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SUNDAY • MAY 15 29<br />

9:24 Integrated Approaches to Understanding Pulmonary Fibrosis<br />

D.A. Schwartz, MD, Aurora, CO<br />

9:48 What Gene Expression Networks Tell Us About the<br />

Mechanisms of Anti-Inflammatory Glucocorticoid Action<br />

R. Newton, PhD, Calgary, Canada<br />

10:12 DUSP1 and TTP Co-Operate to Regulate Cytokine Expression:<br />

Knowledge Gained from Experimental Models of Arthritis<br />

A.R. Clark, PhD, Birmingham, United Kingdom<br />

10:36 RNA-Protein Interactions on a Global Scale: Investigating<br />

mRNA-Binding Proteomes in Model Organisms<br />

A.P. Gerber, PhD, Guildford, United Kingdom<br />

This session and the International Conference are supported by an educational grant from<br />

Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.<br />

All CME sessions have been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential<br />

Areas and Policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME)<br />

and are free of the control of commercial interests.<br />

A6<br />

BASIC • CLINICAL • TRANSLATIONAL<br />

SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM<br />

CME Credits Available: 2.0<br />

JOINT ATS/ERS/JRS SYMPOSIUM ON SEVERE<br />

ASTHMA: A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE<br />

Assemblies on Allergy, Immunology and Inflammation; Clinical<br />

Problems; Environmental, Occupational and Population Health; Nursing;<br />

Pediatrics; Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology; Respiratory<br />

Structure and Function<br />

9:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. MOSCONE CENTER<br />

Room 2001/2003 (West Building, Level 2)<br />

Target Audience<br />

Providers of lung health and those taking care of patients with asthma.<br />

Objectives<br />

At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to:<br />

• review recent advances in the epidemiology and molecular basis of severe<br />

asthma;<br />

• understand the clinical and molecular heterogeneity of severe asthma;<br />

• highlight areas of needed research to reduce the impact of this disease on<br />

human health.<br />

This symposium proposal represents an international collaborative effort between<br />

members of the Japanese Respiratory Society, The European Respiratory Society,<br />

and the American Thoracic Society to foster interactions towards a precision<br />

medicine approach to severe asthma. Globally, severe asthma represents a subset<br />

of asthma accounting for approximately 5-10% of patients with asthma. However<br />

health care utilization for this subset has been estimated to be up to 40% of the<br />

economic burned of asthma. Recently there has been significant efforts to determine<br />

the underlying basis for this disease in terms of epidemiology, physiology,<br />

immunology, and genetics that influence this phenotype. Data are emerging that<br />

serve asthma consists of several endotypes. This phenotypic and now molecular<br />

classification may greatly aid in patient management with improved disease control,<br />

improved clinical outcomes and reduced medical costs. This symposium will<br />

highlight recent advances as well as highlight needed areas of research to advance<br />

treatment and prevention of this disease.<br />

Chairing: G.P. Downey, MD, Denver, CO<br />

K. Asano, MD, Kanagawa, Japan<br />

S. Hashimoto, MD, Tokyo, Japan<br />

B.D. Levy, MD, Boston, MA<br />

N.N. Jarjour, MD, Madison, WI<br />

9:00 Introduction and Overview of Severe Asthma<br />

B.D. Levy, MD, Boston, MA<br />

9:05 Severe Asthma: Lessons Learned from Global Studies<br />

K. Asano, MD, Kanagawa, Japan<br />

9:22 Severe Asthma in the Pediatric Population<br />

S.J. Szefler, MD, Aurora, CO<br />

9:39 Pathogenesis of Severe Asthma: A Clue from the Common<br />

Genes Underlying Asthma and COPD<br />

N. Hizawa, MD, Tsukuba, Japan<br />

9:56 Serum Periostin: A Key Marker to Dissect the Pathophysiology<br />

of Type 2-Predominant Asthma<br />

H. Matsumoto, MD, PhD, Kyoto, Japan<br />

10:14 Current Therapies for Severe Asthma in 2016<br />

M. Kraft, MD, Tucson, AZ<br />

Parker B. Francis Speaker<br />

10:32 Severe Asthma Phenotype/Endotype Guided Therapy<br />

P.J. Sterk, MD, PhD, Amsterdam, Netherlands<br />

10:50 Summary of Symposium and Panel Discussion<br />

N.N. Jarjour, MD, Madison, WI<br />

This session and the International Conference are supported by an educational grant from<br />

AstraZeneca LP.<br />

All CME sessions have been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential<br />

Areas and Policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME)<br />

and are free of the control of commercial interests.<br />

A7<br />

BASIC • CLINICAL • TRANSLATIONAL<br />

SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM<br />

CME Credits Available: 2.0<br />

ATS MYTHBUSTER: REVERSING FIBROSIS IN THE<br />

LUNGS IS BIOLOGICAL MISSION (IM)POSSIBLE<br />

Assemblies on Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology; Allergy,<br />

Immunology and Inflammation; Clinical Problems; Respiratory Structure<br />

and Function<br />

9:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. MOSCONE CENTER<br />

Room 2016/2018 (West Building, Level 2)<br />

Target Audience<br />

Basic, translational, clinical researchers, and clinicians interested in fibrotic<br />

lung diseases, including IPF, connective tissue disease-ILD, chronic<br />

hypersensitivity pneumonitis and sarcoidosis.<br />

Objectives<br />

At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to:<br />

• understand both the overall potential, and the current barriers, to reverse<br />

established fibrosis in patients with fibrotic lung diseases;<br />

• understand how effector fibroblasts and extracellular matrix could be targeted to<br />

induce the regression of established fibrosis;<br />

SUNDAY MORNING<br />

ATS 2016 • San Francisco

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