 
The Centers for Disease Control confirms there are 300,000 new cases of Lyme  disease diagnosed every year in the United States. In the continental US,  Pennsylvania is usually ranked as being first or second in the nation with the  most cases. In 2014, the State Senate unanimously passed legislation intended  to execute prevention, education and surveillance strategies for Lyme and other  tick-borne diseases. In light of this legislation, Drexel University College of  Medicine is teaming up with the International Lyme and  Associated Diseases Society (ILADS), and the PA Lyme Resource Network (PALRN) to host  a two-day conference. This conference brings together physicians and researchers  to discuss current and future treatment protocols and investigational research.
“ILADS  and Drexel are working as partners in this effort,” said Garth Ehrlich, PhD, professor in the  Departments of Microbiology & Immunology and Otolaryngology-Head and Neck  Surgery at Drexel University College of Medicine, and executive director of  Drexel’s Center for Advanced Microbial Processing and the Center for Genomic  Sciences, within the Institute for Molecular Medicine & Infectious Disease.  “This ILADS conference breaks new ground as it is the first such meeting to be  co-sponsored by a University. The goal is to bring frontline researchers  together with the clinical teams that are battling this complex disease that  can affect multiple organ systems, resulting in a constellation of  presentations from acute to chronic infections and from rapidly resolving  symptoms to recurrent exacerbations. Priorities will be to develop strategies  for improved diagnostics, treatments and vaccines.”
“This  conference will help educate doctors and researchers in the spirit of  Pennsylvania’s legislation and hopefully catalyze more options for patients in  preventing and treating these sometimes debilitating diseases,” said Julia  Wagner, MBA, president, PALRN.
The  keynote speaker, Judith Miklossy, MD, PhD, is a great example of this  groundbreaking research focus. Miklossy’s research studies the role of  pathogens in neurodegenerative disease, specifically Borrelia and Alzheimer’s. Miklossy  is director of the Alzheimer’s Prevention International Foundation and  International Alzheimer Research Center in Switzerland. “Topics will be  presented by top clinicians, and also international investigators sharing  breakthrough research on the chronic infections which can be associated with  Lyme and other diseases,” said Daniel Cameron, MD, MPH, president, ILADS.
In  addition to Ehrlich and Miklossy, other speakers include:
    - Peter Nara, DVM, PhD, CEO and co-founder of  Biological Mimetics, Inc.; former section chief  of Vaccine Resistant Diseases Section at the National Cancer Institute,  National Institutes of Health, former Endowed Eugene Lloyd Entrepreneurial Chair in  the College of Veterinary Medicine at Iowa State University; current adjunct  professor of Microbiology/Immunology, Carver College of Medicine, University of  Iowa.
- Daniel  Cameron, MD, MPH, president of ILADS; pioneer in the field of clinical  epidemiology in Lyme disease as an author of practice guidelines, analytic  reviews, and clinical trials.
- Sam Shor,  MD, associate clinical professor, George Washington University  Health Care Sciences and president-elect of ILADS.
- Eva Sapi,  PhD, associate professor and university research scholar at the  Department of Biology and Environmental Science at the University of New Haven,  where she teaches graduate biology courses and conducts Lyme disease research. 
The conference takes place on April 10 (1 – 9 p.m.) and April 11 (7:15 a.m. – 5:45  p.m.) at the College’s Center City Campus (245 N. 15th Street). More details on the  conference program and speakers are available at www.ilads.org. CME credit is  available (AMA-PRA, AAFP).