
In this soundbite video from the April 2025 ADVENT Forum in Lisbon, Portugal, Dr Brian Kim provides an overview of itch in type 2 inflammatory skin diseases and explains how the shared and unique mechanisms that drive inflammation and itch mediate each disease in distinct ways.
Prof. Salvatore Oliva and Dr. Milli Gupta discuss the evolution in understanding EoE and the impact of chronic, underlying type 2 inflammation.

In this soundbite video from the April 2025 ADVENT Forum in Lisbon, Portugal, Prof Oscar Palomares discusses how type 2 inflammation plays a critical role in a broad range of diseases across different organ systems.
Prof. Salvatore Oliva discusses the impact of chronic type 2 inflammation on EoE progression, highlighting the need for long-term management.

Join Dr. Jason Hawkes in discussing the burden of CSU and how type 2 inflammation contributes to the development of chronic wheals (hives) and angioedema
Experts from different specialties use a case-based discussion to understand type 2 inflammatory diseases from a nurse practitioner perspective.
Join ADVENT faculty members Len Bacharier, Antonella Cianferoni, and Andre Moreira for an educational symposium highlighting type 2 inflammation and its shared and distinct roles in multiple chronic pediatric diseases.

Watch this short video to learn how type 2 inflammation, skin barrier dysfunction, and neurosensitization contribute to chronic itch and the itch-scratch cycle in atopic dermatitis

Join Dr. Brian Kim in discussing the diagnosis of CPUO and the role of type 2 inflammation in disease pathophysiology.

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.

Learn about key drivers of type 2 inflammation in EoE and how they mediate progressive esophageal remodeling and impact patient burden

In this soundbite video from the April 2025 ADVENT Forum in Lisbon, Portugal, Prof. Oscar Palomares explains how type 2 immunity evolved to protect against parasites, venoms, and toxins, and how its dysregulation can result in aberrant type 2 inflammation underlying multiple chronic inflammatory diseases.