NEET PG result cancelled: The National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS) has annulled the NEET PG results of 22 candidates due to allegations of malpractice in exams conducted between 2021 and 2025. Among them, 13 candidates were from the NEET PG 2025 session.
The Board issued a warning stating that using the cancelled scorecards or results for any purpose, such as employment, admission, registration or enrolment in PG courses is illegal.
NBEMS denies responsibility for misused results
NBEMS clarified that it is not responsible for any jobs, admissions, or registrations obtained using the invalidated NEET PG results.
“NBEMS disclaims any responsibility or liability arising from employment, admission, or enrolment based on the NEET PG result cancelled herein above,” the official statement read.
Breakdown of cancelled candidates
Out of the 22 candidates whose results were annulled, 13 appeared in NEET PG 2025, three appeared in 2024, four appeared in 2023 and one each appeared in 2022 and 2021. The NBEMS Examination Ethics Committee made this decision after a thorough investigation into malpractice across multiple exam cycles.
Srusti Bommanahalli Rajanna was disqualified following the Karnataka High Court’s ruling on Writ Petition No. 5785/2025. The other 21 candidates were found guilty of using unfair means by the ethics committee.
NEET PG 2025: Participation and counselling delay
The NEET PG 2025 exam had over 2.42 lakh candidates, with 1,28,116 qualifying for MD, MS and PG Diploma programs. Although results have been announced, the counselling schedule is still pending.
Delays are due to ongoing legal cases, including petitions demanding the release of full question papers and answer keys, raising concerns about exam transparency.
Students raise data privacy concerns
Several students took to social media platforms like X, Telegram, and Reddit, questioning how private entities accessed their personal data to offer admissions outside the official process conducted by the Medical Counselling Committee (MCC) and NBEMS.