Monday 24 December 2012

2013 EACPT Geneva Congress Symposia: Inflammatory disease and biotherapeutics


Abstract submission is now open for the next EACPT Congress, to be held in Geneva 28-31 August 2013. The congress includes symposia, keynote lectures and peer-reviewed oral and poster communications
Symposium on Inflammatory disease and biotherapeutics
The development of biotherapeutics has considerably expanded during the last decade with the formidable improvement of biotechnological tools and better validation of targets. Inflammatory disorders represent indications of choice for the development of biotherapeutics. An intense competition is taking place currently to find new treatments for disorders against which the therapeutic armamentarium has remained limited for a long time. This session will focus on the latest therapeutic developments in the field of neurological and rheumatologic inflammatory disorders and discuss the promise but also the limitations of these new approaches.
2013 EACPT Congress
Over 900 participants are expected to attend including health professionals, scientists, policy makers, biotechnology and pharmaceutical professionals, and others with an interest in basic and clinical pharmacology, pharmacotherapy, drug discovery and development, regulatory affairs and related areas.
See here for more on key themes of the Congress.

EACPT Geneva 2013 Congress website  www.eacpt2013.org 

1 comment:

  1. Hi there! great stuff here, I'm glad that I drop by your page and found this very interesting. Thanks for posting about ocular inflammatory research. Hoping to read something like this in the future! Keep it up!
    Participating in a research study requires significant commitment on the participant’s behalf. Study visits may be lengthier, involve further testing not routinely prescribed, and require special concessions. For this, commercially-sponsored studies often offer compensation for time and trouble. Please consider this prior to evaluating whether or not you feel you or a loved one would be a viable candidate.

    ReplyDelete