Functional Renal Imaging: Where Physiology, Nephrology, Radiology and Physics Meet
Dear colleagues and friends,
this symposium is designed to bring together scientists and clinicians from several disciplines, in a unique attempt to shape the future of renal functional imaging. It will provide an overview of cutting edge clinical and pre-clinical renal imaging techniques, and explore the clinical relevance of renal imaging, the future directions of renal functional MR, and the harmonization of these approaches with clinical applications.
We aim to provide a platform for fruitful engagement with colleagues and peers, and to foster the development of local, national and international collaborations to explore multi-disciplinary imaging approaches. The symposium is tailored to attract basic scientists, clinical scientists and clinicians from physiology, nephrology, radiology, internal medicine and related fields, as well as experts in imaging sciences and physics from all levels, ranging from students to advanced users and international experts. It is a symposium from the community for the community.
The scientific program comprises 13 sessions, covering a wide spectrum of renal physiology and pathologies, invasive quantitative approaches, optical imaging techniques, photoacoustic imaging and MR imaging. We are honored to present an array of outstanding international speakers including first class basic scientists, technology leaders and distinguished clinical experts. Focused sessions will provide deeper explanations into the most pressing imaging needs from the clinical perspective, and highlight the potential of renal imaging for the assessment of renal physiology, and the challenges en route to broader clinical applications.
Industry experts will present the current capabilities of functional MRI of the kidney, and outline the emergence of future renal MR imaging techniques. We aim to bridge disciplinary boundaries, and to engage the creativity and drive of the renal imaging community to solve the remaining challenges and overcome the barriers standing in the way of addressing unmet clinical objectives with renal functional imaging.
Poster sessions will run in parallel with the scientific program. We will also include multiple timeslots for poster power presentations, in order to bring to the attention of the audience a large number of poster presenters. Contributions of posters are strongly encouraged, and the best posters and poster power presentations, as judged by the audience, will receive an award.
We warmly invite you to join us for the 2nd International Symposium on Functional Renal Imaging in Berlin. Please save the date. A visit to Berlin is always worth it. Alongside the dynamic scientific landscape, Berlin has numerous historical landmarks, cultural highlights and sport events to offer.
We eagerly look forward to your participation. Be there – be Berlin!
- Previous meeting: 1st international meeting on renal MRI
- Next meeting: 3rd international meeting on renal MRI
Abstracts and registration
Every registered participant is invited to submit one or several abstracts for poster presentations. Abstracts may be composed of a text with a maximum length of 650 words and up to 3 figures. The deadline for abstract submission is 27 August, 2017.
The abstract submission deadline has been extended until 4 September, 10:00 a.m. (Central European Summer Time).
At the symposium a board will be assigned to each poster presenter to display their poster. The poster should have A0 size in portrait format (poster display dimension 100 cm wide x 120 cm high).
During the symposium there will be several Power Poster sessions that will give a large number of poster presenters the opportunity to showcase their work in a 3-minute oral presentation. We are looking forward to your poster contributions, which will be all considered for the symposium’s poster price contest.
Please be aware that you have to register for the symposium before you will be able to submit an abstract.
If you have any questions, please directly contact us: renalsymp@mdc-berlin.de.
Venue
MDC.C Axon 1+2
Zeit
Catering
Lunch break
Coffee break
Social Event: Museum of Natural History
Program
Scientific Program
Day 1
Wednesday 11 October 2017
- Download presentations (ZIP, 1.8 GB) (password required)
- Download selected presentations (password required)
Introduction
10:30 |
Welcome & objectives of meeting |
10:40 |
The PARENCHIMA initiative: Aims and roadmap |
Renal Physiology
10:55 |
Renal physiology: Urine formation and salt-water balance |
11:15 |
Renal physiology: Renal oxygenation |
11:35 |
Renal physiology: Regulation of intrarenal oxygenation |
11:55 |
Renal physiology: Regulation of renal perfusion |
12:15 |
Light lunch (posters) |
Renal Diseases & Pathophysiology - Part I
13:00 |
Nephrological perspectives: Acute kidney injury (AKI) |
13:20 |
Nephrological perspectives: Diabetic nephropathy |
13:40 |
Nephrological perspectives: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) |
14:00 |
The link between Cardiac and renal diseases |
14:20 |
Modelling renal pathophysiology: Promises and challenges of animal models |
Renal MR Imaging Methods
14:40 |
Fibrosis and microstructure: T1 relaxation, apparent diffusion, diffusion tensor imaging |
15:00 |
Oxygenation and blood volume: T2/T2* relaxation, BOLD, iron oxide enhancement Andreas Pohlmann – Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, Berlin, Germany |
15:20 |
Perfusion and filtration: arterial spin labeling, dynamic contrast enhancement |
15:40 |
Molecular imaging: Hyperpolarisation, magnetization transfer, CEST |
16:00 |
Coffee break (posters) |
(Minimally) Invasive Quantitative Measurements
16:30 |
The physiologists tool kit: Quantitative invasive probes |
16:50 |
Renal optical methods: Near infrared spectroscopy |
17:10 |
Renal optical methods: Hyperspectral imaging |
17:30 |
Renal optical methods: Phosphorimetric pO2 measurement |
17:50 |
Renal optical methods: Optoacoustic renal imaging |
18:30 |
Management committee meeting of the COST action PARENCHIMA |
Day 2
Thursday 12 October 2017
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Insights Into Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI
09:00 |
What DCE MRI can(not) tell us about renal pathophysiology |
09:20 |
Current challenges for using renal DCE MRI in the clinic |
Insights Into Arterial Spin Labelling MRI
09:40 |
What ASL MRI can(not) tell us about renal pathophysiology |
10:00 |
Current challenges for using renal ASL MRI in the clinic María Fernández Seara – Universidad de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain |
10:20 |
Coffee break (posters) |
Renal Diseases & Pathophysiology - Part II
11:00 |
A pharmaceutical industry’s perspective on how renal imaging can enrich clinical trials |
11:20 |
What does the nephrologist expect from functional renal imaging |
11:40 |
What does the pathophysiologist expect from functional renal imaging |
12:00 |
What does the radiologist expect from functional renal imaging Iosif Mendichovszky, Cambridge University Hospitals, UK |
12:20 |
What does an expert radiographer expect from renal imaging |
12:40 |
Lunch break (posters) |
Insights Into Oxygenation MR Imaging
14:10 |
What oxygen sensitive MRI can(not) tell us about renal pathophysiology |
14:30 |
Current challenges for using renal BOLD MRI in the clinic |
Renal Power 1 - Clinical Research
(13 presentations of 3 min each)
14:50 |
Acute pyelonephritis in children: Diagnostics and comparison of two methods – static renal scintigraphy and MR imaging |
Role of image and clinical-based biomarkers in renal transplant assessment |
|
The effect of enhancing spatial resolution in non-contrast enhanced renal MR angiography |
|
Reference method for measurement of total renal function - estimated versus measured GFR |
|
The cortico-medullary ADC difference reduces inter-system variability in renal diffusion-weighted imaging |
|
Feasibility study of diffusion tensor imaging of the kidneys in freely breathing infants with pyelonephritis |
|
Validation of single-kidney glomerular filtration rate measurement with dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI |
|
Repeatibility of renal BOLD MRI |
|
Feasibility of renal ASL in a pediatric cohort with impaired renal function |
|
Kidney fibrosis assessment: T1rho and DCE permeability study |
|
A pilot, multi-vendor comparison of multi-echo gradient-echo acquisitions for BOLD imaging in the kidney |
|
Diffusion weighted MR imaging to investigate response to therapy: A case report |
|
Variability reduction in renal diffusion-weighted MR imaging with motion compensation |
Renal Power 2 - Experimental Research
(7 presentations of 3 min each)
15:35 |
The renal effect of anesthesia on the functional and metabolic phenotype in rats |
Simultaneous assessment of kidney perfusion and pH in an acute kidney injury murine model exploiting a dynamic CEST-MRI approach |
|
Assessment of metabolism in early renal ischemia/reperfusion injury using hyperpolarized 13C-pyruvate |
|
Measuring renal oxygenation in a mouse model of volume-dependent hypertension using BOLD MRI |
|
Quadrature birdcage RF coil for renal sodium (23Na) imaging in rodents at 9.4 T: Initial results |
|
Noninvasive evaluation of renal pH homeostasis after ischemia reperfusion injury by CEST-MRI pH mapping |
|
Diffusion-weighted split-echo RARE imaging free of geometric distortion for renal MRI at ultrahigh fields |
16:00 |
Poster session (coffee break) |
Insights Into Diffusion MR Imaging
16:50 |
What diffusion MRI can(not) tell us about renal pathophysiology |
17:10 |
Current challenges for using renal diffusion MRI in the clinic |
Social Event
19:00 |
Social Event |
Day 3
Friday 13 October 2017
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Insights Into Emerging MR Technologies
09:00 |
Susceptibility MR: Better and bolder than BOLD |
09:20 |
Sodium MR is worth its salt! |
Renal Power 3 - Multiparametric Studies
(9 presentations of 3 min each)
09:40 |
Assessment of renal stiffness in IgA nephropathy using multifrequency MRE compared to DWI and BOLD |
|
Multiparametric kidney MR imaging to identify novel markers of disease progression in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease |
|
Molecular DCE MRI with high and low temporal resolution, using bimodal AGulX contrast agents and multiparametric MRI in a murine UUO model |
|
Multiparametric MRI of renal transplant: Preliminary comparison of advanced MRI parameters in patients with functional and fibrotic renal allografts |
|
MR imaging to assess the pathophysiology of acute kidney injury |
|
Hyperpolarized [13C,15N2]urea: A novel renal O2 saturation biomarker in acute kidney injury? |
|
Non invasive MRI of renal physiology |
|
Multiparametric assessment of chronic kidney disease |
|
Evaluation of fibrosis models using 1H T1 mapping and slow component T2 23Na |
Renal Power 4 - Segmentation & Modelling
(5 presentations of 3 min each)
10:10 |
Novel strategy for contrast-free MR angiography of arteriovenous fistulae for hemodialysis |
|
Semi-automated kidney delineation on BOLD images using k-means clustering of R2* signal decay |
|
Fully automatic kidney segmentation in abdominal MR imaging using random forests (RFs) |
|
The influence of hydration status of kidney volume and cyst measurements |
|
Fast semi-supervised segmentation of the kidneys in DCE-MRI using convolutional neural networks and transfer learning |
10:30 | Poster session (coffee break) |
The Industry's Perspective
11:10 |
Renal imaging in pharmaceutical research: Investigating glomerular pathophysiology using micro-CT |
11:30 |
State-of-the-art and future directions in preclinical abdominal MRI |
11:50 |
Clinical MRI of the kidneys – Today and tomorrow |
Looking Beyond The Horizon
12:10 |
Improving diagnostic accuracy and treatment of renal diseases with computational models |
12:30 |
Predictive analytics and machine learning for advancing renal diagnostics and therapies |
12:50 |
Practical challenges of multi-center studies and clinical renal imaging trials |
13:10 |
Adjourn (symposium) |
13:20 |
Lunch break |
Working Group Meetings organized by COST action PARENCHIMA
Plenary session
14:00 |
Introduction: Organization of the WG meeting |
14:05 |
Working Group 1 pitch: objectives, progress, task forces, questions |
14:20 |
Working Group 2 pitch: objectives, progress, task forces, questions |
14:35 |
Working Group 3 pitch: objectives, progress, task forces, questions |
14:50 |
Working Group 4 pitch: objectives, progress, task forces, questions |
15:05 |
Working Group 5 pitch: objectives, progress, task forces, questions |
Working Group Meetings organized by COST action PARENCHIMA
Breakout sessions
15:30 |
Working Group 1: Improving the reproducibility and standardization of renal MRI |
15:30 |
Working Group 2: Development of a renal MRI open-access toolbox with software & data |
15:30 |
Working Group 3: Multi-centre clinical trial Lead: Anna Caroli, IRCCS – Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Ranica – Bergamo, Italy |
15:30 |
Working Group 4: Development of a training program on renal MRI for basic scientists and clinical users |
16:30 |
Reporting: Roles, planning, milestones, STSMs |
17:15 |
Internal sum up per Working Group |
17:30 |
Adjourn |
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- Download selected presentations (password required)
Fees
Regular fee
- Early (until 28.07.17): 300 €
- Late (until 29.09.17): 400 €
- On-site: 450 €
Student fee (incl. PhD students)
- Early (until 28.07.17): 150 €
- Late (until 29.09.17): 190 €
- On-site: 200 €
Day ticket
- Per day: 200 €
Organisator*innen
Andreas Pohlmann (MDC)
Erdmann Seeliger (Charité)
Dirk Grosenick (PTB)
Sonia Waiczies (MDC)
Kathleen Cantow (Charité)
Pontus Persson (Charité)
Thoralf Niendorf (MDC)
Co-organizers
This symposium is co-organized by the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) action 'MRI Biomarkers for Chronic Kidney Disease' (PARENCHIMA, CA16103).
Contact
Rosita Knispel
phone: +49 30 9406 4505
Lien-Georgina Dettmann
phone: +49 30 9406 2719