every course.
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“The Longitudinal Knowledge Assessment is changing the way clinicians maintain their specialty certification. That’s why we created this page, to make the process clear and show you how our high-yield lectures and QBank work together to keep you prepared. You’ll find searchable, straightforward content so you can spend less time figuring out what to study and more time focused on patient care and lasting confidence.” – Jack Krasuski, Founder, The Pass Machine
Fix gaps fast and make LKA easy with review courses from The Pass Machine!
Blueprint-aligned, expert lectures along with searchable resources paired with your quarterly LKA feedback into turns an efficient study plan into better care for your patients.
The Pass Machine courses are available for the following LKA subspecialties
What is the ABIM® Longitudinal Knowledge Assessment (LKA)?
The LKA is a different kind of assessment, it’s a longitudinal signal, not a one-off exam. Use our searchable lectures and PDF quick-guides for fast answers during open-book sessions and rely on our QBank to keep your knowledge sharp between reports.
Watch the ABIM LKA platform tour video for details.
For more information, visit the ABIM LKA page here.
LKA vs Traditional MOC
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ Provided by American Board of Internal Medicine
Once the LKA launches in your specialty, you will be eligible to start.
- All board certified physicians, except those in a grace year, can start participating in the LKA in their assessment due year. As long as they are already certified, physicians will continue to be reported as “Certified” as long as they are meeting the Participation Requirement, and a decision on their performance is made in the 5th year. You won’t be able to start LKA before your assessment due year.
- Physicians who earned their certificate prior to 1990 can use the LKA to help them meet their MOC Participation Requirement. No physician with a lifetime certification will ever lose certification due to not meeting an assessment requirement.
- The LKA can be used to regain certification if it is available in your specialty; however, please note that because a decision on performance is not made until the end of the 5th year of participation, a physician will be reported as “Not Certified” until that time. Your status will only change at that time if you pass the LKA and are meeting all other MOC requirements. A physician whose certification has lapsed may use the traditional, 10-year MOC exam to restore certification more quickly.
- Any physician in their grace year is ineligible for the LKA and must pass the traditional, 10-year MOC exam by the end of their grace year to continue to be reported as “Certified.”
- Diplomates from co-sponsored ABMS Member Boards will be able to participate in the LKA if it is available in their specialty.
Enrollment for the 2025 LKA opened 12/1/24. Please note that since LKA questions are delivered on a quarterly basis, delaying enrollment may mean less time to answer questions, or that some questions expired at the end of the previous quarter. The absolute last day to enroll in the 2025 LKA is 6/30/25. If you’re a diplomate from a co-sponsored board, please contact your certifying board to confirm if LKA will be offered as an assessment option.
Physicians whose certification has lapsed can meet their assessment requirement by passing one traditional, 10-year MOC examination or by successfully participating in the Longitudinal Knowledge Assessment (LKA®) if it is available in your specialty. However, because a decision on performance is not made until the end of the 5th year of the LKA cycle, such physicians choosing the LKA cannot regain certification for at least 5 years. Your status will only change at that time if you pass the LKA and are meeting all other MOC requirements.
ACC Collaborative Maintenance Pathway will remain an option for those currently board certified in cardiovascular disease or a cardiology subspecialty to meet their assessment requirement. In addition to the Collaborative Maintenance Pathway, general cardiologists and cardiology subspecialists will be able to take the traditional, 10-year MOC exam in Cardiovascular Disease, Clinical Cardiac Electrophysiology, Interventional Cardiology and Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant Cardiology. Sign in to your personalized Physician Portal to view requirements, due dates and assessment options.
As an ABIM physician certified in Sleep Medicine, you have two LKA options:
- The general Sleep Medicine LKA
- The Sleep Medicine LKA: Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) Emphasis
- This option has a greater number of questions on OSA. It also includes additional questions on bruxism, snoring, GERD, and home sleep apnea testing. Overall, there is about a 70% overlap with the current general Sleep Medicine blueprint.
Learn more about how the Sleep Medicine LKA: OSA Emphasis works.
No. You will not be able to enroll in the LKA while your exam results are pending. Once the exam results have been released, if you happen to be unsuccessful and wish to switch to the LKA, you can do so as long as it is not beyond the June 30 LKA enrollment deadline. Exam results can take up to three months to be released. This means that the exam results could be pending beyond the aforementioned deadline, and you could not switch to the LKA. In this case, you would still have the opportunity to take the traditional, 10-year MOC exam or Collaborative Maintenance Pathway (CMP) in cardiovascular disease or a cardiology subspecialty.
As a longitudinal assessment, the LKA is designed to help you measure your medical knowledge over time. This means you’ll have the opportunity to change your approach and improve your performance during your 5-year cycle if you find you’re not performing at the level you expected. While the LKA is intended to be both a learning tool and an assessment focused on medical knowledge that a physician typically wouldn’t need to research extensively in day-to-day practice, you should still take it seriously and treat it like an assessment. Some physicians may find that their typical approach to keeping current with medical knowledge is effective and no additional studying is required. Others may want to use the feedback provided as part of the LKA to address knowledge gaps to ensure that their knowledge remains broad and current. This feedback includes the correct answer to the question, the rationale for the right and wrong answers, and references. In addition, your interim progress report (offered at the end of the first quarter of the second year of your LKA participation, and every quarter afterwards) will give you helpful information to re-adjust your approach and focus your studies as needed. You are encouraged to try the LKA and see what works best for you. And remember, because a pass/fail decision isn’t made until the end of 5 years, as long as you continue to meet the LKA Participation Requirement (open at least 500 out of 600 questions over 5 years) your certification status won’t be affected before then. Learn more about what happens at the end of your five-year cycle.
We know sometimes you’re needed elsewhere in your life, or that it’s simply not the best time for you to focus on LKA questions. That’s why the LKA Participation Requirement includes built-in flexibility to allow for life’s circumstances, such as short-term medical issues, vacations, weddings, funerals, or other events. Whatever the reason, we encourage you to take a break and not open questions when “life happens,” and come back when you’re ready.
As long as you open at least 500 out of the 600 questions offered over the course of your 5-year LKA cycle, you’ll have met the LKA Participation Requirement.
You’ll receive 30 questions at the start of each quarter, and can answer them any time before the end of that quarter. You’ll have five minutes per question, and can answer one at a time, in batches, or whatever works best for you.
At the end of each quarter:
- Questions you have opened will be scored.
- Questions you have not opened will count toward the maximum of 100 total questions you don’t have to open over 5 years.
Please note any unopened questions will not be scored and expire at the end of the quarter, meaning you can’t come back to them later.
When you need a break, simply don’t open the questions – up to 100 over your 5-year LKA cycle – because once you open a question, it will be scored even if you don’t answer it. And don’t worry, you’ll get notifications about how many questions you’ve opened and how many are remaining in your 5-year LKA cycle to help you stay on track.
If you don’t meet the LKA Participation Requirement ABIM will let you know, and you’ll be able to take the traditional, 10-year MOC exam to stay certified.
The LKA performance standard indicates the score you must meet at the end of your 5-year cycle to maintain your certification, also referred to as the Passing Score. Although you will receive formative feedback on how you are doing along the way, including how you are performing relative to the current Passing Score, a summative determination is made at the end of the 5th year. If your score meets or exceeds the Passing Score at the end of your 5-year cycle, you can continue with the LKA. Failure to meet the performance standard does not result in loss of certification, however, you must pass the traditional, 10-year MOC exam the following year to remain certified. In accordance with best practice in assessment, ABIM periodically consults with practicing physicians in your discipline to review and update the Passing Score. This allows ABIM to ensure that the passing scores reflect appropriate and current expectations for examinee performance in the discipline. As a result, the Passing Score shown on your quarterly progress report may change during the course of your 5-year cycle. When this occurs, ABIM will update the passing score on your progress report before the summative decision is made at the end of the 5-year cycle.
A summative, pass/fail decision is made at the end of your 5-year cycle.
If you pass:
- You can choose to continue the LKA, and would begin your next 5-year cycle the following year. You would continue to be reported as certified throughout that 5-year cycle as long as you are meeting any other MOC requirements.
- Or, you could choose to take the traditional, 10-year MOC exam the following year instead. You will be reported as certified during that year, and if you pass, your next assessment will be due in 10 years.
If you do not pass:
- You will enter the grace period, meaning you will have one year to take and pass the traditional, 10-year MOC exam. You will continue to be reported as certified during the grace period as long as you are meeting all other MOC requirements.
- If your certificate is not lapsed and has an expiration date on it, you will be issued a new printed certificate after successfully completing your first year of LKA participation so long as all other MOC requirements are up to date. Your new certificate will remain valid as long as you meet MOC requirements.
- If you
- earned your Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine certificate in 2010 or later;
- earned your initial certification in any other discipline in 2013 or later; or,
- completed MOC requirements (recertified) in 2014 or later;
your certificate is valid as long as you meet MOC requirements, and you will not be issued a new printed certificate.
- If you earned your certificate prior to 1990 you can request a printed certificate of appreciation after successfully completing your first year of LKA participation by emailing us at request@abim.org. As a reminder, if you were certified prior to 1990 your certificate is valid indefinitely.
You’ll receive 30 questions at the start of each quarter, and can answer them any time before the end of that quarter. You’ll have five minutes per question, and can answer one at a time, in batches, or whatever works best for you.
At the end of each quarter:
- Questions you have opened will be scored.
- Questions you have not opened will count toward the maximum of 100 total questions you don’t have to open over 5 years.
Please note any unopened questions will not be scored and expire at the end of the quarter, meaning you can’t come back to them later.
Over the course of 5 years, you’ll be offered 600 questions and must open at least 500 to meet the LKA Participation Requirement.
Questions are multiple choice, single best answer like those on the traditional, 10-year MOC exam. The number of questions is the same for all specialties.
Quarter | Opens | Closes |
---|---|---|
1 | 1/1 | 3/31 |
2 | 4/1 | 6/30 |
3 | 7/1 | 9/30 |
4 | 10/1 | 12/31 |
The intention of the LKA quarterly progress report is to offer physicians continuous feedback about their performance on the LKA as they progress through a 5-year cycle. There are four sections on the LKA quarterly progress report:
- Your Timeline:
- Shows the examinee what quarter the current progress report is covering.
- Your Performance:
- Displays the examinee’s current score including that quarter.
- Previous scores are also displayed.
- The current passing score is displayed to allow the examinee to examine where their current score is relative to the passing score used during that quarter.
- Group Performance:
- Displays a distribution of scores for all examinees who received a score for that quarter.
- Shows the examinee where their current score, the passing score, and the average score fall in the distribution.
- Recent Content Area Performance:
- Shows the examinee how many items they got correct and incorrect within each content area over the past year.
- Shows the examinee how many items they were confident or not confident about, for items they got correct and incorrect, within each content area over the past year.
For additional information, please watch the LKA quarterly progress report video.
Because the LKA and traditional, 10-year MOC exam are separate assessments whose scores are not comparable, it is best practice to report LKA scores on their own, separate score scale. Therefore, rather than report scores ranging from 200-800 like the traditional 10-year MOC exam, LKA scores are reported on a standardized score scale that ranges from 100-150, with a mean of 125 and standard deviation of 8 on the base form of the assessment.
Yes. ABIM will offer LKA accommodations in compliance with Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) for individuals with documented disabilities who demonstrate a need for accommodation. Given the format of the LKA, some common testing accommodations may not be available.
Physicians requesting special testing accommodations under the ADA should submit a completed request by the deadline. All required documentation to be approved for the assessment must be received by deadline in order for staff to review and set the appropriate accommodations.
All physicians should review the Disability Accommodations Request policy in its entirety to ensure that they understand their rights and obligations when requesting a testing accommodation.
Learn more about ABIM’s evaluation of accommodations requests.
Note: Accommodation requests will only be considered with appropriate documentation. After the deadline, requests with insufficient information, or that are incomplete for any reason, will not be processed and the physician may begin the LKA under normal conditions or withdraw their request.
To request a testing accommodation for the LKA, the request forms and supporting documentation must be submitted to accommodations@abim.org in writing one month prior to the enrollment deadline for the upcoming quarter.
Quarter | LKA Enrollment Deadline | Accommodations Request Deadline |
---|---|---|
1 | 3/31 | 2/28 |
2 | 6/30 | 5/31 |
If approved for additional testing time, the time will be added to the standard five minutes that physicians have to answer each question as well as the 30-minute time bank physicians may access each year, if more time is needed on a particular question.
The LKA is designed to work with most text-to-speech and screen magnification programs. You may also adjust the font size with your keyboard:
Operating System | Zoom In | Zoom Out |
---|---|---|
Windows | Ctrl+ | Ctl- |
MAC | Command+ | Command- |
For additional information, please contact accommodations@abim.org and our accommodations team will provide any assistance.
Also, some questions may contain multimedia that are better experienced on a device with a larger screen. If a question will contain multimedia, you’ll see an alert prompt before opening it that will advise you to use a laptop or desktop computer.
Minimum System Requirements (Through June 30, 2025 11:59 p.m. ET):
- Windows: Windows 10+ with Microsoft Edge, Chrome or Firefox. The latest version of Windows products can be downloaded from the Microsoft Download Center.
- Mac: Mac OS Mojave 10.14+ with Safari 13 or higher, Chrome or Firefox. The latest version of Mac products can be downloaded from the Mac Support site.
- Android: Android version 9.0 or higher.
- iOS: Version 13 or higher.
- iPadOS: Version 15 (on iPad 5th generations or newer, iPad Air 2 or newer, iPad Pro).
Minimum System Requirements (Effective July 1, 2025 12:00 a.m. ET):
- Windows: Windows 10+ with Microsoft Edge, Chrome or Firefox. The latest version of Windows products can be downloaded from the Microsoft Download Center.
- Mac: Mac OS Catalina 10.15.7 and Safari 15 or higher, Chrome or Firefox. The latest version of Mac products can be downloaded from the Mac Support site.
- Android: Android version 9.0 or higher.
- iOS: Version 16 or higher.
- iPadOS: Version 16 (on iPad 5th generation or newer, iPad Air 3 or newer, iPad Pro).