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AST Fellows Symposium on Transplantation Medicine 2008
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Agreement
By completing this form, you attest that you have attended the activity in its entirety.

Please rate the following: 

 

   Overall quality of the meeting

   The program was relevant to my work

   Content matched stated objectives

   Usefulness of handouts/AV

PRIOR to attending this meeting how confident did you feel that you understood the key concepts listed below.
The basic immunology of solid organ transplantation including T-cell and B-cell recognition of alloantigens, signaling pathways involved in lymphocyte activation potential targets for therapy, and the pathologic manifestations of rejection in solid organ transplants.

The mechanisms by which cellular and/or humoral immunity and inflammation damages transplanted kidneys, pancreas, livers, hearts and lungs.

The factors that contribute to the development of chronic allograft injury including in non-renal solid organs.

Approaches to induction tolerance.

The process of tissue-typing and cross-matching.

Current organ allocation policies and controversies.

Surgical complications of organ transplantation.

The principles of modern immunosuppression.

The long-term complications of immunosuppressive therapy.

The perioperative management of kidney, liver, pancreas, heart and lung transplant recipients.

Emerging factors that contribute to the development or research interests in transplantation.

Approaches to tolerance induction.

Tissue-typing and cross-matching techniques.

AFTER attending this meeting how confident do you feel that you understand the key concepts listed below.
The basic immunology of solid organ transplantation including T-cell and B-cell recognition of alloantigens, signaling pathways involved in lymphocyte activation potential targets for therapy, and the pathologic manifestations of rejection in solid organ transplants.

The mechanisms by which cellular and/or humoral immunity and inflammation damages transplanted kidneys, pancreas, livers, hearts and lungs.

The factors that contribute to the development of chronic allograft injury including in non-renal solid organs.

Approaches to induction tolerance.

The process of tissue-typing and cross-matching.

Current organ allocation policies and controversies.

Surgical complications of organ transplantation.

The principles of modern immunosuppression.

The long-term complications of immunosuppressive therapy.

The perioperative management of kidney, liver, pancreas, heart and lung transplant recipients.

Emerging factors that contribute to the development or research interests in transplantation.

Approaches to tolerance induction.

Tissue-typing and cross-matching techniques.

What did you learn during this activity that you intend to integrate into your practice?

What barriers might you have that would interfere with implementation of new information learned from this training?

How can this training be improved to impact your competence or practice?

Please list any educational needs/topics you would like to see addressed in future meetings.

Additional comments:

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