
Highlights from the ADVENT educational symposium at EADV 2024 where Professors Eric Simpson, Stephan Weidinger, and Marjolein de Bruin-Weller explored the local and systemic effects of type 2 inflammation in AD and potential benefits of early intervention with regard to disease modification.

Many AD treatment goals focus on clinical manifestations, so that if a patient is free of lesions, their disease is considered well controlled. However, the inflammatory process underlying AD reaches far beyond the skin, affecting patients in unique ways at different stages of their lives. Education on the importance of treating AD beyond the skin and altering the treatment approach to fit the individual patient will help improve clinical management and reduce long-term patient burden.

In this highlight video from the May 2024 ADVENT symposium at ESPD’s Annual Meeting in Košice, Slovakia, Dr. Eulàlia Baselga, Dr. Amy Paller, and Dr. Lisa Weibel share their views on what “early” means when discussing early intervention in AD.

Dr. Amy Paller emphasizes that early intervention in children can alter disease progression. Depending on the severity, this can be achieved with topical interventions or systemic therapies.

Dr. Amy Paller discusses the evolving concepts of early intervention and disease modification in AD and describes potential biomarkers of subclinical control at EADV 2025.
Join Drs. April Armstrong and Lisa Beck for a conversation around the long-term burden and effects of AD. They will discuss the underlying pathophysiology of AD and how early intervention and disease modification may impact disease course.

This video from the May 2024 ADVENT symposium at ESPD’s Annual Meeting in Košice, Slovakia features Dr. Amy Paller discussing the benefits of early intervention for children with AD and the potential for disease modification. Dr. Paller also reviews available data investigating the impacts of therapies for AD on the disease itself and on associated comorbidities.
Dr Jason Hawkes describes the importance of early intervention for patients with uncontrolled skin diseases and the effectiveness of evidence-based management strategies, sharing a patient case and his clinical insights with chronic spontaneous urticaria. Drs Eichenfield, Elmariah, and Culton join to review the burdens faced by patients with atopic dermatitis, prurigo nodularis, and bullous pemphigoid, respectively.

Join experts Drs. Amy Paller and Peter Lio at an educational symposium as they investigate atopic dermatitis as a risk factor for the development of food allergies. The speakers will also discuss the benefits of early intervention in pediatric atopic dermatitis and the potential for disease modification.

Dr. Paller presents highlights from recent clinical studies in AD, which highlight the potential benefits of early and effective AD treatment in modifying disease progression and mitigating atopic comorbidities.
Dr Lawrence Eichenfield explores the broadening of treatment goals for long-term disease control, highlighting the importance of this approach in atopic dermatitis. Drs Culton, Elmariah, and Hawkes expand the discussion to further examine specific management goals unique to each skin disease (bullous pemphigoid, prurigo nodularis, and chronic spontaneous urticaria).

This video presentation of the May 2024 ADVENT symposium at ESPD’s Annual Meeting in Košice, Slovakia features Dr. Eulàlia Baselga, Dr. Amy Paller, and Prof. Lisa Weibel. The faculty investigate the inflammatory processes driven by type 2 cytokines that lead to the local and systemic clinical effects of AD, the potential benefits of treating children with AD early in the disease course, and the emerging clinical and real-world data on the use of advanced systemic treatments for children with AD.