| Expanding 
            Horizons in PDT
 Chair: Mohammad Azab
 Over 
              the past several years, extensive research has been conducted to 
              evaluate photodynamic therapy for treatment of conditions in oncology, 
              ophthalmology, autoimmunity and cardiology. This symposium is designed 
              to acquaint PDT researchers and practitioners from a broad spectrum 
              of fields with the wide-ranging research and development efforts 
              that have been undertaken using verteporfin and other photosensitizers. 
               Dr. 
              Mohammad Azab, MD and Senior Vice-President, Clinical Research and 
              Medical Affairs for QLT will chair this symposium, during which 
              a panel of distinguished physicians and scientists will present 
              information on preclinical and clinical studies that have recently 
              been conducted within these four areas.  The 
              presentation agenda is as follows:.  16:00 
              – 16:30 Michael J. Potter, MD – Visudyne™ Therapy for the Treatment of Classic 
              and Occult Choroidal Neovascularization in Age-related Macular Degeneration
 The wet form of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the 
              leading cause of legal blindness in people over the age of 50 in 
              the Western world. Results from the TAP and VIP studies have demonstrated 
              a significant treatment effect for verteporfin therapy in patients 
              with predominantly classic and occult CNV lesions. Two year follow-up 
              from both trials will be presented.
 16:30 
              – 16:50David Saperstein, MD – Clinical Trials Using Visudyne™ Therapy for 
              Choroidal Neovascularization Secondary to Pathologic Myopia (VIP 
              - PM Trial) and Ocular Histoplasmosis Syndrome (VOH Trial)
 In this session, the effects on visual acuity of patients with subfoveal 
              choroidal neovascular membranes (CNV) in pathologic myopia (PM) 
              and ocular histoplasmosis syndrome (OHS) who were treated with verteporfin 
              will be presented.
  
              16:50 – 17:05Sandra Gollnick, PhD – Photodynamic Vaccination: Review and Data 
              Presentation
 One of the potential advantages of photodynamic therapy over 
              other types of cancer treatment is its ability to enhance the host 
              anti-tumor immune response. Studies that have sought to exploit 
              the ability of PDT to enhance tumor immunogenicity by using PDT-generated 
              tumor cell lysates as tumor vaccines have shown that PDT vaccines 
              are effective at suppressing subsequent tumor growth via the generation 
              of tumor specific T-cells.
 17:05 
              – 17:20 Nancy Oleinick, PhD – PDT in Signal Modulation and Apoptosis: Review 
              and Data Presentation
 Photodynamic therapy produces localized oxidative damage in cells 
              at or near the intracellular site of photosensitizer binding, resulting 
              in oxidative stress that is highly efficient at activating cellular 
              signaling pathways and prompt apoptosis. This presentation will 
              review the evidence for the intersection of constitutive and PDT-regulated 
              pathways in PDT-induced apoptosis.
 17:20 
              – 17:30 Philippe Margaron, PhD – Review of PDT in Cardiovascular Medicine
 Researchers have explored photodynamic therapy as a modali-ty 
              for the reduction and stabilization of atherosclerotic plaques and 
              the inhibition of intimal hyperplasia, and a number of clinical 
              trials are underway. This presentation will first summarize the 
              scientific rationales for PDT in cardiovascular applications before 
              reviewing the approaches being investigated today by the groups 
              actively working in this field.
 17:30 
              – 17:40 Harvey Lui, MD – Review of Verteporfin PDT in Skin Cancer
 Historically PDT was first used for treating patients with skin 
              tumors, and this has been the case with verteporfin as well. Early 
              studies of patients with non-melanoma skin cancer confirmed the 
              short duration of systemic photosensitivity with verteporfin, while 
              demonstrating the potential for effective control of primary and 
              metastatic skin tumors. More recent studies have been designed to 
              explore the role of verteporfin-based PDT in patients with multiple 
              skin tumors in terms of both tumor eradication and cosmetic outcome.
 17:40 
              – 18:00 Q & A
 
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