
Dr. Stella Lee explores the past, present and future implementation of guidelines into daily practice
This is the full presentation of the March 2025 ADVENT cross-dermatology symposium, hosted in Orlando, Florida, presenting the latest information around type 2 inflammation and its association with atopic dermatitis (AD), prurigo nodularis (PN), chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) and bullous pemphigoid (BP).

Dr. Palomares discusses how type 2 inflammation, an aberrant immune response, underlies skin diseases like atopic dermatitis, prurigo nodularis, and chronic spontaneous urticaria, linking to their clinical symptoms.

In this soundbite video from the April 2025 ADVENT Forum in Lisbon, Portugal, Prof. Oscar Palomares highlights how patients with type 2 inflammatory diseases often experience multimorbidities, with overlapping symptoms that amplify their overall disease burden and impact quality of life.
Join allergist Dr. Nicole Chase and dermatologist Dr. Jason Hawkes as they dispel common myths in the management of chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU). They offer practical, empathetic strategies to move beyond unnecessary diagnostics and delays, focusing instead on urgent treatment escalation and effective management to reduce the profound burden of uncontrolled CSU on patients.
Join Professor Joaquim Mullol for a discussion of the emerging concept of clinical remission in CRSwNP.

Prof. Peter Hellings discusses the interconnection between the pathophysiology, burden and clinical management of uncontrolled and/or severe CRSwNP

This video clip from the EAACI 2024 symposium highlights that a multidisciplinary approach is essential for the treatment of asthma.

Dr. Oscar Palomares explains that IL-4 and IL-13 are crucial cytokines in type 2 inflammation, playing both unique and overlapping roles, including T cell expansion and contributing to clinical symptoms in chronic diseases.

This video clip from the EAACI 2024 symposium discusses whether patients with CRSwNP should undergo a surgery.

In this video soundbite from the EAACI 2025 symposium, Dr. Brian Lipworth discusses that co-existing type 2 inflammatory diseases are common in patients with CRSwNP & increasing severity of asthma is associated with higher severity of CRS and prevalence of nasal polyps. Additionally, he explains that patient burden is substantially greater when asthma and CRSwNP are co-existing.