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.

In this soundbite video from the April 2025 ADVENT Forum in Lisbon, Portugal, Dr Amy Paller reviews the increased risk of atopic and nonatopic comorbidities associated with atopic dermatitis and discusses the potential of early intervention to mitigate their development.

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

This full video presentation of the April 2025 WCPD symposium features Dr Amy Paller, Dr Paula Luna, and Dr Eulàlia Baselga. The faculty present the latest data on the possibility of achieving disease modification in infants and children with atopic dermatitis.
Professors Bouaziz, Paller, and Irvine discuss the clinical burden of atopic dermatitis, the biomarkers of subclinical control, and evidence of potential disease modification in AD at EADV 2025.

In this video from the April 2025 WCPD symposium, Dr Eulàlia Baselga discusses how early intervention during infancy and childhood in patients with AD may reduce the progression of the atopic march. Dr Baselga goes on to review data showing how the reduction of biomarkers such as IgE and CCL17 may reduce inflammation and sensitization that contribute to atopic comorbidities.

Learn about the role of type 2 inflammation in the burden and pathophysiology of severe asthma in pediatric patients
Join leading experts for an educational symposium where they delve into the clinical consequences and real-world patient burden of type 2 inflammation in asthma and COPD.