Official Programme - 13th Congress of the European Society of
Transcription
Official Programme - 13th Congress of the European Society of
Official Programme 1 Contents 2 Welcome 4-5 Committees 6-7 General Information 8-9 Congress Venue 10-11 Wednesday 14 September 12-19 Welcome Reception 20-21 Thursday 15 September 22-41 Friday 16 September 42-59 Congress Dinner 60-61 Saturday 17 September 62-75 Posters 76-85 Satellite Symposia 86-91 Sponsors & Exhibitors 92-93 Exhibition Plan 94-95 Map of Manchester 99 3 Greetings from the ESCD President I wish you all a special welcome to the 13th ESCD Congress in Manchester. This is our second Congress in England. After the first ESCD Congress was held in Brussels, London was chosen as the venue for the third Congress and named after Jadassohn. The scientific committee has succeded in organizing a most exciting programme including Breakfast sessions, Plenary lectures, Focus sessions, Free communications, and a poster exhibition covering most aspects of cutaneous allergy, contact dermatitis, and occupational dermatology. Interestingly, two related societies, EAACI and the ICDRG have also been invited to organize sessions. Before the main ESCD Congress, the Prosser White Centenary Symposium takes place focusing on occupational dermatology. This topic seems most appropriate in Manchester with its heritage of being the world’s first great industrial city. After the main ESCD Congress, an Educational session has also been arranged, following in the tradition of past events. Hopefully, your visit to Manchester will also allow you to experience the city and its beautiful surroundings. Manchester is one of the world’s football capitals hosting both City and United teams. The Whirley museum combining both old and modern architecture is well worth a visit. There are many buildings and museums in Manchester and its surrounding areas reflecting on its industrial heritage, with the textile, steel industry and coal mining industry all represented. A favourite of mine originates from this heritage - the Yorkshire Sculpture Park in Wakefield. We owe our thanks to Dr. Mark Wilkinson and his team for all the hard work that they have put into preparing the 13th Congress. I am sure that Manchester 2016 will continue the tradition of past ESCD Congresses and be a great success. I hope you all enjoy the experience! A Warm Welcome to the Congress We’re delighted that you’ve decided to join us for the 13th Congress of the European Society of Contact Dermatitis and to welcome you to Manchester. I hope that the meeting fulfils your expectations and you have the opportunity to interact with colleagues from around the globe in a relaxed and friendly environment. The program commences with a presymposium on occupational skin disease organised in conjunction with the Centre for Occupational and Environmental Health, Manchester University on 14th September 2016. The session has been named after a local physician, Dr Prosser-White, who was one of the pioneers of the development of occupational skin disease. The day has been organised to appeal to all with an interest in occupational skin disease from dermatology and occupational health. The meeting program from 15-17th September has been themed with the first day (Thursday) focussing on occupational aspects for those wishing to attend following the presymposium. The main program reflects areas of current scientific and clinical interest on all aspects of contact dermatitis and allergic skin disease. The second day (Friday) has a focus on allergy to appeal to allergists with an interest in immediate hypersensitivity reactions. The Congress finishes with a course on the Saturday designed for those new to the field. The Manchester Central Conference Centre is situated at the heart of Manchester with easy access by air, rail and road. Whilst in the city don’t miss out on the opportunity to see the local sights. The welcome reception will take place at the Museum of Science of Industry and the Congress Banquet will be held at the cathedral. In addition to the other museums and galleries in Manchester those prepared to travel further afield may be interested in the short train ride to Liverpool and the Albert Dock which houses the Beatles and Tate museums or to the Roman town of Chester with its walled city and medieval buildings. We look forward to meeting you all through the Congress. Magnus Bruze ESCD President 4 Mark Wilkinson Conference Organising Committee ESCD Manchester 2016, UK 5 Committee Scientific Advisory Board President Magnus Bruze (Sweden) Secretary David Orton (UK) Kristiina Aalto-Korte (Finland) Ian Kimber (UK) Tove Agner (Denmark) Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin (France) President Elect Wolfgang Uter (Germany) Treasurer Thomas Diepgen (Germany) Klaus Andersen (Denmark) Christopher Lovell (UK) Mike Ardern-Jones (UK) Laura Malinauskiene (Lithuania) Past President Margarida Goncalo (Portugal) Legal Representative Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin (France) John Bourke (Ireland) Stefan Martin (Germany) Magnus Bruze (Sweden) Andreas Natsch (Switzerland) Pieter-Jan Coenraads (Netherlands) Rosemary Nixon (Australia) Razvigor Darlenski (Bulgaria) Evy Paulsen (Denmark) Peter Elsner (Germany) Pailin Puangpet (Thailand) John English (UK) Axel Schnuch (Germany) Carsten Flohr (UK) Peter Friedmann (UK) Marie-Louise Schuttelaar (Netherlands) Congress President Mark Wilkinson (UK) Local Organising Committee Mike Beck (UK) Scientific Committee David Basketter (UK) David Gawkrodger (UK) Jacob Thyssen (Denmark) Johannes Geier (Germany) Wolfgang Uter (Germany) David Orton (UK) Deirdre Buckley (UK) Ana Gimenez-Arnau (Spain) Sarah Wakelin (UK) Jason Williams (UK) John McFadden (UK) An Goossens (Belgium) Erin Warshaw (USA) Cathy Green (UK) Ian White (UK) Curt Hamann (USA) Jonathan White (UK) Jeanne Duus Johansen (Denmark) Kathryn Zug (USA) Education Course Coordinator Graham Johnston (UK) 6 Sven Malte John (Germany) 7 General Info Venue The Congress will take place at Manchester Central, the award-winning centre in the heart of the city. A truly distinctive and flexible venue, Manchester Central’s historic architecture and state-of-the-art facilities provide the perfect backdrop for some of the world’s leading events. Location Manchester City Centre, UK. Venue website manchestercentral.co.uk Postal Address Manchester Central Convention Complex Ltd. Petersfield M2 3GX UK Accommodation CME Visit Manchester is the official accommodation provider for ESCD 2016. To book accommodation for this event, please use the following link: https://resweb.passkey.com/ go/ESCD2016 For all accommodation enquiries please call the Accommodation Booking Team on: 0161 238 4563 / 4514 or email: abs@visitmanchester.com The congress will be accredited for European CME credits (ECMEC) by the European Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (EACCME). 21 European CME credits. Event code: 14243. Certificates will be issued after the Congress. UK Doctors should note that the Congress has applied for RCP accreditation for 24 credits (code 106340). Badges Conference badges will be handed to delegates on registration. For security purposes name badges must be worn at all times throughout the meeting. In the event that you lose your badge, a replacement must be obtained at the registration desk immediately. Please note: Exhibiting companies that scan your badge will recieve your contact postal address. Banking Professional Conference Organiser Conference & Event Services British Association of Dermatologists 4 Fitzroy Square London W1T 5HQ Tel: +44 (0)20 7391 6343 Fax: +44 (0)20 7388 0487 Email: conference@bad.org.uk Web: www.bad.org.uk/events 8 ATM facilities are available in the Central Foyer. Business Services Manchester Central has a dedicated Business Centre at the concierge desk in the Central Foyer. Catering First Aid Please visit the concierge desk and they will be able to direct you. Parking There is an NCP (National Car Park) directly below Manchester Central that is open 24 hours a day. It has 720 spaces including 18 disabled parking bays and there is direct access to Manchester Central by lift, stairs and escalators. Taxis There is a dedicated taxi rank at the front of the venue for pick-ups and drop offs. Wi-Fi The free Wi-Fi network can be accessed in any part of Manchester, via an easy to use, quick, log-in page. Lunch and all scheduled refreshment breaks will be served from designated points in the exhibition area, Exchange Hall of Manchester Central. 9 Venue Plan Site plan Site plan Key TOILETS Key ORGANISERS’ OFFICE FIRST AID TOILETS ORGANISERS’ ESCALATORS OFFICE FIRST AID LIFT ESCALATORS CONCIERGE LIFT CLOAKROOM CONCIERGE BABY CHANGE CLOAKROOM BABY CHANGE 10 11 Wed 14 Sept Wed 14 Sept Wednesday Overview Wednesday 14th September Wednesday 14th September -‐ Overview Room & Time 08:00 -‐ 09:00 9:00 -‐ 10.00 Exchange Auditorium 10.00 -‐ 11:00 12:00 -‐ 13:00 11:00 -‐ 12:00 13:00 -‐ 14:00 14:00 -‐ 15:00 15:00 -‐ 16:00 16:00 -‐ 17:00 10:30 -‐ 12:40 13:40 -‐ 15:00 15:30 -‐ 17:00 The Prosser White Centenary Symposium The Prosser White Centenary Symposium The Prosser White Centenary Symposium 05:00 -‐ 11:30 11:30 -‐ 12:00 12:00 - 12:30 12:40 -‐ 13:40 13:40 -‐ 15:00 15:00 -‐ 15:30 15:30 -‐ 17:00 EXHIBITION BUILD DISPLAY POSTERS EXHIBITION LUNCH BREAK Exhibition & Posters BREAK Exhibition & Posters Exchange Hall Speaker Preview Room Exchange 1 08:00 -‐ 10:00 Exchange 4 & 5 Exchange 6 & 7 12 ESCD Executive Committee 09:00 -‐ 12:00 15:00 -‐ 17:00 Ibero-‐Latinoamerican Programme (open to all registered delegates) IDVK Programme (open to all registered delegates) 13 The Prosser White Centenary Symposium - Occupational Dermatoses: Past, Present and Future Chairs Session 2 Richard Heron, Rosemary Nixon 13:40 – 14:00 European Union legislation: medicolegal implications – Diana Kloss (Manchester, UK) 14:00 – 14:20 What’s happening at the coal face: the Occupational Dermatology Clinic – Rosemary Nixon (Melbourne, Australia) 14:20 – 14:40 Solving protective glove problems – Curt Hamann (Phoenix, USA) 14.40 - 15.00 “Trust me I’m a doctor? “- Risk communication with patients and employers and duty of care – Richard Heron (London, UK) 15:00 – 15:30 Break Chairs Session 3 Jason Williams, Dil Sen 15:30 – 15:50 Special features and challenges of occupational dermatoses North America – Denis Sasseville (Montreal, Canada) 15:50 – 16:10 Risk assessment in the workplace – Chris Packham (Westbury - on - Severn, UK) 16:10 – 16:30 Preventive interventions and rehabilitation for workers with dermatitis – Swen Malte John (Osnabrück, Germany) 16:30 – 16:50 Breaking news in occupational dermatoses – Kristiina AaltoKorte (Helsinki, Finland) 16:50 – 17:00 Closing remarks Exchange Auditorium 10:30 – 17:00 14 Chairs Session 1 Raymond Agius, Mike Beck 10:30 – 10:40 Welcome 10:40 – 11:00 Manchester’s industrial heritage: the setting for Robert Prosser White’s classic Occupational Dermatoses of the Skin – Mike Beck (Manchester, UK) 11:00 – 11:20 Surveillance of occupational skin disease in the U.K. – Raymond Agius (Manchester, UK) 11:20 – 11:40 U.K. standards of care for occupational contact dermatitis and occupational contact urticaria – John English (Nottingham, UK) 11:40 – 12:00 Update on occupational dermatitis from biocides – Jeanne Duus Johansen (Copenhagen, Denmark) 12:00 – 12:20 Occupational skin cancer due to ultraviolet radiation – Thomas Diepgen (Heidelberg, Germany) 12:20 – 12:40 Utilizing specific challenge facilities in the investigation of skin allergy and anaphylaxis – Jennie Hoyle (Manchester, UK) 12:40 – 13:40 Lunch Wed 14 Sept Wed 14 Sept Prosser White Programme 15 09:24 - 09:30 Allergic Contact Dermatitis from ultraviolet-curable nail lacquer. – Gatica Ortega M.E, Pastor-Nieto M.A; SánchezMoya A.I; Schoendörff C. Dermatology Department. Virgen de La Salud Hospital, Toledo. Spain and Dermatology Department. University Hospital of Guadalajara Spain. 09:30 - 09:36 Patch testing in ocular allergies – Alé I. Uruguay 09:36 - 10:00 Discussion 2nd Session Epidemiology Chair Dra. Iris Alé (Uruguay) Co-Chairs Dra. Virginia Fernández Redondo (Spain), Dra. Elena Gimenez Arnau (France) 10:00 - 10:06 Sensitization to the most used corticosteroids in Spain: a 1-year prospective study. – Mercader P (1); Silvestre J. F (2) on behalf of GEIDAC. Department of Dermatology. Hospital Morales Meseguer Murcia (1), and Hospital General Universitario de Alicante (2). Spain Exchange Room 6 / 7 09:00 – 12:00 Chairs Dra. Alicia Cannavó (Argentina), Dra. Ana Gimenez-Arnau (España) Dra. Margarida Gonçalo (Portugal) Introduction Dra. Alicia Cannavó, Dermatology Department Hospital de Clínicas José de San Martín. Buenos Aires University Argentina 1st Session Clinical Cases Chair Dr. Juan Francisco Silvestre (España) Co-Chairs Dra. Graciela Guzmán Perera (México), Dr. Juan Pedro Russo (Argentine) 09:00 – 09:06 Positive Patch Test to Metamizole in non-immediate drug eruptions – André Pinho, Luis Santiago, Miguel Gouveia, Margarida Gonçalo. Portugal 10:06 - 10:12 09:06 – 09:12 Photoallergic contact dermatitis to sunscreens – Russo JP (1); Cannavó A.(2) Dermtology Department (1) Hospital San Martín La Plata (2) Hospital de Clínicas José de San Martín. Buenos Aires. Argentina Sensitization to individual fragrances: a 5-year multicenter prospective study in Spain. – Silvestre J.F on behalf of GEIDAC. Department of Dermatology. Hospital General Universitario de Alicante. Spain 10:12 - 10:18 Incidence of sensitizaton to methylisothiazolinone in Argentine – Russo JP, Cannavó AB, La Forgia MP, Kvitko E, Infante ML, Fortunato L, Bravo G. Research Contact Dermatitis Group. Argentine Society of Dermatology. 10:18 - 10:24 Latin American standard series: two years of experience – Guzmán-Perera M.G. México 10:24 - 10:30 Limonene and Linalool Hydorperoxides in Spain, a mulitcenter prospective study. – Gimenez-Arnau A.M (1); García Bravo B (2). Servicio de Dermatología (1) Hospital del Mar. Barcelona y (2) Hospital Virgen de la Macarena. Sevilla en representación del GEIDAC. Spain 09:12 - 09:18 09:18 - 09:24 16 Erythema multiforme-like Allergic Contact Dermatitis from Vitamin K. – Pastor–Nieto M.A; Gatica Ortega M.E; Melgar-Molero V; Gonzalez P; Mollejo M; De Eusebio E. Dermatology Department. University Hospital of Guadalajara. Spain. Virgen de La Salud Hospital, Toledo. Spain Cutaneous reaction by garment: unusual clinical presentation. – Pousa-Martinez M; Rodriguez-Rodriguez M; VazquezVeiga H; Fernandez Redondo V. Servicio de Dermatología. Complejo Hospitalario Universitario. Santiago de Compostela. España. Wed 14 Sept Wed 14 Sept Latinoamerican Programme 17 10:36 - 11:00 Discussion 3rd Session Occupational Dermatology & Clinical Cases Chair Dra. Ida Duarte (Brasil) Co-Chairs Marcos Hervella Garcés ( Spain), Dra. Raquel Silva (Portugal) Chair Axel Schnuch, Vera Mahler 11:00 - 11:06 The metals allergy in patients with allergic contact dermatitis during the period of 2003-2015. – Duarte I; Mendonça R; Korkes K; Lazzarini R; Figueiredo M. Brasil 15:00 – 15:15 Concerto grosso: The orchestra of cells and mediators in contact dermatitis – Stefan Martin, Freiburg 15:15 – 15:30 11:06 - 11:12 Methylisothiazolinone. Current situation in Latin America Vs European legislation. – Nardelli,A; Russo J.P; Consigli C. Canada - Argentine Smoking kills…and more: New insights on tobacco smoking and hand dermatitis – Sonja Molin, Munich 15:30 – 15:45 Show me your feet, show me your shoes: News on contact dermatitis of the feet – Richard Brans, Osnabruck 15:45 – 16:00 The evil sisters? -Prurigo nodularis and Contact dermatitis – Elke Weisshaar, Heidelberg 16:00 – 16:15 Promiscuity of preservatives: Work-related contact allergy against preservatives – Andrea Bauer, Dresden 16:15 – 16:30 Made in Germany: Nickel release from tools - revisited – Vera Mahler, Erlangen 16:30 – 16:45 Test-retest reliability reloaded: A study of the strip patch test versus the conventional patch test in eczema patients – Heinrich Dickel, Bochum 16:45 – 17:00 Patch test – a double-edged sword: patch test sensitization updated – Axel Schnuch, Gottingen 11:18 - 11:24 11:24 - 11:30 Differences between sexes for work-related Contact Dermatitis in Argentina: a 4-year retrospective clinica data from Buenos Aires and La Plata. – Cannavó A: Russo J.P; La Forgia M; Kvitko E; Infante L; Alfonso JH.(2) Argentine Society of Dermatology (2) National Institute of Occupational Health, Norway Non classical mechanisms in skin sensitization: the case of hydroperoxides derived from autoxidation of terpenes. – Kuresepi S, Vileno B, Lepoittevin JP, Giménez-Arnau E*. France Occupational Contact Dermatitis in a University Hospital: a 1-year retrospective clinica data from Argentina. – Cannavó A; Allevato M.A; Dahbar M; Sehtman A. Dermatology Department. Hospital de Clínicas José de San Martín”. Buenos Aires University. Argentine 11:30 - 11:45 Discussion 11:45 - 12:00 Tribute to Professor An Goossens Wed 14 Sept Wed 14 Sept Allergic contact dermatitis to methylisotiazolinone and fragances in cosmetics and cleaning supplies. Prevalence and incidence of these in two dermatologic centres. – Nardelli A; Russo J.P; Consigli C. Canada - Argentine 11:12 - 11:18 18 IDVK Programme 10:30 - 10:36 New data and insights from the German Contact Dermatitis Society (DKG) and Information Network of Departments of Dermatology (IVDK) Exchange Auditorium 6 / 7 15:00 – 17:00 19 Wed 14 Sept Wed 14 Sept Welcome Reception Museum of Science & Industry 18:30 – 21:00 The ESCD2016 welcomes all delegates to Manchester with an entertaining evening within the MOSI, please join us for drinks and canapés. The Museum of Science and Industry (MOSI) in Manchester, England, is a large museum devoted to the development of science, technology and industry with emphasis on the city’s achievements in these fields. The museum is part of the Science Museum Group, a non-departmental public body of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, having merged with the National Science Museum in 2012. There are extensive displays on the theme of transport (cars, aircraft, railway locomotives and rolling stock), power (water, electricity, steam and gas engines), Manchester’s sewerage and sanitation, textiles, communications and computing. The museum is an Anchor Point of the European Route of Industrial Heritage; and is situated on the site of the world’s first railway station – Manchester Liverpool Road – which opened as part of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in September 1830. The train station frontage and 1830 warehouse are both Grade I listed. Delegates are asked to make their own way to the Museum, it is a short walk from the Congress venue. Please refer to the map within this programme or ask at the registration desk for directions. The address is: Museum of Science and Industry Liverpool Road Manchester M3 4FP 20 21 Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept Thursday Overview Thursday 15th September Thursday 15th September -‐ Overview Room & Time 07:40 08:00 -‐ 09:00 Exchange Auditorium Exchange Hall 9:00 -‐ 10.00 10.00 -‐ 11:00 Exchange 10 22 13:00 -‐ 14:00 14:00 -‐ 15:00 15:00 -‐ 16:00 16:00 -‐ 17:00 17:00 -‐ 18:00 18:15 08:45 -‐ 10:10 11:00 -‐ 12:25 13:30 -‐ 14:55 17:00 -‐ 18:15 Focus Session: Occupational Dermatitis Plenary: Prostheses and metals Focus Session: Gloves / Rubber 08:30 -‐ 10:15 10:15 -‐ 11:00 11:00 -‐ 12:30 12:30 -‐ 13:30 13:30 -‐ 15:00 15:00 -‐ 15:30 15:30 -‐ 17:00 Exhibition & Posters BREAK Exhibition & Posters LUNCH BREAK Exhibition & Posters BREAK Exhibition & Posters 07:40 -‐ 08:40 Breakfast session 2: Top tips for the CHE patient 10:15 -‐ 11:00 Gold Symposium Stiefel, a GSK company 15:30 -‐ 16:55 Special Session: Basic Science, Toxicology and patch testing 12:30 -‐ 13:30 Platinum Symposium DEB Speaker Preview Room 07:40 -‐ 08:40 11:00 -‐ 12:25 15:00 -‐ 16:50 Breakfast session 3: Q & A on workplace visits Free Communications 2 -‐ Clinical Free Communications 4 -‐ Clinical 12:30 -‐ 13:30 10:30 -‐ 11:00 Contact Dermatitis Journal editorial Exchange 8 Exchange 9 12:00 -‐ 13:00 Plenary: Preservatives and cosmetic allergens Exchange 1 Exchange 4 & 5 11:00 -‐ 12:00 ESCD Council 07:40 -‐ 08:40 10:15 -‐ 11:00 13:30 -‐ 14:55 15:30 -‐ 16:55 Breakfast session 1: Q & A on the Chemistry of ACD Gold Symposium RIFM Focus Session: Healthcare Workers Focus Session: Acrylates / Resins 08:45 -‐ 10:10 11:00 -‐ 12:25 13:30 -‐ 14:50 17:00 -‐ 18:15 Free Communications 1 – Occupational Focus Session: Plants Free Communications 3 -‐ Non-‐ Clinical Grand Rounds 1 23 Top Tips for the CHE Patient Breakfast Session 1 Breakfast Session 2 Exchange 9 Exchange Hall 07:40 – 08:40 07:40 – 08:40 Chair Prof Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin (Strasbourg, France) Chair Prof Tove Agner Copenhagen, Denmark) 07:40 – 08:05 The chemistry of allergic contact dermatitis: Current hot topics – Prof Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin (Strasbourg, France) 07:40 – 07:55 Chronic hand eczema: the CARPE registry – Dr Elke Weisshaar (Heidelberg, Germany) 08:05 – 08:40 Q&A 07:55 – 08:10 Hand eczema and life style factors – Dr Kim Clemmensen (Copenhagen, Denmark) 08:10 – 08:25 Chronic Hand Eczema and its relation to eczema on the feet – Dr Richard Brans (Osnabrück, Germany) 08:25 – 08:40 Diagnosing latex allergy, is there a problem? – Prof Charlotte Mortz (Odense, Denmark) Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept 24 Q & A on the Chemistry of ACD 25 Breakfast Session 3 Preservatives and cosmetic allergens Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept Q & A on Workplace Visits Exchange 4 & 5 07:40 – 08:40 Plenary Session 1 Exchange Auditorium 26 Chair Dr John English (Nottingham, UK) 07:40 – 07:55 Dermatologists view – Dr John Bourke (Cork, Ireland) 07:55 – 08:10 Workplace visits – Dr John Hobson (Stoke on Trent, UK) 08:10 – 08:25 Occupational engineers view – Mr Chris Packham (Westburyon-Severn, UK) 08:25 – 08:40 Workplace visits: practical tips – Dr John English (Nottingham, UK) 08:45 – 10:10 Chair Dr David Orton ( London, UK) Co-Chair Dr David Basketter (Sharnbrook, UK) 08:45 – 08:50 Cosmetic preservation and contact allergy; have we learned anything post Dillarstone? – Dr David Basketter (Sharnbrook, UK) 08:50 – 09:05 Preservatives in paint – a non-sustainable future? – Mrs Linda Lea (Slough, UK) 09:05 – 09:25 Consumer contact allergy, EU regulations and dossiers – Prof Pieter-Jan Coenraads (Groningen, The Netherlands) 09:25 – 09:45 European Union cosmetic regulations – what this means to the cosmetic industry – Dr Emma Meredith (London, UK) 09:45 – 10:05 Nail cosmetic allergy – The next big problem? – Dr David Orton (London, UK) 10:05 – 10:10 Panel Discussion Q & A 27 Plants Free Communications 1 Focus Session 1 Exchange 10 Exchange 10 08:45 – 10:05 11:00 – 12:25 Chair 08:45 Dr Jason Williams (Manchester, UK) Chair Dr Evy Paulsen (Odense, Denmark) Epidemic of occupational contact dermatitis caused by sodium cocoamphopropionate in a hand cleanser among fast-food restaurant workers – M. Pesonen, O. Kuuliala, S. Suomela and K. Aalto-Korte Co-Chair Dr Christopher Lovell (Bath, UK) 11:00 – 11:20 Allergic contact dermatitis to plants: understanding the chemistry can help the diagnostic approach – Prof Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin (Strasbourg, France) 11:20 – 11:40 Oral exposure to chamomile tea in patients allergic to sesquiterpene lactones – Dr Kerstin C. Lundh (Halmstad, Sweden) 11:40 – 12:00 Regulation (EC) No. 1223/2009, a recast of the Cosmetic Products Directive 76/768/EEC, in relation to the safety of plantderived cosmetic product ingredients – Dr Richard J Schmidt (Penarth, UK) 12:00 – 12:20 Plant dermatitis – Dr Natalie Stone (Newport, UK) 12:20 – 12:25 Panel Discussion Q & A 08:55 FC1.2 Paederus dermatitis among nut farm workers – E. Uzunoglu, I.D. Oguz, B. Kir and C. Akdemir 09:05 FC1.3 Occupational allergic contact dermatitis in a 2-year follow-up study: how well does the patient remember the result of patch testing? – L. Brok, K.K.B. Clemmensen, T.K. Carøe, N.E. Ebbehøj and T. Agner 09:15 28 FC1.1 FC1.4 Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept Occupational Occupational skin disease in healthcare workers: a 22-year Australian analysis – C. Higgins, A. Palmer, J. Cahill and R. Nixon 09:25 FC1.5 A retrospective investigation of chromate allergy in Southern Sweden – T. Lejding, M. Mowitz, M. Bruze, M. Isaksson, C. Svedman, E. Zimerson and M. Engfeldt 09:35 FC1.6 U.K. trends of occupational skin disease attributed to fragrance 1996–2015 – R. Montgomery, R. Agius, S.M. Wilkinson and M. Carder 09:45 FC1.7 Dimethyldithiocarbamylbenzothiazole sulfide (DMTBS): an unexpectedly strong rubber contact allergen – A. Pontén, M. Bruze, N. Hamnerius, C. Svedman and O. Bergendorff 09:55 FC1.8 The use of photos from patch-test reactions on day 7 taken by mobile phones by professional ice hockey players in Sweden investigated for the presence of occupational dermatoses – T. Eriksson, M. Isaksson, Y. Tegner and M. Bruze 29 Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept 30 Occupational Dermatitis Clinical Focus Session 2 Free Communications 2 Exchange Auditorium Exchange 4 & 5 11:00 – 12:25 11:00 – 12:20 Chair Prof Wolfgang Uter (Erlangen, Germany) Chair Co-Chair Dr Rosemary Nixon (Melbourne, Australia) 11:00 FC2.1 11:00 – 11:20 Epidermal barrier metabolites: Monitoring of irritant contact dermatitis and relevance for occupational dermatology – Dr Irena Angelova-Fischer (Lübeck, Germany) The frequency of contact allergy to four isothiazolinones in a general patch-test population, including a pilot study to determine the optimum patch-test concentrations of benzisothiazolinone and octylisothiazolinone – C. Holden and R. Sabroe 11:20 – 11:40 Recent progress in exposure assessment and skin protection of hairdressers – Dr Marie-Louise Lind (Stockholm, Sweden) 11:10 FC2.2 11:40 – 12:00 The EPIDERM project continues: Current results on occupational allergic contact dermatitis from the UK – Dr Melanie Carder (Manchester, UK) Isothiazolinones in cosmetic and cleaning products in Switzerland: occurrence and concentrations for assessing aggregate exposure – E.G. Hidalgo, V. Sottas, N. von Goetz, C. Bogdal and K. Hungerbuehler 11:20 FC2.3 12:00 – 12:20 Burning issues in occupational dermatitis in 2016 – Dr Rosemary Nixon (Melbourne, Australia) Methylisothiazolinone: the epidemic is declining – but not gone – R. Urwin, M. Wilkinson and F. Latheef 11:30 FC2.4 12:20 – 12:25 Panel Discussion Q & A Photoinduced and photoaggravated allergic contact dermatitis due to methylisothiazolinone – D. Trokoudes, A. Fityan, J. McFadden, R. Sarkany, I. White, J. White and P. Banerjee 11:40 FC2.5 Contact allergy to (meth)acrylates: a U.K. multicentre study – S. Rajan, D.I. Orton, M.M. Chowdhury, S.M. Wilkinson, C. Reckling, A. Shah, G.A. Johnston, J.F. Bourke, C. Green, S.A. Ghaffar and D. Buckley 11:50 FC2.6 Nail varnish allergens: the new and the old – V. Rajkomar, N. Collier, G. Street and J. Williams 12:00 FC2.7 Self-testing for contact allergy to hair dyes: a 4-year follow-up multicentre study – U.F. Friis, J.H. Alfonso, C. Lidén, W. Uter, E. Giménez-Arnau, A.M. Giménez-Arnau, J.D. Johansen and I. White 12:10 FC2.8 In vivo evaluation of the protective capacity of different gloves against permanent hair dyes – A. Antelmi, M. Bruze, E. Zimerson, M. Engfeldt, C. Foti and C. Svedman Pailin Puangpet (Bangkok, Thailand) 31 Health Care Workers Plenary Session 2 Focus Session 3 Exchange Auditorium Exchange 9 13:30 – 14:55 13:30 – 14:55 Chair Dr Jacob Thyssen (Hellerup, Denmark) Chair Prof Johannes Geier (Göttingen, Germany) Co-chair Dr Curt Hamann (Phoenix, USA) Co-chair Dr Jonathan White (London, UK) 13:30 – 13:50 Gold Allergy: more than a myth – Prof Joe Fowler (Louisville, USA) 13:30 – 13:50 Occupational drug allergy – Dr Jonathan White (London, UK) 13:50 – 14:10 Cobalt Allergy – where have we come to and where are we going? – Prof Carola Lidén (Stockholm, Sweden) 13:50 – 14:10 Adverse reactions to hand disinfectants – Dr John English (Nottingham, UK) 14:10 – 14:30 Nickel Allergy in America – will there be a regulation? – Dr Sharon Jacob (Loma Linda, USA) 14:10 – 14:30 Hand eczema prevention among healthcare workers – Prof Swen Malte John (Osnabrück, Germany) 14:30 – 14:50 Implants and metal allergy – is it a concern? – Prof Peter Thomas (Munich, Germany) 14:30 – 14:50 Information Network of Departments of Dermatology data on occupational contact allergy in healthcare workers – Prof Johannes Geier (Göttingen, Germany) 14:50 – 14:55 Panel Discussion Q & A 14:50 – 14:55 Panel Discussion Q & A Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept 32 Prostheses and Metals 33 14:20 FC3.6 Local skin-resident memory CD8+ T cells induce rapid interleukin-1b production following exposure to allergens – J.D. Schmidt, M.G. Ahlstrom, J.D. Johansen, B. Dyring-Andersen, C. Agerbeck, M.M. Nielsen, S.S. Poulsen, A. Woetmann, N. Ødum, A.R. Thomsen, C. Geisler and C.M. Bonefeld 14:30 FC3.7 Allergenic allylic hydroperoxides derived from linalool: chemistry through radical intermediates, translation into immune-cell responses and the role of the Nrf2 pathway – S. Kuresepi, C. Raffalli, B. Vileno, P. Turek, M. Pallardy, J.-P. Lepoittevin, S. Kerdine-Römer and E. Giménez-Arnau 14:40 FC3.8 In situ metabolism of cinnamyl alcohol in reconstructed human epidermis: new insights into the activation of this fragrance skin sensitizer – E. Moss, C. Debeuckelaere, V. Berl, K. Elbayed, F.-M. Moussallieh, I.-J. Namer and J.-P. Lepoittevin Free Communications 3 Exchange 10 13:30 – 14:55 Chair 34 Elena Giménez-Arnau (Madrid, Spain) 13:30 FC3.1 The gene profiles of four different contact sensitizers and two irritants – S. Suomela, V. Fortino, J. Vendelin, E. Lehto, A. Lauerma, M. Pesonen, K. Aalto-Korte, D. Greco, H. Alenius and N. Fyhrquist 13:40 FC3.2 The gene expression and immunohistochemical time course of diphenylcyclopropenone-induced contact allergy in healthy humans following repeated epicutaneous challenges – K. Fredløv Mose, M. Burton, M. Thomassen, F. Andersen, T. Kruse, Q. Tan, L. Skov, M. Røpke, T. Litman, O. Clemmensen, B.W. Kristensen, P. Friedmann and K.E. Andersen 13:50 FC3.3 A study of the pink spot substance in Disperse Blue 106 and 124, which has been found to cause contact allergy – A. Everitt, E. Zimerson, K. Ryberg, M. Bruze and M. Isaksson 14:00 FC3.4 New contact allergens are formed during vulcanization of rubber – O. Bergendorff, A. Pontén, C. Svedman, C. Persson and C. Hansson 14:10 FC3.5 Understanding the mechanistic differences and similarities between sensitization and irritation with the aid of tissueengineered skin models – S. Gibbs, I. Kosten, S. Spiekstra and T. de Gruijl Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept Non-Clinical 35 Acrylates / Resins Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept Basic Science, Toxicology and Patch Testing Focus Session 4 Exchange 9 15:30 – 16:55 Special Session Exchange Hall 15:30 – 16:55 Chair Prof Ian Kimber (Manchester, UK) Co-chair Dr Jason Williams (Manchester, UK) 15:30 – 15:50 Intriguing research questions in skin sensitisation – Prof Ian Kimber (Manchester, UK) 15:50 – 16:10 Skin sensitisation hazard identification and risk assessment: recent developments – Dr David Basketter (Sharnbrook, UK) 16:10 – 16:30 16:30 – 16:50 16:50 – 16:55 36 Correlations between patch-test reactivity and T-lymphocyte responses – Dr Jason Williams (Manchester, UK) Mathematical modelling of skin sensitisation – Dr Gavin Maxwell (Bedford, UK) Chair Prof Margarida Goncalo (Coimbra, Portugal) Co-chair Prof Kristiina Aalto-Korte (Helsinki, Finland) 15:30 – 15:45 Chemistry of acrylates and epoxy resins – Dr Malin Engfeldt (Malmö, Sweden) 15:45 – 16:00 Epidemiological data on contact dermatitis from epoxy resins: Information Network of Departments of Dermatology data – Prof Johannes Geier (Göttingen, Germany) 16:00 – 16:15 Allergic contact dermatitis from epoxy resins: clinical aspects – Prof Kristina Aalto-Korte (Helsinki, Finland) 16:15 – 16:30 Allergic contact dermatitis from (meth)acrylates: nails and other cosmetic uses – Prof Margarida Goncalo (Coimbra, Portugal) 16:30 – 16:45 Usual and unusual clinical presentations of allergic contact dermatitis to (meth)acrylates – Dr Marie-Louise Schuttelaar (Groningen, The Netherlands) 16:45 – 16:55 Panel discussion Q & A Panel Discussion Q & A 37 Grand Rounds 1 Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept Clinical Free Communications 4 Exchange 4 & 5 Exchange 10 15:30 – 16:50 17:00 – 18:15 Chair 15:30 15:40 38 FC4.1 FC4.2 Prof Thomas Rustemeyer (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) Chair Dr Pailin Puangpet (Bangkok, Thailand) Fragrance allergy could be missed without patch testing with 26 individual fragrance allergens – P. Vejanurug, P. Tresukosol, P. Sajjachareonpong and P. Puangpet Co-Chair Dr John McFadden (London, UK) Autoxidized linalool as a contact hapten: a multicentre prospective study of contact sensitization to hydroperoxides of linalool in Spain – L. García-Colmenero, G. Deza, M. Rodríguez, P. Mercader, M.E. Gatica, J.E. Gómez de la Fuente, M. Hervella, E. Serra, M.A. Pastor-Nieto, J. GarcíaGavin J. Carlos Armario-Hita Bo Niklasson and A. M. Giménez-Arnau 15:50 FC4.3 Contact allergy to oxidized lavender oil: patch testing with the main components is not enough to catch all cases – L. Hagvall and J.B. Christensson 16:00 FC4.4 A case of severe intractable eyelid dermatitis likely caused by hydroperoxides of linalool in a very common, heavily fragranced shampoo – J.F. Elliott, A. Ibrahim, U. Nilsson, A.-T. Karlberg, W. Moffat and K. Suzuki 16:10 FC4.5 The significance of batch and patch-test method in establishing contact allergy to Fragrance Mix I: the EDEN Fragrance Study Group – M. Bruze, M. Mowitz, R. Ofenloch, P.-J. Coenraads, P. Elsner, M. Goncalo, L. Naldi and Å. Svensson 16:20 FC4.6 Allergic contact dermatitis caused by benzyl salicylate: an underestimated fragrance allergen? – O. Aerts, M. Mertens, J. Leysen, J. Lambert and A. Goossens 16:30 FC4.7 Contact dermatitis caused by sunscreens: a cross-sectional study in a Victorian patch-test population – C. Higgins and R. Nixon 16:40 FC4.8 Trends in preservative contact allergy in Cork – R. O’Connor, S. McCarthy, M. Murphy and J. Bourke We are bringing technology to the ESCD in Manchester. Each of the interactive Grand Round sessions will involve clinical case presentations with questions for the audience as the case unfolds. The audience will be able to participate using their electronic voting pad with immediate results/ feedback during the presentations. Pit your clinical patch testing acumen against that of your colleagues! Are you patch testing to the same series? Was your pre-test diagnosis the same as colleagues? Each of the presentations has been selected for its learning points – a novel allergen, a new source or changing trends. The sessions will appeal to anyone involved in patch testing with invited presentations from across the globe. 39 Notes Thurs 15 Sept Thurs 15 Sept Gloves / Rubber Focus Session 5 Exchange Auditorium 17:00 – 18:15 40 Chair Prof An Goossens (Leuven, Belgium) Co-chair Prof Swen Malte John (Osnabrück, Germany) 17:00 – 17:15 Protective performance of glove materials – Dr Anders Boman (Stockholm, Sweden) 17:15 – 17:30 Hairdressers and their gloves – Prof Jeanne Duus Johansen (Hellerup, Denmark) 17:30 – 17:45 Current trends in type IV sensitization to gloves – Prof Johannes Geier (Göttingen, Germany) 17:45 – 18:00 Which alternatives for patients allergic to gloves? – Dr MarieNoelle Crépy (Paris, France) 18:00 – 18:15 Panel discussion Q & A 41 Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Friday Overview Friday 16th September Friday 16th September -‐ Overview Room & Time 07:40 08:00 -‐ 09:00 Exchange Auditorium 9:00 -‐ 10.00 10.00 -‐ 11:00 Exchange 9 Exchange 10 42 14:00 -‐ 15:00 15:00 -‐ 16:00 16:00 -‐ 17:00 17:00 -‐ 18:00 18:30 11:00 -‐ 12:25 13:30 -‐ 14:55 17:00 -‐ 18:30 Plenary: Atopic Dermatitis, Urticaria and Chemicals Focus Session: ACD in children Plenary Session: Fragrances ESCD General Assembly 08:30 -‐ 10:15 10:15 -‐ 11:00 11:00 -‐ 12:30 12:30 -‐ 13:30 13:30 -‐ 15:00 15:00 -‐ 15:30 15:30 -‐ 17:00 Exhibition & Posters BREAK Exhibition & Posters LUNCH BREAK Exhibition & Posters BREAK Exhibition & Posters 10:15 -‐ 11:00 12:30 -‐ 13:30 15:30 -‐ 16:55 Gold Symposium -‐ SmartPractice Platinum Symposium -‐ Unilever Focus Session: Hair dyes Speaker Preview Exchange 1 Exchange 6 & 7 13:00 -‐ 14:00 12:00 -‐ 13:00 08:45 -‐ 10:10 Exchange Hall Exchange 4 & 5 11:00 -‐ 12:00 07:40 -‐ 08:40 11:00 -‐ 12:25 15:30 -‐ 16:55 Breakfast session 6: Drug hypersensitivity Focus Session: In vitro alternatives Special Session: Global Perspectives -‐ ICDG at 50 07:40 -‐ 08:40 12:30 -‐ 13:30 Breakfast session 5: Skin Prick testing / contact urticaria ESSCA working group meeting 07:40 -‐ 08:40 10:15 -‐ 11:00 Breakfast session 4: patch testing tips & tricks Platinum Symposium -‐ IDEA 17:00 -‐ 18:15 13:30 -‐ 14:55 Grand Rounds 2 Focus Session: Irritant contact dermatitis 08:45 -‐ 10:05 11:00 -‐ 12:20 13:30 -‐ 14:55 15:30 -‐ 16:55 Free Communications 5 -‐ Clinical Free Communications 6 -‐ Clinical Free Communications 7 -‐ Atopy & Children BSACI / ESCD Joint sesion 43 Breakfast Session 4 Skin Prick Testing / Contact Urticaria Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Patch Testing Tips / Tricks Exchange 9 07:40 – 08:40 Breakfast Session 5 Exchange 6 & 7 44 Chair Prof Magnus Bruze (Malmö, Sweden) 07:40 – 07:55 When semi open test is an alternative to a patch test – Prof An Goossens (Leuven, Belgium) 07:55 – 08:05 When to use buffer solutions and ultrasonic bath extracts in patch testing – Dr Martin Mowitz (Malmö, Sweden) 08:05 – 08:15 Patch testing with thin layer chromatograms – Dr Malin Engfeldt (Malmö, Sweden) 08:15 – 08:25 How to patch test the ‘air’ when suspecting an air-borne contact dermatitis – Dr Erik Zimerson (Malmö, Sweden) 08:25 – 08:40 Is patch test reading on day 7 necessary? – Prof Thomas Rustemeyer (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) 07:40 – 08:40 Chair Dr Sarah Wakelin (London, UK) 07.40 – 08.00 Testing for immediate contact reactions in the clinic – Prof Ana Giménez-Arnau (Barcelona, Spain) 08.00 – 08.20 Latex allergy: where are we now? – Dr Mabs Chowdhury (Cardiff, UK) 08.20 – 08.40 Interesting cases from the literature – Dr Sarah Wakelin (London, UK) 45 Breakfast Session 6 Atopic Dermatitis, Urticaria and Chemicals Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Drug Hypersensitivity Exchange 4 & 5 07:40 – 08:40 Plenary 3 Exchange Auditorium Chair Dr Michael Ardern-Jones (Southampton, UK) 07:40 – 07:55 Systemic reactions when patch testing drug rash with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms and toxic epidermal necrolysis – Prof Rannakoe Lehloenya (Cape Town, South Africa) 08:00 – 08:20 08:20 – 08:40 46 Can we use blood tests for drug hypersensitivity diagnosis? – Dr Michael Ardern-Jones (Southampton, UK) Desensitization in drug hypersensitivity – Dr Paul Whitaker (Leeds, UK) 08:45 – 10:10 Chair Dr John McFadden (London, UK) Co-chair Dr Carsten Flohr (London, UK) 08:45 – 09:15 Update in atopic dermatitis – Dr Carsten Flohr (London, UK) 09:15 – 09:45 Update in urticaria – Dr Alexander Marsland (Manchester, UK) 09:45 – 10:00 Contact allergy mimicking endogenous eczemas – Dr Korbkarn Pongpairoj (Bangkok, Thailand) 10:00 – 10:10 Chemicals and atopy – Dr John McFadden (London, UK) 47 ACD in Children Free Communications 5 Focus Session 6 Exchange 10 Exchange Auditorium 08:45 – 10:05 11:00 – 12:25 Chair 08:45 48 FC5.1 Dr Sarah Wakelin (London, UK) Chair Dr Cathy Green (Dundee, UK) North American Contact Dermatitis Group patch-test results 2013–2014 – J. DeKoven, E. Warshaw, D. Sasseville, M. Pratt, J. Fowler Jr, D. Belsito, V. DeLeo, H. Maibach, J. Marks, T. Mathias, J. Taylor, M. Zirwas and K. Zug Co-chair Dr Kathryn Zug (Lebanon, USA) 11:00 – 11:20 Patch testing in children: who should I test and how should I do it? – Dr Cathy Green (Dundee, UK) 11:20 – 11:40 Patch testing in children: the North American experience – Dr Kathryn Zug (Lebanon, USA) 11:40 – 12:00 Photopatch testing in children – Dr Alastair Kerr (Ayrshire, UK) 12:00 – 12:20 Cases of contact allergy in children – Prof Joseph Fowler (Louisville, USA) 12:20 – 12:25 Panel Discussion Q & A 08:55 FC5.2 A dynamic landscape of allergen associations in delayed-type cutaneous hypersensitivity – M. Lynch, J. White, J. McFadden, Y. Wang, I. White and P. Banerjee 09:05 FC5.3 Prevalence of contact allergy in the general population: sensitization to metals with a focus on nickel sulfate, the EDEN Fragrance Study Group – M.-L. Schuttelaar, R. Ofenloch, M. Bruze, S. Cazzaniga, P. Elsner, M. Goncalo, L. Naldi, Å. Svensson and T. Diepgen Correlation between self-reported metal allergy and observed metal allergy in a tertiary-referral patch-test service: implications for future patch-test service provision – A. Foulkes, N. Collier and J. Williams 09:15 FC5.4 09:25 FC5.5 Do nickel-sensitive subjects react to short-term applications of nickel discs? – R. Nixon, H. Bala, C. Higgins, A. Palmer and K. Heim 09:35 FC5.6 Variation in patch-test reactivity to palladium and nickel. – L.R. Comstedt, M. Hindsén, M. Engfeldt and M. Bruze 09:45 FC5.7 A retrospective study on titanium sensitivity: patch-test materials and manifestations – N.P.J. de Graaf, A.J. Feilzer, C.J. Kleverlaan, S. Gibbs and T. Rustemeyer 09:55 FC5.8 Allergic reactions to metal orthopaedic prostheses: a review of the literature on the role of epicutaneous patch testing – N.P.J. de Graaf and T. Rustemeyer Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Clinical 49 Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept 50 In Vitro Alternatives Clinical Focus Session 7 Free Communications 6 Exchange 4 & 5 Exchange 10 11:00 – 12:25 11:00 – 12:20 Chair Dr Andreas Natsch (Duebendorf, Switzerland) Chair Co-chair Dr David Basketter (Sharnbrook, UK) 11:00 FC6.1 11:00 – 11:20 Continuing developments on peptide reactivity assays to characterise the molecular initiating event – Prof Jean-Pierre Lepoittevin (Strasbourg, France) The British Association of Dermatologists’ guidelines for the management of contact dermatitis 2016 – G. Johnston, L. Exton, M.F. Mohd Mustapa, J. Slack, I. Coulson, J. English and J. Bourke 11:10 FC6.2 11:20 – 11:40 Keratinocyte activation and its contribution to in vitro prediction of contact sensitizers – Dr Andreas Natsch (Duebendorf, Switzerland) Long-term reproducibility of positive patch tests in nonimmediate cutaneous adverse drug reactions to antibiotics – A. Pinho, I. Coutinho, M. Gouveia, A. Marta and Margarida Gonçalo 11:40 – 12:00 Current status of dendritic cell-based tests for skin sensitizer identification – Prof Bruno Neves (Coimbra, Portugal) 11:20 FC6.3 12:00 – 12:20 No animal alternatives: a rocky road to regulatory acceptance – Dr Annette Mehling (Duesseldorf, Germany) REVIDAL-GERDA: results of 12 years of systematic patch testing of additional allergens to the European baseline series – M. Castelain and M. Avenel-Audran 11:30 FC6.4 12:20 – 12:25 Panel Discussion Q & A Patch testing in patients with psoriasis results of a 30-year retrospective cohort study – W. Alwan, J. McFadden, I.R. White and P. Banerjee 11:40 FC6.5 Steareths may sometimes prove problematic in patients contact allergic to cetostearyl alcohol: an example – O. Aerts, J. Leysen, T. Naessens, J. Dandelooy, S. Apers and J. Lambert 11:50 FC6.6 Potent haptens in chloroprene rubber products – A. Ramzy, L. Hagvall, M. Pei, K. Samuelsson and U. Nilsson 12:00 FC6.7 Allergic contact dermatitis to dimethylthiocarbamylbenzothiazole sulfide in canvas shoes: in search of the culprit allergen – M.-L. Schuttelaar, J. Meijer, M. Engfeldt, H. Lapeere, A. Goossens, M. Bruze and O. Bergendorff 12:10 FC6.8 Allergic contact dermatitis from canvas shoes – A. Goossens, L. Gilissen, O. Bergendorff, M. Engfeldt and M. Bruze Dr Mihaly Matura (Stockholm, Sweden) 51 Irritant Contact Dermatitis Plenary 4 Focus Session 8 Exchange Auditorium Exchange 9 13:30 – 15:00 13:30 – 15:00 Chair Prof Jeanne Duus Johansen (Copenhagan, Denmark) Chair Prof Peter Elsner (Jena, Germany) Co-chair Dr Deirdre Buckley (Bath, UK) Co-chair Prof Razvigor Darlenski (Sofia, Bulgaria) 13:30 – 13:50 Clinical aspects of fragrance allergy – Dr Deirdre Buckley (Bath, UK) 13:30 – 13:50 Pathogenetic Mechanisms of Irritant Dermatitis – Prof Tove Agner (Copenhagen, Denmark) 13:50 – 14:10 Markers of fragrance contact allergy: how to test – Dr Ian White (London, UK) 13:50 – 14:10 Non-invasive diagnosis of irritant dermatitis – Prof Razvigor Darlenski (Sofia, Bulgaria) 14:10 – 14:30 Clinical relevance of contact allergy to limonene and linalool – Dr Johanna Brared Christensson (Gothenburg, Sweden) 14:10 – 14:30 Irritant Dermatitis in healthcare workers – Dr John English (Nottingham, UK) 14:30 – 14:50 Fragrance contact allergy among children – Prof Thomas Rustemeyer (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) 14:30 – 14:50 Prevention of irritant dermatitis by protective creams: Proving the benefit – Prof Peter Elsner (Jena, Germany) 14:50 – 15:00 Panel discussion Q & A 14:50 – 15:00 Panel discussion Q & A Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept 52 Fragrances 53 Free Communications 7 Global Perspectives – ICDRG at 50 Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Atopy & Children Exchange 10 13:30 – 14:50 Focus Session 9 Exchange 4 & 5 Chair FC7.1 Quantification of epidermal filaggrin in human skin and its response to skin irritation – J. Bandier, K. Ross-Hansen, B.C. Carlsen, J.T. Tanassi, J.D. Johansen and N. Heegaard 13:40 FC7.2 Allergic contact dermatitis in Danish children – A.B. Simonsen, M. Deleuran, C.G. Mortz, J.D. Johansen and M. Sommerlund 13:50 FC7.3 Association between filaggrin null mutations and decreased health-related quality of life in adult patients with dermatitis – N.G. Heede, J.P. Thyssen, B.H. Thuesen, A. Linneberg, P. Szecsi, S. Stender and J.D. Johansen 13:30 14:00 54 Dr Pui Banerjee (London, UK) FC7.4 15:30 – 16:55 Chair Prof Magnus Bruze (Malmö, Sweden) Co-chair Prof Klaus Andersen (Odense, Denmark) 15:30 – 15:50 Historical aspects – Prof Jean-Marie Lachapelle (Louvain, Belgium) 15:50 – 16:10 Workers compensation schemes – Dr Denis Sasseville (Montreal, Canada) 16:10 – 16:30 Association between atopic dermatitis and allergic contact dermatitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis – C.R. Hamann, D. Hamann, J. Silverberg and J. Thyssen Recent International Contact Dermatitis Research Group patchtest studies – Prof Marlene Isaksson (Malmö, Sweden) 16:30 – 16:50 Clarification of the ICDRG classification of patch test reactions scale – Prof Magnus Bruze (Malmö, Sweden) 16:50 – 16:55 Panel discussion Q & A 14:10 FC7.5 Review of 35 years of paediatric patch testing in a tertiary-care centre – B. McDonald and J. White 14:20 FC7.6 Allergic contact dermatitis in Australian children – H.R. Bala, A.M. Palmer, J.L. Cahill and R.L. Nixon 14:30 FC7.7 Allergic contact dermatitis to shin pads: concerning nine cases – N. Raison-Peyron, A. Barbaud, O. Bergendorff, M. Bruze, B. Milpied, C. Poreaux, D. Tennstedt and J. Waton 14:40 FC7.8 Earrings are still the major cause of allergic nickel dermatitis – M.G. Ahlström, T. Menné, J.P. Thyssen and J.D. Johansen 55 BSACI / ESCD joint session Focus Session 10 Exchange 10 Exchange Hall 15:30 – 16:55 Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Hair Dyes 15:30 – 16:55 Prof Ana Giménez-Arnau (Barcelona, Spain) & Dr Helen Brough (London, UK) Chair Dr Marie-Louise Schuttelaar (Groningen, The Netherlands) Co-chair Dr David Orton (London, UK) 15:30 – 15:50 BSACI Guidelines of the diagnosis and management of Local Anaesthetic Allergy – Dr Rubaiyat Haque (London, UK) 15:30 – 15:45 Prevelance of contact allergy to p-phenylenediamine in the general population – Prof Thomas Diepgen (Heidelberg, Germany). On behalf of the EDEN Fragrance Study Group. 15:50 – 16:10 Differential diagnosis , Angioedema vs Contact Dermatitis. Review of potential contact allergens involved. – Prof Jeanne Duus Johansen (Copenhagen, Denmark) 15:45 – 16:00 Patch testing with hair dyes – Prof Wolfgang Uter (Erlangen, Germany) 16:10 – 16:30 16:00 – 16:15 Cross-elicitation responses to 2-methoxymethyl-pphenylenediamine in p-phenylenediamine-allergic individuals – Dr Marie-Louise Schuttelaar (Groningen, The Netherlands) Practical approach to diagnosis and management of Non Steroidal Anti-inflammatory Drug (NSAID) Allergy – Dr Rubaiyat Haque (London, UK) 16:30 – 16:50 Immediate contact hypersensitivity reactions, from contact urticaria to protein contact dermatitis – Prof Ana GiménezArnau (Barcelona, Spain) 16:50 – 16:55 Panel discussion Q & A 16:15 – 16:30 56 Chairs Mechanism of hair dyes allergic contact dermatitis – Dr David Basketter (Sharnbrook, UK) 16:30 – 16:45 Quantitative risk assessment for skin sensitisation of hair dye ingredients – Dr Carsten Goebel (Darmstadt, Germany) 16:45 – 16:55 Panel discussion Q & A 57 General Assembly Exchange 9 Exchange Auditorium 17:00 – 18:15 17:00 – 18:30 Chair & Co-chair Dr Jason Williams (Manchester, UK) & Dr Adrienne Lee All ESCD Members are invited to attend the General Assembly Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Grand Rounds 2 (Melbourne, Australia) We are bringing technology to the ESCD in Manchester. Each of the interactive Grand Round sessions will involve clinical case presentations with questions for the audience as the case unfolds. The audience will be able to participate using their electronic voting pad with immediate results/ feedback during the presentations. Pit your clinical patch testing acumen against that of your colleagues! Are you patch testing to the same series? Was your pre-test diagnosis the same as colleagues? Each of the presentations has been selected for its learning points – a novel allergen, a new source or changing trends. The sessions will appeal to anyone involved in patch testing with invited presentations from across the globe. 58 59 Fri 16 Sept Fri 16 Sept Congress Dinner Manchester Cathedral 19:30 – 23:30 The ESCD2016 Congress Dinner will be held at Manchester Cathedral. Manchester Cathedral is one of Manchester’s most historical buildings, boasting a heartstopping beautiful interior awash with historical features and offering an altogether splendorous medieval experience. This will offer a wonderful setting for Congress Dinner and we hope you will be able to join us for a delightful evening. Delegates can either make their own way to the Cathedral, it is a 15minute walk from the Congress venue. Please refer to the map within this programme or ask at the registration desk for directions. Or there will be coaches going from outside of the Congress venue at 19:15, returning at 23:00 and 23:30. The address is: Manchester Cathedral, Victoria Street, Manchester, M3 1SX 60 61 Sat 17 Sept Sat 17 Sept Saturday Overview Saturday 17th September Saturday 17th September -‐ Overview Room & Time 08:00 -‐ 09:00 9:00 -‐ 10.00 10.00 -‐ 11:00 12:00 -‐ 13:00 11:00 -‐ 12:00 13:00 -‐ 14:00 15:00 -‐ 16:00 09:00 -‐ 10:30 11:00 -‐ 12:25 13:30 -‐ 14:00 14:00 -‐ 14:30 14:30 -‐ 15:00 Plenary: Immunology Focus Session: Footwear and textiles Jadassohn Lecture Wahlberg Lecture Prizes Exchange Auditorium Exchange Hall 14:00 -‐ 15:00 08:30 -‐ 10:30 10:30 -‐ 11:00 11:00 -‐ 12:30 12:30 -‐ 13:30 14:30 -‐ 17:00 EXHIBITION BREAK Exhibition & Posters LUNCH BREAK Exhibition Breakdown 09:00 -‐ 10:30 11:00 -‐ 12:25 Focus Session: Medicaments Focus Session: Genetics 16:00 -‐ 17:00 Speaker Preview Exchange 1 09:00 -‐ 10:30 11:00 -‐ 12:25 Hot Topics Focus Session: Epidemiology Exchange 4 & 5 12:30 -‐ 13:30 15:00 -‐ 17:00 European baseline ICDG Meeting Exchange 8 Exchange 9 Exchange 10 62 07:55 -‐ 08:55 10:00 -‐ 11:00 11:30 -‐ 12:30 14:30 -‐ 15:30 16:00 -‐ 17:00 Breakfast session 7: EU legislation and cutaneous allergy Educational Course Educational Course Educational Course Educational Course 07:55 -‐ 08:55 11:00 -‐ 11:30 12:30 -‐ 13:30 15:30 -‐ 16:00 Breakfast session 8: How to get ingredient information Course Break Course Lunch Course Break 63 How to get Ingredient Information Breakfast Session 7 Breakfast Session 8 Exchange 9 Exchange 10 07:55 – 08:55 07:55 – 08:55 Chair Dr Ian White (London, UK) Chair Prof An Goossens (Leuven, Belgium) 07:55 – 08:15 What progress with Nickel? – Prof Jacob Thyssen (Hellerup, Denmark) 07:55 – 08:25 Cosmetics: requirements for labelling – Dr Martine Vigan (Besancon, France) 08:15 – 08:35 Classification for Labelling and Packaging: a help or hindrance? – Prof Carola Lidén (Stockholm, Sweden) 08:25 – 08:40 Material safety data sheets and their shortcomings – Dr Jakob Dahlin (Malmö, Sweden) 08:35 – 08:55 Cosmetic Regulation: could it be better? – Dr Ian White (London, UK) 08:40 – 08:55 How to get information about ingredients in gloves – Dr MarieNoelle Crépy (Paris, France) Sat 17 Sept Sat 17 Sept 64 EU Legislation and Cutaneous Allergy 65 Medicaments Plenary 5 Focus Session 11 Exchange Auditorium Exchange Hall 09:00 – 10:30 09:00 – 10:30 Chair Prof Stefan Martin (Freiburg, Germany) Chair Dr Johnny Bourke (Cork, Ireland) Co-chair Prof Peter Friedmann (Southampton, UK) Co-chair Prof David Gawkrodger (Sheffield, UK) 09:00 – 09:20 Allergic contact dermatitis: when chemicals turn on the immune response – Prof Stefan Martin (Freiburg, Germany) 09:00 – 09:20 Occupational Dermatitis from pharmaceuticals – Dr Johnny Bourke (Cork, Ireland) 09:20 – 09:40 In contact dermatitis, individual naive T cells give rise to both skin resident and central memory T cells – Dr Olivier Gaide (Lausanne, Switzerland) 09:20 – 09:40 Occupational dermatitis to medicaments in nurses – Prof An Goossens (Leuven, Belgium) 09:40 – 10:00 T cell responses to contact allergens – Dr Marc Vocanson (Lyon, France) 09:40 – 10:00 Age stratification of medicament dermatitis – Prof David Gawkrodger (Sheffield, UK) 10:00 – 10:20 The chemical and cellular basis of drug hypersensitivity – Dr Dean Naisbitt (Liverpool, UK) 10:00 – 10:20 Contact dermatitis to ophthalmic preparations – Dr Jakob Torp Madsen (Odense, Denmark) 10:20 – 10:30 Panel discussion Q & A 10:20 – 10:30 Panel discussion Q & A Sat 17 Sept Sat 17 Sept 66 Immunology 67 Free Communications 10:10 HT8 Contact desalinated water eczema in the east coast of Egypt – Amr Magdy Kotb 10:20 HT9 Identification of Occupational and Environmental Hazard and Occupational Skin Diseases in Indonesian Batik Home Industry – Sri Awalia Febriana, Kusuma Dewi Erdina Exchange 4 & 5 09:00 – 10:30 Chair 68 POSTER HT10 Prof Paolo Pigatto (Milan, Italy) 09:00 HT1 Allergyapp. One year experience and future aspects – C. Avnstorp and J.P. Thyssen 09:10 HT2 Patch test in patients with facial melanosis due to lichen planus pigmentosus and pigmented cosmetic dermatitis – Sharma VK, Gupta V, Pahadia P 09:20 HT3 Allergic contact dermatitis to a new temporary black tattoo dye – sensitization to Genipa Americana (Jagua) extract – Andreas J. Bircher, Rita Sigg, Kathrin Scherer Hofmeier, Urs Hauri 09:30 HT4 Contact Dermatitis (CD) – The benefits of workplace visits – Deirdre Phelan, Esther Burden-Teh, Kyle Tang, Tanya Bleiker 09:40 HT5 An epidemic of allergic contact dermatitis from moisturizers caused by a new allergen, caprylhydroxamic acid – Ackermann Leena, Virtanen Hannele, Korhonen Laura, Hasan Taina 09:50 HT6 Epidermal barrier dysregulation in human skin after exposure to p-Phenylenediamine – Sanne Skovvang Steengaard, Can Altunbulakli, Charlotte M. Bonefeld, Jeanne Duus Johansen, Cezmi A. Akdis 10:00 HT7 Patch test allergens must be stored correctly and some should not be prepared in advance to avoid false negative results. – Daniel J. Keith and Deirdre A. Buckley Sat 17 Sept Sat 17 Sept Hot Topics A Study Of Occupational Irritant Contact Dermatitis in Metal/ Mechanic and Plastic Industry in Kalasan Yogyakarta – Niken Indrastuti, Laily Noor Qomariah, Fajar Waskito, Satiti Retno Pudjiati, Farida HartatiProf Paolo Pigatto 69 Footwear and Textiles Focus Session 12 Focus Session 13 Exchange Hall Exchange Auditorium 11:00 – 12:25 11:00 – 12:25 Chair Prof Axel Schnuch (Göttingen, Germany) Chair Dr Laura Malinauskiene (Vilnius, Lithuania) Co-chair Prof Peter Friedmann (Southampton, UK) Co-chair Prof Ana Giménez-Arnau (Barcelona, Spain) 11:00 – 11:15 Genetic factors in contact hypersensitivity: Introduction – Prof Peter Friedmann (Southampton, UK) 11:05 – 11:25 11:15 – 11:30 Skin barrier and contact allergy: Genetic risk factor analyses – Prof Jacob Thyssen (Hellerup, Denmark) Main shoe contact allergens , update of regulatory recommendations and the research to avoid them – Dr Elena Albert Navarro (Alicante, Spain) 11:25 – 11:45 11:30 – 11:45 Polymorphisms in contact allergy – Results from an ongoing study of the IVDK – Dr Götz Westphal & Dr Hans Peter Rihs (Bochum, Germany) How to recognize and study shoe contact dermatitis, an old and new source of contact allergy – Prof Ana Giménez-Arnau (Barcelona, Spain) 11:45 – 12:05 The human leucocyte antigen system and drug allergy: implications for contact sensitizers – Dr Dean Naisbitt (Liverpool, UK) Testing textiles, the main allergens involved and a proposal for an algorithm of testing – Prof Marlene Isaksson (Malmö, Sweden) 12:05 – 12:25 Sensitizers in textiles and toys – Dr Stefan Posner (Mölndal, Sweden) 11:45 – 12:00 70 12:00 – 12:15 Exploring the role of microRNAs in allergic contact dermatitis – Dr Tilman Sanchez-Elsner (Southampton, UK) 12:15 – 12:25 Panel discussion Q & A Sat 17 Sept Sat 17 Sept Genetics 71 Jadassohn / Wahlberg Lectures Focus Session 14 Plenary Session Exchange 4 & 5 Exchange Auditorium 11:00 – 12:25 13:30 – 15:00 Chair Dr Erin Warshaw (Minneapolis, USA) Chair Prof Magnus Bruze (Malmö, Sweden) Co-chair Prof Pieter-Jan Coenraads (Groningen, The Netherlands) Co-chair Dr Mark Wilkinson (Leeds, UK) 11:00 – 11:20 Epidemiology of fragrance sensitivity in Europe – Prof Thomas Diepgen (Heidelberg, Germany) 13:30 – 14:00 11:20 – 11:40 New patch-test prevalence data for both methylchloroisothiazolinone / methylisothiazolinone and methylisothiazolinone in the North American Contact Dermatitis Group (NACDG) patients from 2013–2014 – Dr Matthew Zirwas (Colombus, USA) The Jadassohn Lecture – Contact dermatitis research - the power of collaboration and encouragement – Prof Klaus Ejner Andersen (Odense, Denmark) 14:00 – 14:30 The Wahlberg Lecture – Hidden haptens in rubber devices and other everyday products – Prof Lina Hagvall (Gothenburg, Sweden) 14:30 – 14:45 Presentation of certificates for the Jadassohn lecturer, Jan wahlberg lecturer, poster prize winners and travel grant winners – Prof Magnus Bruze (Malmö, Sweden) 14:45 – 14:50 Closing Remarks – Dr Mark Wilkinson (Leeds, UK) 14:50 – 14:55 Invitation to Milan 2018 – Prof Paolo Pigatto (Milan, Italy) 14:55 – 15:00 Formal thank you and close of the ESCD2016 Congress – Prof Magnus Bruze (Malmö, Sweden) 11:40 – 12:00 Current results with baseline series allergens from the ESSCA network – Prof Wolfgang Uter (Erlangen, Germany) 12:00 – 12:20 Epidemiology of metal sensitivity – Prof Jacob Thyssen (Hellerup, Denmark) 12:20 – 12:25 Panel discussion and Q & A Sat 17 Sept Sat 17 Sept 72 Epidemiology 73 Education Course Exchange 9 & 10 ESCD educational session registrants should then return to Exchange 9 Session 3 14:30 – 15:00 Occupational dermatology for beginners – Dr Donna Thompson (Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust, UK) 15:00 – 15:30 Cosmetic dermatitis and how to avoid it – Dr Adam Haworth (St Mary’s Hospital, UK) 15:30 – 16:00 Coffee break in Exchange 10 10:00 – 17:00 Chair Dr Graham Johnston (Leicester, UK) Session 1 10:00 – 10:30 Taking a proper history – Dr Pippa Cousen (South Tees NHS Trust, UK) 10:30 – 11:00 The reading and interpretation of patch test reactions made easy – Dr Graham Johnston (University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust, UK) 11:00 – 11:30 Coffee Break in Exchange 10 Session 2 11:30 – 12:00 The standard series: what all those names mean – Dr Tracey Finch (Heart of England NHS Trust, UK) 12:00 – 12:30 10 ways to improve your patch testing service – Dr Deirdre Buckley (Royal United Hospital, Bath, UK) 12:30 – 13:30 Lunch in Exchange 10 Sat 17 Sept Sat 17 Sept ESCD Educational Session Session 4 16:00 – 16:30 Hand dermatitis and it’s differential diagnosis – Dr Tanya Bleiker (Derby Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK) 16:30 – 17:00 The Friday method-diagnosing allergic contact dermatitis by elimination, perception, detection and deduction – Dr John McFadden (St Johns’ Institute of Dermatology, London, UK) and Dr Graham Johnston (University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust, UK) Delegates then have access to the named lecture in the Exchange Auditorium 74 13:30 – 14:00 The Jadassohn Lecture – Contact dermatitis research - the power of collaboration and encouragement – Prof Klaus Ejner Andersen (Odense, Denmark) 14:00 – 14:30 The Wahlberg Lecture – Hidden haptens in rubber devices and other everyday products – Prof Lina Hagvall (Gothenburg, Sweden) 75 Posters are situated in the Exchange Hall alongside the Exhibition and will be displayed in both hardcopy and electronic format. Specific poster viewing sessions will take place 12:30 – 13:30 Thursday 15th September (even numbers) and 12:30 – 13:30 Friday 16th September (odd numbers) P001 Autoxidized limonene as a contact hapten: a multicentre prospective study of contact sensitization to hydroperoxides of limonene in Spain G. Deza, L, García-Colmenero, F. Heras, J. Sanchez, J.F. Silvestre, L. Borrego, J. Ortiz, V. Fernandez, R. Gonzalez, J.M. Carrascosa, B. García-Bravo, I. Ruiz, S. Cordoba, B. Niklasson and A.M. Giménez-Arnau P012 Facing the challenge: developing and validating approaches for the detection and quantification of skin-sensitizing hydroperoxides in consumer products A. Natsch, M. Calandra, H. Leijs, J. Masson, E. Corbi, A. Duesterloh, A.-T. Karlberg, E. Giménez-Arnau, J.-M. Aubry, U. Nilsson, M. Vey and C. Gonzalez P013 Nonanimal approaches for sensitization potency: to what extent can local lymph node assay data provide a useful benchmark? D. Roberts P014 Abstract withdrawn P015 The finding of gold on skin after gold exposure A.-K. Björk, C. Svedman and M. Bruze P002 Orofacial granulomatosis associated with delayed hypersensitivity to acrylates present in dental prosthesis A. Teixeira, M. Camacho, L. Soares-Almeida and T. Correia P016 Octylisothiazolinone is a relevant nonoccupational contact allergen in leather goods and may show cross-reactivity to methylisothiazolinone J. Leysen, A. Goossens, H. Meert, S. Apers, J. Lambert and O. Aerts P003 Is unsubstituted benzophenone a potential screening agent to detect photocontact allergy to octocrylene? O. Aerts, Y.Y. Kong, J. Leysen, W. De Borggraeve, J. Lambert and A. Goossens P017 Photoaggravation and persistent photosensitivity in patients sensitized to methylchloroisothiazolinone/methylisothiazolinone and methylisothiazolinone in Belgium and France: a report of nine cases O. Aerts, A. Goossens, M.-C. Marguery, M. Castelain, L. Boursault, F. Giordano-Labadie, J. Lambert and B. Milpied P004 Contact allergy to methyldibromoglutaronitrile preservative: European Surveillance System on Contact Allergies results from the baseline series, 2009–12 A.M. Giménez-Arnau, G. Deza, A. Bauer, G. Johnston, V. Mahler, M.-L. Schuttelaar, J. Sanchez, J.F. Silvestre, M. Wilkinson and W. Uter P005 Cutaneous allergy testing in anogenital dermatoses C.C. Foley, S. White, S. Merry, U. Nolan, B. Moriarty, P. Collins, B. Kirby and A. Lally P006 Allergic contact dermatitis caused by (meth)acrylates in users and technicians of artificial nails: a 5-year study I. Raposo, I. Lobo, C. Amaro, M. de Lurdes Lobo, H. Melo, J. Parente, T. Pereira, J. Rocha, P. Serrano, T. Correia, M. Dias, A.R. Travassos, F. Pereira and M. Gonçalo P018 Quantification of l-carvone in toothpastes available on the Swedish market L. Kroona, J. Dahlin, Ö. Sörensen, M. Isaksson, M. Bruze, C. Ahlgren and G. Warfvinge P019 Some preparations of hydroperoxides of linalool give lower response rates because hapten concentrations are less than indicated M. Abbas, A. Ibrahim, U. Nilsson, W. Moffat,3 J. DeKoven,4 K. Suzuki1 and J. Elliott1 P007 Immediate reactions in hand eczema J. Azevedo, F. Regateiro, M. Gouveia, L, Ramos and M. Gonçalo P020 Airborne bullous allergic contact dermatitis from methyl isothiazolinone contained in a glass shower screen cleaning spray M.-A. Pastor-Nieto, M.-E. Gatica-Ortega, P. González-Muñoz, C. Perna-Monroy, R. Gil-Redondo, R. Pérez-Mesonero, V. Melgar-Molero, F.-De-A. AlcántaraNicolás, L. Hernández-Caballero and A. Vieira-Pereira P008 Investigation of two diisocyanates and their corresponding amines for sensitizing capacity and cross-reactivity in the guinea pig H. Hamada, M. Engfeldt, M. Isaksson, M. Bruze and E. Zimersson P021 Allergic contact dermatitis from nickel is prevented using a novel barrier cream B. Niklasson and M. Isaksson P009 Contact allergy to beeswax in patients with cheilitis G. Nyman, M. Tang, A. Inerot and L. Hagvall P022 The methylisothiazolinone epidemic: a pan-European prospective study J.F. Schwensen, W. Uter, M. Bruze, C. Svedman, A. Goossens, M. Wilkinson, A. Giménez Arnau, M. Gonçalo, K.E. Andersen, E. Paulsen, T. Agner, C. Foti, K. Aalto-Korte and J. Duus Johansen P010 A novel barrier cream is effective in preventing allergic contact dermatitis from nickel- releasing items B. Niklasson, A. Gregorius and R. Spiewak 76 P011 The reproducibility of patch testing: a cause for concern? A.-K. Björk, M. Bruze and C. Svedman Posters Posters Posters 77 P024 Refining the prediction of skin sensitization potential: performance of the Derek Nexus knowledge base for a published dataset M. Payne P025 Patch testing With Fragrance Mix I, Fragrance Mix II and their ingredients M. Mowitz, C. Svedman, E. Zimerson and M. Bruze P026 Comparison between formaldehyde 2% aqua and formaldehyde in TRUE Test D.T. Nielsen, R.B. From, M.S. Majidi, M.K. Jensen, A.E. Andersen, L. Vasarhelyi and F. Andersen P027 A case of contact dermatitis due to goalkeeper gloves A. Ito, Y. Masui, K. Sasaki, Y. Ishimura, M. Numata and R. Abe P028 Abstract withdrawn P029 Patch testing with rubber series in Europe: a survey of current practice K. Warburton,1 W. Uter,2 J. Geier,3 M.-N. Crepy,4 M.-L. Schuttelaar,5 V. Mahler6 and M. Wilkinson1 P030 Individual variation in aluminium patch test reactivity I. Siemund, M. Hindsén, E. Zimerson and M. Bruze P031 Cross-reactivity of isothiazolinones: a clinical perspective R. Urwin, M. Wilkinson and F. Latheef P032 Comparison of reactivity to allergens between the TRUE Test and IQ chamber system: multicentre clinical trials E.J. Park and W.J. Kwon P039 Allergic contact dermatitis from propylene glycol: a case with past and present relevance in relation to several owned products M.E.G. Ortega, M.A.P. Nieto, M.M. Camacho, A.I.S. Moya, O.A. Palma, C.B. Monné, C.P. Hortet and C.S. Ortega Posters Posters P023 Allergic contact dermatitis from Solvent Orange 60 in spectacle frames in Japan M. Shono P040 Erythema multiforme and allergic contact dermatitis to paraphenylenediamine in a henna tattoo M.-E. Sarre, M. Avenel-Audran and M. Guerin-Moreau P041 Paediatric contact dermatitis: study of clinical and aetiological characteristics of a population registered in the REVAC-GEIDAC network in Spain, 2004–14 A.M. Giménez-Arnau, M.A. Descalzo, J.C. Armario-Hita, V. FernandezRedondo, J. Garcia-Gavin, P. Mercader, J. Sanchez, I. Ruiz and J.-F. Silvestre P042 Using skin penetration measurements to refine exposure for skin sensitization quantitative risk assessment: application to methylisothiazolinone P. Kern, H. Rothe, C. Goebel and C. Ryan P043 A glance at detergents B. Dezfoulian, C. Defourny and A. Nikkels P044 A rare case of bra-associated allergic contact dermatitis M. Haeberle P045 Allergic contact dermatitis to limonene and linalool in ironing water C. Duhovic and C. Reckling P046 A retrospective study of the epidemiology and causative contact allergens on the face, scalp and neck in a tertiary dermatology centre from 2005 to 2013 H. Ochi and C.L. Goh P047 Black hairy tongue, mercury dental amalgam and allergy to metals P. Pigatto, G. Guzzi, S. Ferrucci and L. Brambilla P033 Epidemiological study on allergic contact dermatitis in Japan: patch test results of the products and related allergens A. Yagami and K. Matsunaga P048 Cutaneous reaction to a garment: unusual clinical presentation M. Pousa-Martinez, M. Rodriguez-Rodriguez, H. Vázquez-Veiga and V. Fernández-Redondo P034 Spectacle frame dermatitis caused by para-tert-butylphenol formaldehyde resin P. Mahendran and S. Wakelin P049 Nanotechnology and contact dermatitis: applications and implications C. Higgins, A. Barnard and R. Nixon P035 Cheilitis secondary to limonene contained in toothpaste D. Trokoudes and J. McFadden P050 Nickel, chromium and cobalt: the relevance of occupational and nonoccupational sensitization I. Duarte, R. Mendonca, K. Korkes, R. Lazzarini and M. Haufner P036 Estimating aggregate dermal exposure to preservatives for skin sensitization quantitative risk assessment P. Kern, S. Tozer, J. Rose, C. Ryan and C. O’Mahony P051 Classic (Mediterranean) Kaposi sarcoma associated with contact allergy to gold P. Pigatto, G. Guzzi and L. Brambilla P037 Metalyzer: a new device for metal ion release and colorimetric detection C.B. Olsen, M.S. Jellesen and J.P. Thyssen P052 Patch testing with the Indian standard series in patients with hand eczema V. Karthik, S. Ganguly and S. Kuruvila P038 Antiseptic contact dermatitis in children: not just chlorhexidine B. Milpied, A.-S. Darrigade, C. Labreze and F. Boralevi 78 79 P067 Asymmetric thiuram monosulfides in thiuram mix and in vulcanized rubber C. Persson and O. Bergendorff P054 Unusual case of allergic contact dermatitis to thimerosal following exposure to jet fuel S.P.R. Lim, H. Ochi and S.X. Lee P068 Thin-layer chromatography of oxidized para-phenylenediamine with and without the coupler resorcinol E. Young, E. Zimerson, M. Bruze and C. Svedman P055 Cross-hypersensitivity reactions or just concomitant reactions? Two case reports G. Suciu, M. Moisa, R. Andrei, M. Radu and S. Badulici P056 Histopathological characteristics of a patch test-positive group in patients with chronic eczema H.Y. Choi, J.Y. Byun, Y.-W. Choi and H.-J. Lee P057 The incidence of nail acrylate contact allergy in a tertiary referral patch test service N. Collier, A. Foulkes, V. Rajkomar and J. Williams P058 Occupational allergic contact dermatitis caused by 1-propanol in a hand disinfectant K. Politiek, H. Bosker, P.J. Coenraads, P. Flach and M.-L. Schuttelaar P059 Frequency of methylisothiazolinone and fragrance-related contact allergy in Argentina: a multicentre study J.P. Russo, A. Nardelli, M.L. Hinny and C. Consigli P060 Hair dye allergy: aspects of self-testing D. Basketter, C. Donovan, J. English, I. Folds, N. Plunkett and J. Williams P061 Preservatives in topical and domestic cleaning products available in Spain M.-A. Pastor-Nieto, M.-E. Gatica-Ortega, R. Pérez-Mesonero, V. MelgarMolero, F. Alcántara-Nicolás, M.-A. Vergara-Sánchez, P. González-Muñoz, A. Martín-Fuentes, R. Gil-Redondo and E. De Eusebio-Murillo P062 Japanese experience of an outbreak of leucoderma associated with allergic contact dermatitis from a lightening agent, Rhododenol K. Matsunaga, A. Yagami, K. Suzuki and A. Ito P063 A clinical study of 80 cases of Rhododenol-induced leucoderma Y. Masui, A. Ito, M. Ito and R. Abe P064 Cosmetics intolerance: the presence of facial and extrafacial lesions may be a marker of allergic contact dermatitis M.N. Hernández, F. Liuti and L. Borrego P065 Facial contact dermatitis with mixed mechanism caused by cosmetic products I. Solomon, R. Lutuc and L. Haiducu P066 Integrated testing strategies for nonanimal prediction of sensitization: what needs to be integrated and why? D. Roberts 80 Posters Posters P053 Changes in the patch test population over a 10-year period at the contact dermatitis clinic of a university-based tertiary care hospital in Thailand S. Phaitoonwattanakij and W. Boonchai P069 Assessment of cross-reactivity of new less-sensitizing epoxy resin monomers in epoxy resin-allergic individuals L. Hagvall, I.B. Niklasson, J. Rudbäck, N. O’Boyle, E. Niklasson, K. Luthman and A.-T. Karlberg P070 High concentrations of hexavalent chromium in cement samples from India K. Verma, E. Zimerson, M. Bruze, M. Engfeldt, C. Svedman and M. Isaksson P071 Contact sensitivity to essential oils in consecutive patients: results from North America and Central Europe W. Uter, J. Geier, NACDG members, K. Zug and E. Warshaw P072 Sensitization to the individual fragrances of Fragrance Mix I and Fragrance Mix II in Spain: a 5-year multicentre study (2011–2015) J.F. Silvestre, M. Hervella, P. Mercader, J. Sánchez-Pérez, A. Giménez-Arnau, F. Heras, J.C. Armario, R. González-Pérez, I. Ruiz, M.A. Pastor, E. Serra, J. Ortiz de Frutos and V. Fernández-Redondo P073 Trying to resolve some questions about how to study a patient with allergy to fragrances based on the results of a 5- year multicentric study in Spain J.F. Silvestre, J. García-Gavín, P. Sánchez-Pedreño, S. Córdoba, L. Borrego, T. Sanz, B. García-Bravo, E. Gómez de la Fuente, M.E. Gatica, J.M. Carrascosa, V. Zaragoza, D. Guimaraens and V. Fernández-Redondo P074 Allergyapp: 1-year experience and future aspects C. Avnstorp and J.P. Thyssen P075 Gallates, as well as hydroperoxides of limonene and linalool, are more frequent and relevant sensitizers than any cosmetic ingredient included in the European Baseline Series R. Spiewak, Z. Samochocki, E. Grubska-Suchanek, E. Czarnobilska, M. Pasnicki, M. Czarnecka-Operacz, M. Bukiel, A. Cisowska, K. JedrzejewskaJurga, A. Krakowski and B. Niklasson P076 Patch testing with the Swedish baseline series supplemented with a textile dye mix and gold in Vilnius, Lithuania and Malmö, Sweden L. Malinauskiene, M. Isaksson and M. Bruze P077 Tattooing and adverse reactions in adults from the general population R. Dybboe, A. Linneberg and J.D. Johansen 81 P079 Clinical study of 120 patients with perianal dermatitis A. Agulló, M. Hervella, S. Oscoz, M. Larrea, M.-Á. Ciga-Lozano, F. OteizaMartinez and I. Yanguas P080 Abstract withdrawn P081 Do the corticosteroids of the Spanish baselines series detect properly sensitization to the most used topical corticosteroids in Spain? P. Mercader-García, J.F. Silvestre-Salvador, E. Serra-Baldrich, L. BorregoHernando, P. Sanchez-Pedreño, S. Cordaba, B. García-Bravo, E. Gomez de la Fuente, M.E. Gática-Ortega, J.M. Carrascosa and M. Rodríguez-Serna P082 Hand eczema among hairdressing apprentices in Denmark following a nationwide prospective intervention programme: 6-year follow-up S.S. Steengaard, A. Bregnhøj and J.D. Johansen P083 Solving the puzzle of chronic hand eczema M. Hervella, M. Larrea, A. Agulló, M. Azcona and I. Yanguas P084 Eyelid dermatitis M. Hervella, M. Azcona, M. Larrea, A. Agulló, J. Mitxelena and I. Yanguas P085 Protocol for the translation and national validation of the Quality of Life in Hand Eczema Questionnaire (QOLHEQ) J.A.F. Oosterhaven, M.L.A. Schuttelaar, C. Apfelbacher, T.L. Diepgen and R.F. Ofenloch P086 Why study acute and recurrent vesicular hand dermatitis? M. Hervella, L. Loidi, M. Larrea, S. Oscoz and I. Yanguas P087 Portuguese Contact Dermatitis Study Group patch-tests results for 2014 F. Pereira, A.P. Cunha, A.R. Travassos, A. Baptista, C. Amaro, F. Brandão, H. Melo, I. Lobo, J. Parente, J. Rocha, L. Lobo, M. Dias, M. Gonçalo, M. Henrique, P. Serrano, R. Santos, R. Silva, R. Vieira, T. Correia and Teresa Pereira; on behalf of the Portuguese Contact Dermatitis Study Group P088 Prevalence of sickness presenteeism and associated reasons in patients with hand eczema in the Netherlands: a cross-sectional survey J.A.F. Oosterhaven, P.A. Flach, U. Bültmann and M.L.A. Schuttelaar P089 Patch results in Sweden 2010–2014 D. Byström and M. Lindberg; on the behalf of the Swedish Contact Dermatitis Research Group P090 Assisting workers with occupational skin disease return to work: program components, barriers and facilitators D. Linn Holness, P. Gmez, I. Kudla, J. DeKoven and S. Skotnicki 82 P091 Using health insurance administrative data to explore patch testing utilization in Ontario, Canada: an untapped resource V. Arrandale and D. Linn Holness Posters Posters P078 Sensitization to the most used corticosteroids in Spain: a prospective study. P. Mercader-García, J.F. Silvestre-Salvador, J. Sanchez-Perez, A.M. GimenezArnau, M. Hervella, V. Fernández-Redondo, J.C. Armario-Hita, B. Diaz-Ley, I. Ruiz-González, R. González-Pérez, M.A. Pastor-Nieto and D. Guimaraens P092 Occupational contact dermatitis in healthcare workers V, Pinheiro, A, Pinho, C, Pestana, I, Antunes and M. Gonçalo P093 Hand eczema and contact allergies in healthcare personnel N. Hamnerius, O. Bergendorff, M. Bruze, C. Svedman and A. Pontén P094 Hand eczema in healthcare workers: a questionnaire survey of risk factors and work-related exposures N. Hamnerius, O. Bergendorff, M. Bruze, C. Svedman and A. Pontén P095 Occupational allergic contact dermatitis in a Portuguese tertiary hospital: a 6-year review T. Pinto, L. Amaral, A.P. Cunha and F. Mautempo P096 Occupational skin diseases: patient management pathways in Europe. An analysis of the current state in 28 countries V. Mahler, Working Group 4 and all contributors at StanDerm2 P097 A new application for epoxy resins resulting in occupational contact dermatitis: the 3D printing industry K. Creytens and A. Goossens P098 Development of minimum standards on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of work-related and occupational skin diseases in Europe: COST Action TD1206 (StanDerm) J.H. Alfonso, A. Bauer, A. Barbaud, M. Bubas, L. Constandt, M.-N. Crepy, M. Goncalo, J. Macan, V. Mahler, D. Mijakoski, M. Jordan, J.M. Ramada, R. Thomas, P. Spring, W. Uter, M. Wilkinson, S.M. John and A.M. Gimenez-Arnau P099 Making a diagnosis of contact dermatitis in the occupational dermatology clinic P. Kasemsarn, A. Palmer and R. Nixon P100 Work-related contact allergy against preservatives A. Bauer P101 Situations at risk of occupational irritant contact dermatitis: new insights from the French National Network for Occupational Disease Surveillance and Prevention (RNV3P) L. Bensefa-Colas, M. Telle-Lamberton, S. Faye, M.-N. Crepy, G. Lasfargues and I. Momas P102 Prevalence and work-related risk factors for hand eczema in a Norwegian population H.K. Vindenes, C. Svanes, B.-E. Hollund, S.H.L. Lygre, A. Langhammer and R.J. Bertelsen 83 P104 Occupational hand eczema: factors predicting job change or job loss T. Caroee, N. Ebbehoej, J.P. Bonde and T. Agner P105 Ethylenediamine: an old problem in a new setting D. Dittmar, K. Politiek, P.J. Coenraads, P.A. Flach and M.L.A. Schuttelaar P106 Occupational relevance for contact dermatitis diagnosed in Buenos Aires and La Plata, Argentina: retrospective clinical data from 2011 to 2014 A.B. Cannavo, J.P. Russo, E.B. Kvitko, M.P. La Forgia, L. Infante and J.H. Alfonso P107 Implications of total protein and Hevb6 concentrations in latex medical gloves D. Hamann, K. Hamann, E. Sager, C. Hamann and C. Hamann P108 The Healthy Hands Project: effectiveness of a skincare programme for the prevention of contact dermatitis in healthcare workers M. Soltanipoor, J. Hines, J. Sluiter, S. Kezic and T. Rustemeyer P109 Feasibility of workplace screening for dermatitis in the hospital setting K. Nichol, J. Eriksson, R. Copes, K. Kersey and D. Linn Holness P110 Associations between profession, job exposures and severity of hand eczema J. Sørensen, M. Fisker, T.C. Carøe, N.E Ebbehøj and T. Agner P111 Airborne contact urticaria resulting from occupational exposure to sodium benzoate R. O’Connor, S. McCarthy, M. Murphy and J. Bourke P112 The SCIN (Skin Care Intervention in Nurses) trial: a cluster randomized trial I. Madan, V. Parsons, B. Cookson, J. English, T. Lavender, P. McCrone, C. Murphy, G. Ntani, L. Rushton, J. Smedley, H. Williams, A. Wright and D. Coggon P118 A novel approach to investigate whether hand eczema affects hand function H.M. Passlov, A. Pontén, J. Björk, B. Rosén, M. Bruze, C. Svedman and M. Isaksson Posters Posters P103 Work-related skin diseases in the Norwegian offshore sector: notification trends from 2000 to 2014 J.H. Alfonso and K.M. Suuronen P119 Ensuring the British Association of Dermatologists’ Contact Dermatitis Guidelines make the GRADE: a systematic approach to guideline development. G. Johnston, L. Exton, I. Coulson, J. English, J. Bourke and M.F. Mohd Mustapa2 P120 The benefits of preclerking patients for patch testing S. Nasir, S. Ramyead and P. Goldsmith P121 Patch testing with the Indian standard series of 20 allergens in 125 patients with chronic dermatitis and dermatoses B. Panambur and S. Kakkilaya P122 Omalizumab treatment of patients with recalcitrant chronic inducible urticarias E. Rozas-Muñoz, J. Spertino, J F M Bonafé, M. Sanchez-Martínez, L. Puig and E. Serra-Baldrich. P123 An investigation of optimum patch testing concentrations with isothiazolinone preservatives H. Kanto, T. Ito and K. Washizaki P124 Repeated monthly epicutaneous challenges with diphenylcyclopropenone result in a clinically reproducible level of contact allergy in de novo sensitized individuals K.F. Mose, F. Andersen, L. Skov, M. Røpke, P. Friedmann and K.E. Andersen P125 Piroxicam-induced fixed drug eruptions, confirmed by positive patch tests L. Gilissen, K. Creytens and A. Goossens P126 Shiitake dermatitis with features of dermal hypersensitivity O. Paes and S. Wakelin P113 Audit of current skin surveillance practice in London occupational health services C. Rathmalgoda, V. Mason, L. Curran and L. Batty P114 Occupational contact dermatitis among Lithuanian metalworkers K. Linauskiene, L. Malinauskiene and A. Blažiene P115 Oral lichen planus is associated with contact allergy K. Larsen, J.D. Johansen, J. Reibel and A.M.L. Pedersen P116 Hand eczema: quality of life and disease severity R. Santos, L. Igreja, T. Pereira and C. Brito P117 Comparison of petrolatum and aqueous vehicles for the detection of contact allergy to different formaldehyde releasers I. Hauksson, A. Pontén, M. Isaksson and M. Bruze 84 85 Gold Sponsored Symposium Stiefel – One year on: How are the ESCD guidelines for hand eczema informing practice? The RIFM Science Program Update Exchange Hall Thursday 15 September 10:15 – 11:00 Thursday 15 September 10:15 – 11:00 Welcome Exchange 9 Moderator Dr. Donald Belsito (Leonard C. Harber Professor of Dermatology, Columbia University Medical Center). 10:15 Anne Marie Api, Ph.D., Vice President, Human Health Sciences – An Overview of the RIFM Science Program 10:30 Ms. Devin O’Brien, M.S., Huma Health Research Assistant – Conducting Safety Assessments for Skin Sensitization 10:45 Rahul Parakhia, Ph.D., Human Health Sciences Dermatotoxicology – The RIFM Research Program for Skin Sensitization Myooran Nathan (Stiefel) One year on: Evaluating the ESCD guidelines for hand eczema - their aims and objectives – Thomas Diepgen (Germany), Co-chair Translating and implementing the ESCD guidelines into clinical practice: exploring the opportunities and challenges – Panelled discussion and voting session with audience, facilitated by Myooran Nathan Satellite Symposia Satellite Symposia Gold Sponsored Symposium Our commitment for the next year – John English (UK), Cochair This satellite symposium has been organised and fully funded by Stiefel, a GSK company. 86 This satellite symposium has been organised and fully funded by RIFM 87 Gold Sponsored Symposium Satellite Symposia Satellite Symposia Platinum Sponsored Symposium Smartpractice – Patch Testing - Is there a future? Exchange Hall Deb. 3 Moments of Skin Care – A new standard for occupational skin care Friday 16 September 10:15 – 11:00 best practice Exchange Hall Thursday 15 September 12:30 – 13:30 Chair S M John, University Osnabrück, Germany 12:30 Opening Remarks 12:35 Development of the 3 Moments of Skincare – Speaker: H I Maibach, University of California, USA We review the evidence for skin cream use in workplaces as a preventative measure. We conclude that 3 “universal” moments for skin care can be identified; when beginning a work period, after washing hands, at the end of a work period. We propose that simplified practical worker education based on these “universal” moments should be developed and implemented in order to encourage cream use where appropriate. 12:50 Speaker Dr Curt Hamann (Phoenix, USA) 10:15 – 11:00 There are not enough dermatologists, or dermatologists with adequate training to help diagnose and treat patients with allergic contact dermatitis. Other specialties are becoming involved in patch testing because of the vacuum created by dermatologist who opt for more lucrative cosmetic practices. Additionally, governments do not understand the benefits of a diagnostic solution compared to a lifetime of costly topical and oral palliative care. This talk will provide suggestions for ESCD members to help solve these challenges in their countries and get more patients the diagnosis they deserve. Driving Behaviour Change for Improved Skin Health – Speaker: J Hines, Deb Group, UK We present a scheme for implementation of a recommended universal skin care best practice in workplaces. Referencing established models for effective behaviour change, we consider essential elements for effective implementation including communication, measurement and regular feedback. 13:05 Clinical Validation and Practical Application – Speaker: T Rustemeyer, VU University Medical Center Amsterdam, Netherlands We will present early data & learnings from both clinical validation studies and practical application of the “3 Moments” universal skin care model. We will include consideration and review of both workers’ and change leaders’ experiences including what works well & what challenges are faced when implementing the programme. 13:20 Panel Q&A and Symposium Close 13:30 Close This satellite symposium has been organised and fully funded by Smartpractice This satellite symposium has been organised and fully funded by Deb. 88 89 Platinum Sponsored Symposium IDEA Unilever Exchange 9 Exchange Hall Friday 16 September 10:15 – 11:00 Friday 16 September 12:30 – 13:30 10:15 – 11:00 12:30 - 13:30 Tackling fragrance allergy: the IDEA project – Dr Ian White (London, UK) Dr Ian White, a past chair of the SCCS, is a member of the Supervisory Group, a small group of independent internationally recognized experts, responsible for the scientific aspects of the IDEA project. He has been involved in a number of the IDEA workshops. He will be presenting the progress of the IDEA programme and a vision for the future. Satellite Symposia Satellite Symposia Platinum Sponsored Symposium Improving skin allergy risk assessment: clinical practice meets basic science – Discussion facilitated by Nicola Gilmour, Ian Kimber, Gavin Maxwell & Jason Williams IDEA (the International Dialogue on the Evaluation of Allergens) is a multi-stakeholder project designed to address the issue of skin allergies from fragrance ingredients. The objective is to develop a scientifically sound, robust methodology for the risk assessment of fragrancies which will ensure a high level of consumer protection. This satellite symposium has been organised and fully funded by IDEA 90 This satellite symposium has been organised and fully funded by Unilever 91 Sponsors Exhibitors PLATINUM Albert Waeschle Alliance Pharmaceuticals Ltd Bayer Plc British Association of skin camouflage British Skin Foundation Chemotechnique Diagnostics Crawford Healthcare Limited GOLD DEB Group Ltd European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, EAACI Galderma Hisamitsu UK Ltd Johnson & Johnson NAOS Group UK SILVER Pern Consumer Products Ltd Peter Greven Physioderm SmartPractice Stiefel, A GSK Company T & R Derma Unilever SEAC 92 93 Exhibition Plan Key P1 – Deb Group Ltd P2 – Unilever SEAC G1 – Steifel, A GSK Company G3 – SmartPractice S3 – Hisamitsu UK Ltd 01 – Chemotechnique Diagnostics 02 – Crawford Healthcare Limited 03 – British Association of skin camouflage 04 – Albert Waeschle 05 – European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, EAACI 06 – NAOS Group UK 07 – Peter Greven Physioderm 08 – British Skin Foundation 09 – Pern Consumer Products Ltd 10 – Bayer Plc 11 – Johnson & Johnson 12 – Alliance Pharmaceuticals Ltd 13 – Galderma (UK) Ltd 14 – T & R Derma 94 95 Notes 96 Notes 97 Notes Map of Manchester 3 2 98 1 1 Manchester Central Convention Complex 2 MOSI – Welcome Reception Venue 3 Manchester Cathedral – Gala Dinner Venue 99 100