
In this soundbite video from the April 2025 ADVENT Forum in Lisbon, Portugal, Prof. Amy Paller reviews a Japanese study showing that early proactive treatment of infant atopic dermatitis with topical corticosteroids reduced the incidence of food allergy but was also associated with decreased gains in height and weight.

Dr. Eric Simpson discusses the differing goals of patients and physicians in treating atopic dermatitis and emphasizes the importance of patient input.

In this video from the April 2025 WCPD symposium, Dr Paula Luna discusses the multidimensional disease burden in pediatric patients with AD and the data regarding how early intervention may lead to long-term disease control and a reduced risk of developing non-atopic comorbidities.

Review a patient case to learn more about identifying uncontrolled asthma and type 2 inflammation in pediatric patients

Join Christine Bangert, Mark Boguniewicz and Perla Lansang for an educational symposium on atopic dermatitis (AD) in children, exploring the diagnosis and pathophysiology of AD in children, the life-long effects of uncontrolled disease beyond the skin, and current and emerging therapies.

In this video clip from the EAACI 2024 symposium, Dr. Mullol discusses the challenge of defining active nasal disease using an endoscope.

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.

This video of the October 2024 ADVENT symposium at EAPS in Vienna, Austria features Drs Christine Bangert, Mark Boguniewicz, and Perla Lansang as they discuss the inflammatory processes driven by type 2 cytokines that lead to AD and atopic comorbidities, the multidimensional and cumulative disease burden associated with AD and its comorbidities, and the current and emerging treatment options for children with AD uncontrolled with topical therapy
Join ADVENT at the Digestive Disease Week 2024 Congress and visit the Sanofi and Regeneron Medical Booth # 1707.

This infographic highlights how uncontrolled moderate‑to‑severe atopic dermatitis (AD) can lead to Cumulative Life Course Impairment (CLCI) by contributing to ongoing physical, psychological, and social burdens such as itch and sleep loss, impaired bone growth and mental health challenges. It emphasizes the importance of early and effective disease control to help reduce long‑term impact on patients.

Watch as Drs. Michihiro Hide, Marta Ferrrer, and Ana M. Giménez-Arnau discuss chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) and highlight the unmet needs, importance of disease control, and emerging therapies.
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).