Amsterdam 2015 ERS International Congress Programme Education and Scientific sessions organised by ERS Valid as per 11 June 2015 (note that all faculty are not confirmed yet) Saturday 26 September 2015 Educational skills workshop: EW1 Inhaler techniques - train the trainer Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room L001 (Amtrium) Session 08:00-10:20 Aims: To provide participants with the knowledge, skills and tools needed to demonstrate the use of inhalation devices and to coach and teach patients effectively. <br>Workstation 1: Overview of different types of models and how they function.</br> <br>Workstation 2: This workstation will provide the participants with the necessary skills and knowledge to guide and train a patient to successfully use an inhaler.</br> <br>Workstation 3: An overview will be given of how inhalers perform in real life scenarios. Patient's preferences and views on which inhalers are most practical to use will be discussed.</br> <br>Workstation 4: This workstation will teach participants how to successfully administer medication and how to avoid commons mistakes.</br> Tracks: Physiology Target audience: Nurses, technologists, clinicians, fellows, physiologists and pharmacists. Registration for this workshop is additional to the congress registration fee and is €85 or €65 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Daniel Schuermans (Brussels, Belgium) Introduction Workstation 1: Inhalation devices Eric Derom (Gent, Belgium) Workstation 2: How to train a patient Job van der Palen (Enschede, Netherlands) Workstation 3: Inhaler techniques Marit Leine (Røyse, Norway) Workstation 4: Medication Frans H.C. de Jongh (Enschede, Netherlands) Educational skills workshop: EW2 Research bronchoscopies Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room L002 (Amtrium) Session 08:00-10:20 Aims: Bronchoscopy is widely used for sampling biological material used for research tools. This workshop will provide practical skills for clinical and research purposes. Previous experience in this field is not required to attend. <br>Workstation 1: The indications and procedures useful to start up a protocol involving research bronchoscopies will be identified. Selection of individuals (patients and control subjects) informed consent, safety procedures, technical issue in obtaining bronchoscopic samples such as bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and bronchial biopsies will be illustrated.</br> <br>Workstation 2: The steps of the BAL processing will be discussed, from the collection to the preparation of cytological smears, and to the preparation of further analysis of cells and solutes contained in BAL.</br> <br>Workstation 3: The steps of bronchial tissue collection and preparation, the processing procedures for tissue fixation, tissue embedding, tissue blocks inclusion, cutting and staining will be demonstrated. Immunohistochemical applications and evaluation of tissue immunostaining will be presented and discussed. </br> <br>Workstation 4: Participants will be briefed on the different cytological and histological patterns obtained from bronchoscopic samples. A practical approach on how to categorise samples, to quantify inflammatory cells and biomarkers and how to use the results for clinical and research purposes will be illustrated.</br> Target audience: Allergologists, allied health professionals, clinicians, fellows, immunologists, junior members, nurses, paediatricians, pathologists, patients, pharmaceutical industry representatives, pulmonologists, researchers, residents, respiratory physicians, scientists, students and thoracic endoscopists. Registration for this workshop is additional to the congress registration fee and is €85 or €65 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Guy F Joos (Gent, Belgium) Introduction Workstation 1: How to perform research bronchoscopy Fabio L. M. Ricciardolo (Orbassano (Turin), Italy) Workstation 2: How to process bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) Pascal Chanez (Marseille, France) Workstation 3: Preparation and processing of bronchial biopsies Antonino Di Stefano (Veruno, Italy) Workstation 4: Microscopical examination of BAL and bronchial biopsies Thais Mauad (Sao Paulo, Brazil) Postgraduate course: PG1 Spirometry – train the trainer HERMES Spirometry training programme Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room G104-105 (Europe Foyer) Session 09:00-17:15 Aims: To provide participants with the knowledge and tools to teach high quality spirometry and to provide the necessary training for those who would like to train and certify participants for the European Spirometry Driving Licence Part 1 and Part 2 within Europe. Tracks: Physiology Target audience: All those interested in learning how to train others in spirometry, including pulmonologists, respiratory therapists, respiratory physicians, general practitioners, nurses, and lung function technologists/scientists. The ERS Spirometry train-the-trainer programme is also aimed at those who would like to become directors or instructors of the European Spirometry Driving License training. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €180 or €150 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Irene Steenbruggen (Zwolle, Netherlands), Brendan Cooper (Birmingham, United Kingdom) 09:00 Welcome and introduction to the course Odile Van Eck (Waalre, Netherlands) 09:40 Overview of the European Spirometry Driving License training programmes Brendan Cooper (Birmingham, United Kingdom), Irene Steenbruggen (Zwolle, Netherlands) 10:10 Principles of teaching and learning Walther N. K. A. van Mook (Maastricht, Netherlands) 10:50 Break 11:10 European Spirometry Driving Licence specific teaching and training Julie Lloyd (Birmingham, United Kingdom) 11:40 Practical session on presentation and facilitation skills Vera Habes (Ultrecht, Netherlands), Odile Van Eck (Waalre, Netherlands) 12:10 Presentation from participants 12:50 Lunch 13:50 Providing effective feedback Walther N. K. A. van Mook (Maastricht, Netherlands) 14:30 Discussion and feedback practical session Vera Habes (Ultrecht, Netherlands), Odile Van Eck (Waalre, Netherlands) 15:10 Break 15:40 Principles of assessment Walther N. K. A. van Mook (Maastricht, Netherlands) 16:10 Assessment of the European Spirometry Driving Licence programme Julie Lloyd (Birmingham, United Kingdom) 16:50 Organising a European spirometry training programme Felip Burgos Rincon (Barcelona, Spain) 17:05 Evaluation Session: China Day "Advances in pulmonology" I Advances in airway disease diagnosis and management Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room Forum (Forum) Session 09:00-13:00 Aims: Session organised in collaboration with the Chinese Thoracic Society. Leading specialists from China will share the stage with ERS leadership to discuss key issues in respiratory medicine, providing the opportunity to hear about the latest scientific developments in Chinese. This meeting is designed to update respiratory professionals on the latest developments in the respiratory field. Headsets and translated slides will be used to provide translations of the full session. There will be opportunities for questions and discussion after the presentations. There will be simultaneous translation from English to Mandarin and slides will be shown with Chinese script. Target audience: The session is aimed at specialists in respiratory medicine from China. Chairs: Elisabeth H.D. Bel (Amsterdam, Netherlands), Chen Wang (Beijing, China) 09:00 Tobacco control: the most feasible and challenging way for disease prevention in China Chen Wang (Beijing, China) 09:30 Asthma-COPD overlap syndrome? Elisabeth H.D. Bel (Amsterdam, Netherlands) 10:00 Small airway disorders in COPD Nanshan Zhong (Guangzhou, China) 10:30 Coffee break 11:00 COPD and comorbidity: common pathways of accelerated ageing Peter J. Barnes (London, United Kingdom) 11:30 Asthma in China: current and future challenges Huahao Shen (Shanghai, China) 12:00 Advances in COPD management Jørgen Vestbo (Manchester, United Kingdom) 12:30 COPD community-based prevention and management Speaker to be confirmed 13:00 Lunch Postgraduate course: PG4 Multidisciplinary approach to noninvasive ventilation (NIV) Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room 5.2 (Hall 5) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: To indicate the NIV treatment options in various clinical settings. These treatments will be discussed in the context of the perspectives of the clinical subspecialists and nurses who are involved in treating patients with NIV. Tracks: Intensive care Sleep Paediatric Target audience: Adult and paediatric pulmonologists, somnologists, respiratory care specialists, adult and paediatric intensive care specialists, nurses, respiratory therapists, fellows, and residents. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Paolo Navalesi (Vercelli, Italy), Cesare Gregoretti (Turin, Italy) 09:30 Sleep studies for assessing abnormal events during NIV Jesus Gonzalez (Montlignon, France) 10:15 NIV in the ICU: when to start and when to end Stefano Nava (Bologna, Italy) 11:00 Break 11:30 NIV in the paediatric patient with acute respiratory insufficiency Paola Papoff (Rome, Italy) 12:15 The importance of staff training in NIV Alanna Hare (London, United Kingdom) Postgraduate course: PG5 Treatment of emphysema Pharmacological and non-pharmacological options for hyperinflated lungs Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room D203-204 (Elicium) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: Hyperinflation and emphysema are COPD phenotypes that require special attention. The available treatment modalities will be presented and the possible algorithms will be discussed. Target audience: Pulmonologists, thoracic surgeons, respiratory therapists, respiratory physicians, clinical researchers, radiologists, fellows, and residents. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Pallav L Shah (London, United Kingdom), Lowie Vanfleteren (Horn, Netherlands) 09:30 The burden of emphysema Klaus Friedrich Rabe (Grosshansdorf, Germany) 10:15 Hyperinflation and exercise – how to implement physical activity Thierry Troosters (Leuven, Belgium) 11:00 Break 11:30 Single, double, or triple inhalers: the value of the drugs Peter M.A. Calverley (Liverpool, United Kingdom) 12:15 Toys or tools – the role of interventional procedures Felix J.F. Herth (Heidelberg, Germany) Postgraduate course: PG6 Cell-matrix dynamics in lung injury and repair Focusing on epithelial cells, immune cells, and interstitial cells Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room G109 (Europe Foyer) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: To review the cell-matrix interactions that occur in response to chronic injury and during repair and lung tissues remodelling, with a specific focus on the interactions that involve epithelial, immune and interstitial cells. These interactions play crucial roles in the outcome of different types of lung tissue injuries. Target audience: Pulmonologists, respiratory physicians, respiratory therapists, clinical and basic researchers, thoracic surgeons, pulmonary oncologists, radiologists, pathologists, and trainees. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Silke Meiners (Munich, Germany), Christian M. Kaehler (Innsbruck, Austria) 09:30 Introduction Silke Meiners (Munich, Germany), Christian M. Kaehler (Innsbruck, Austria) 09:35 Role of epithelial cells Melanie Koenigshoff (Munich, Germany) 10:15 Role of immune cells Joanna Domagala-Kulawik (Warsaw, Poland) 10:55 Break 11:30 Role of fibroblasts Martin Kolb (Hamilton, Canada) 12:10 Role of the matrix Eric White (Ann Arbor, United States of America) 12:50 A global viewpoint Silke Meiners (Munich, Germany), Christian M. Kaehler (Innsbruck, Austria) Postgraduate course: PG7 Basic respiratory mechanics Models, measurements, and uses in clinical practice Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room E104-106 (E Area) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: The mechanics of breathing is best described in terms of airways resistance and lung compliance. However, these measurements are not readily available in clinical practice and instead clinicians must focus on the indirect information available from spirometry. The great advantage of spirometry is its known immediate reproducibility and limited between-test variation in both healthy and diseased settings. These properties, coupled with its extensive use in clinical decision making, ensure that spirometry will be used to manage respiratory disease for the foreseeable future. One particular advantage of spirometry is the availability of age- and height-related normal values against which any recording can be judged. This PG course on basic respiratory mechanics will help clinicians to better understand and interpret lung function test results. Tracks: Physiology Target audience: Pulmonologists, respiratory therapists, respiratory physicians, clinical researchers, general practitioners, research fellows, nurses, and trainees. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Michael Polkey (London, United Kingdom), Samuel Verges (Grenoble, France) 09:30 Modelling respiratory mechanics: a multi-scale approach Jason H.T. Bates (Burlington, United States of America) 10:15 Measuring respiratory mechanics: invasive and noninvasive systems Andrea Aliverti (Milan, Italy) 11:00 Break 11:30 Using respiratory mechanics to explain and interpret spirometry John Gibson (Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom) 12:15 Using respiratory mechanics to study exercise limitation in disease Lee Romer (Uxbridge, United Kingdom) Postgraduate course: PG8 Airway and lung fibrosis How epigenetic changes affect fibroblasts and novel therapeutic approaches Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room E103 (E Area) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: To describe the key challenges and features of lung fibrosis; to discuss how epigenetic changes such as miRNAs can affect fibroblast development and function; to compare the progress made in understanding lung fibrosis to the advances made in elucidating the role of fibrosis in liver disease; and to demonstrate how these advances in science will lead to the development of novel therapeutic approaches. Target audience: Pulmonologists, emergency medicine doctors, respiratory physicians, clinical researchers, general practitioners, research fellows, basic scientists, intensivists, nurses, pathologists, and trainees. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Bruno Balbi (Veruno, Italy), Charles Pilette (Brussels, Belgium) 09:30 Pulmonary fibrosis: key features and challenges Elisabetta Renzoni (London, United Kingdom) 10:15 MicroRNAs in the pathogenesis of pulmonary fibrosis Ivana V. Yang (Denver, United States of America) 11:00 Break 11:30 Resolution of liver fibrosis John Iredale (Edinburgh, United Kingdom) 12:15 Future clinical perspectives Oliver Eickelberg (Munich, Germany) Postgraduate course: PG9 Lower respiratory tract infection in children Evaluation and management Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room E102 (E Area) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: To show how to diagnose and manage common and uncommon lower respiratory tract infections in children. Tracks: Paediatric Infection Target audience: Pulmonologists, respiratory therapists, respiratory physicians, clinical researchers, research fellows, and intensivists. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Jonathan Grigg (London, United Kingdom), Ernst Eber (Graz, Austria) 09:30 Evaluation of the child with recurrent chest infections Mark Everard (Perth, Australia) 10:15 Management and prevention of non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis Alexander Möller (Zurich, Switzerland) 11:00 Break 11:30 Acute bronchiolitis – prevention, diagnosis, and new approaches to management Fabio Midulla (Rome, Italy) 12:15 Uncommon lower respiratory infections in childhood Vas Novelli (London, United Kingdom) Postgraduate course: PG10 Malignant pleural effusion management From standard cytopathology to molecular biology Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room 13.2 (Hall 13) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: To understand the new roles that molecular biology and histo-/cytopathology play in the diagnosis and management (treatment and prognosis) of malignant pleural effusions, and how to use these techniques (processing and data interpretation) in clinical practice. Tracks: Oncology Target audience: Trainees, pulmonary physicians, thoracic surgeons, pathologists, molecular biologists, and scientists. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Philippe Astoul (Marseille, France), Marcin Skrzypski (Sopot, Poland) 09:30 Which material in which disease? Sebastian Fernandez Bussy (Santiago, Chile) 10:15 How to send your material to pathology Philipp A. Schnabel (Homburg/Saar, Germany) 11:00 Break 11:30 Interpretation of the results in the clinic Arnaud Scherpereel (Lille, France) 12:15 Atypical mesothelial hyperplasia and other pitfalls in MPE diagnosis Françoise Galateau-Salle (Caen, France) Postgraduate course: PG11 Emerging infectious diseases and pandemic planning PREPARE FP7 EU-funded project Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room D201-202 (Elicium) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: To provide participants with an essential up-to-the minute guide to handling emerging pandemic threats; to describe the key lessons that should be learnt from the Ebola and influenza epidemics; to detail the role of antivirals; and to provide an update regarding current trials in pandemic management. Tracks: Infection Target audience: Respiratory physicians, intensivists, microbiologists, allied health professionals, scientists, primary care and public health teams, and PREPARE EU project team members. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €120 or €90 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Anita Simonds (London, United Kingdom), Stefano Aliberti (Milan, Italy) 09:30 Emerging pathogens: what's new, what's next? speaker to be confirmed 10:15 Ebola: challenges for public health – what have we learnt? Marion Koopmans (Rotterdam, Netherlands) 11:00 Break 11:30 Preventing the next influenza pandemic Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus (Rotterdam, Netherlands) 12:15 Antiviral therapy – the evidence base and clinical trials speaker to be confirmed Postgraduate course: PG2 Asthma and COPD Updates in assessment and treatment Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room 5.1 (Hall 5) Session 09:30-17:30 Aims: To discuss the problems associated with obstructive lung diseases on the basis of experience and the published literature. Target audience: Paediatric and adult pulmonologists, epidemiologists, health professionals, public health physicians, and scientists interested in the aetiology and prevention of lung disease. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €180 or €150 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Ian Douglas Pavord (Oxford, United Kingdom), Marielle Pijnenburg (Rotterdam, Netherlands) 09:30 The burden of obstructive lung diseases Anne Lindberg (Boden, Sweden) 10:15 Monitoring asthma – state-of-the-art physiological, imaging, and biomarker assessments Omar Usmani (London, United Kingdom) 11:00 Break 11:30 Monitoring COPD – state-of-the-art physiological, imaging, and biomarker assessments Roland Buhl (Mainz, Germany) 12:15 Asthma exacerbations in children: the paediatrician’s view Bart Rottier (Groningen, Netherlands) 13:00 Lunch 14:00 Asthma phenotypes Sally Wenzel (Pittsburgh, United States of America) 14:45 COPD phenotypes Christopher E. Brightling (Leicester, United Kingdom) 15:30 Break 16:00 Exacerbations of obstructive lung disease Norbert Krug (Hannover, Germany) 16:45 The future: treating specific endotypes Peter J. Barnes (London, United Kingdom) Postgraduate course: PG3 Cardiorespiratory monitoring in critically ill patients Physiological principles of monitoring. Linked to the educational skills workshops EW7, EW9 and EW11. Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room G106-107 (Europe Foyer) Session 09:30-17:30 Aims: To analyse the fundamental concepts of monitoring, such as accuracy, precision, signal-to-noise ratio, and possible sources of error; to promote understanding of the underlying physiological principles of each monitoring system; and to apply these concepts to clinical situations in simulated scenarios. Tracks: Intensive care Target audience: Consultant physicians in the pulmonary, critical care and anaesthesiology fields, residents in training, medical students, nurses, and respiratory therapists. Registration for this course is additional to the congress registration fee and is €180 or €150 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Antonio Artigas (Sabadell (Barcelona), Spain), David A. Kaufman (Charlottesville, United States of America) 09:30 Introduction to monitoring Amal Jubran (Hines, United States of America) 10:05 Monitoring gas exchange David A. Kaufman (Charlottesville, United States of America) 10:40 Respiratory mechanics 1: physiological bases of monitoring airway pressures during mechanical ventilation Laurent Brochard (Toronto, Canada) 11:15 Break 11:45 Respiratory mechanics 2: oesophageal manometry and interactions between the patient and the ventilator Paolo Pelosi (Milan, Italy) 12:20 Patient-ventilator asynchrony: diagnosis and treatment Lluís Blanch (Sabadell, Spain) 12:55 Lunch 13:55 Monitoring during non-invasive positive pressure ventilation Raffaele Scala (Arezzo, Italy) 14:30 Physiological basis of monitoring with central venous and pulmonary artery catheters and their clinical use Antonio Artigas (Sabadell (Barcelona), Spain) 15:05 Cardiopulmonary interactions: functional haemodynamic monitoring Jean-Louis Teboul (Le Kremlin-Bicêtre, France) 15:40 Break 16:10 Cardiovascular monitoring during resuscitation: between physiology and pragmatism Daniel De Backer (Braine-l'Alleud, Belgium) 16:45 How to use monitoring data to make wise clinical decisions Martin J. Tobin (Hines, United States of America) Session: Primary Care Programme Management of COPD and other respiratory conditions in clinical practice Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room 4.1 (Hall 4) Session 09:30-13:00 Aims: To provide the latest insights into and evidence for the diagnosis and management of respiratory symptoms and diseases in the primary care setting. Target audience: Clinicians, GPs, family physicians, pulmonary specialists, allied respiratory professionals, and respiratory patient representatives. Chairs: Bjorn Stallberg (Uppsala, Sweden), Persijn Honkoop (Leiden, Netherlands), Hilary Pinnock (Edinburgh, United Kingdom), Janwillem Kocks (Groningen, Netherlands) 09:30 Breathlessness: the patient's experience Dominique Hamerlijnck (Amsterdam, Netherlands) 09:45 Breathlessness: respiratory, cardiac, or something else? Jaime Correia de Sousa (Porto, Portugal) 10:15 Breathlessness: a physiotherapist's approach to management Margareta Emtner (Uppsala, Sweden) 10:45 Wheezing infants: a practical primary care approach? Fernando D. Martinez (Tucson, United States of America) 11:15 Break 11:30 Coughing children: what is normal and when to worry Iain Small (Peterhead, United Kingdom) 12:00 Chronic cough in adults: causes and management Alyn Hugh Morice (Cottingham, United Kingdom) 12:30 Wheeze and obstructive symptoms in adults: asthma or COPD or asthma/COPD overlap syndrome? Niels Chavannes (Leiden, Netherlands) Session: Russia Day: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in adults Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room 13.1 (Hall 13) Session 09:30-11:15 Aims: Session organised in collaboration with the Russian Respiratory Society. The aims of the sessions are to discuss the epidemiology, diagnosis, and management of lung diseases in adults and children. This session will be translated into Russian. Target audience: Pulmonologists, GPs, paediatricians, and laboratory diagnostics specialists. Chairs: Alexander Sinopalnikov (Moscow, Russian Federation), Tobias Welte (Hannover, Germany) 09:30 Epidemiology of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) Antoni Torres Marti (Barcelona, Spain) 10:00 CAP management algorithm Alexander G. Chuchalin (Moscow, Russian Federation) 10:30 Panel discussion 11:00 Coffee break Educational skills workshop: EW3 Inhaler techniques - train the trainer Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room L001 (Amtrium) Session 10:40-13:00 Aims: To provide participants with the knowledge, skills and tools needed to demonstrate the use of inhalation devices and to coach and teach patients effectively. <br>Workstation 1: Overview of different types of models and how they function.</br> <br>Workstation 2: This workstation will provide the participants with the necessary skills and knowledge to guide and train a patient to successfully use an inhaler.</br> <br>Workstation 3: An overview will be given of how inhalers perform in real life scenarios. Patient's preferences and views on which inhalers are most practical to use will be discussed.</br> <br>Workstation 4: This workstation will teach participants how to successfully administer medication and how to avoid commons mistakes.</br> Tracks: Physiology Target audience: Nurses, technologists, clinicians, fellows, physiologists and pharmacists. Registration for this workshop is additional to the congress registration fee and is €85 or €65 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Marit Leine (Røyse, Norway) Introduction Workstation 1: Inhalation devices Daniel Schuermans (Brussels, Belgium) Workstation 2: How to train a patient Georgia Narsavage (Morgantown, United States of America) Workstation 3: Inhaler techniques Titia Klemmeier-Boekhout (Bedum, Netherlands) Workstation 4: Medication Mike Thomas (Southampton, United Kingdom) Educational skills workshop: EW4 Research bronchoscopies Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room L002 (Amtrium) Session 10:40-13:00 Aims: Bronchoscopy is widely used for sampling biological material used for research tools. This workshop will provide practical skills for clinical and research purposes. Previous experience in this field is not required to attend. <br>Workstation 1: The indications and procedures useful to start up a protocol involving research bronchoscopies will be identified. Selection of individuals (patients and control subjects) informed consent, safety procedures, technical issue in obtaining bronchoscopic samples such as bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and bronchial biopsies will be illustrated.</br> <br>Workstation 2: The steps of the BAL processing will be discussed, from the collection to the preparation of cytological smears, and to the preparation of further analysis of cells and solutes contained in BAL.</br> <br>Workstation 3: The steps of bronchial tissue collection and preparation, the processing procedures for tissue fixation, tissue embedding, tissue blocks inclusion, cutting and staining will be demonstrated. Immunohistochemical applications and evaluation of tissue immunostaining will be presented and discussed. </br> <br>Workstation 4: Participants will be briefed on the different cytological and histological patterns obtained from bronchoscopic samples. A practical approach on how to categorise samples, to quantify inflammatory cells and biomarkers and how to use the results for clinical and research purposes will be illustrated.</br> Target audience: Allergologists, allied health professionals, clinicians, fellows, immunologists, junior members, nurses, paediatricians, pathologists, patients, pharmaceutical industry representatives, pulmonologists, researchers, residents, respiratory physicians, scientists, students and thoracic endoscopists. Registration for this workshop is additional to the congress registration fee and is €85 or €65 for the early bird registration. Chairs: Guy F Joos (Gent, Belgium) Introduction Workstation 1: How to perform research bronchoscopy Adam Barczyk (Katowice, Poland) Workstation 2: How to process bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) Rene Lutter (Amsterdam, Netherlands) Workstation 3: Preparation and processing of bronchial biopsies Susan Jane Wilson (Southampton, United Kingdom) Workstation 4: Microscopical examination of BAL and bronchial biopsies Jon Ward (Southampton, United Kingdom) Session: Russia Day: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room 13.1 (Hall 13) Session 11:15-12:45 Aims: Session organised in collaboration with the Russian Respiratory Society. The aims of this session are to discuss the epidemiology, diagnosis, and management of lung diseases in children. This session will be translated from English to Russian. Target audience: Pulmonologists, GPs, paediatricians, and laboratory diagnostics specialists. Chairs: Liudmila Kozlova (Smolensk, Russian Federation), Matti Korppi (Tampere, Finland) 11:15 Scientific and practical program “CAP in children” (clinical recommendations for Russia and CIS countries) Natalya Geppe (Moscow, Russian Federation) 11:45 Pneumonia and smoking in children (TITLE TO BE CONFIRMED) Elif Dagli (Istanbul, Turkey) 12:15 Panel discussion 12:45 Lunch break HERMES examination: Adult and Paediatric respiratory medicine examinations Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Session 12:00-17:30 Aims: The HERMES Examinations are in line with the ERS commitment to achieving the highest possible standards of practice in respiratory medicine and harmonising training across Europe. This examination will be a knowledge-based examination with multiple choice questions (MCQ) in English. A European Diploma in Adult or Paediatric Respiratory Medicine will be conferred from the ERS Educational Activities Department upon successful completion of this examination in the Diploma Category. The examination can also be taken as a self-assessment or in-training assessment. Register now via MyERS The blueprint for this examination will be based on the European syllabus. This examination is held annually under the authority of the European Respiratory Society. Chairs: Konrad E. Bloch (Zurich, Switzerland), Robert Dinwiddie (London, United Kingdom) Session: Fellows' Get-Together Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015 Room G102-103 (Europe Foyer) Session 13:00-17:30 Aims: MISSING Target audience: MISSING Chairs: Maria Gabriela Belvisi (London, United Kingdom), Stephen T. Holgate (Southampton, United Kingdom) Session: Russia Day: COPD, asthma, and infection Date: Saturday, 26 September, 2015
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