Translating Pre-Clinical Research to Clinical Patient Care™

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EUROPE 2018

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Short Courses

MSACL hosts a diverse offering of Short Courses.

Short Courses will occur over the first three days of MSACL (Sunday, Monday, Tuesday of September 9 - 11).

Courses are NOT replicated on different days. They are single courses that span multiple days.


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Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
Data Science
Data Science 101
Breaking up with Excel: An Introduction to the R Statistical Programming Language
Daniel Holmes, MD & William Slade, PhD
Mozart 5
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
Data Science 201
Going Further With R: Tackling Clinical Laboratory Data Manipulation and Modeling
Patrick Mathias, MD, PhD & Randall Julian, PhD
Mozart 4
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
Lab Medicine
Lab Medicine 101
Basics of Laboratory Medicine
Prof. Dr. med. Michael Vogeser
Mozart 3
Not
in
Session
Not
in
Session
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
STARTS <
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
LC-MS
LC-MSMS 101
Getting Started with Quantitative LC-MS/MS in the Diagnostic Laboratory
Judy Stone, PhD & Grace van der Gugten
Mozart 2
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
LC-MSMS 202
Practical LC-MS Maintenance and Troubleshooting
J. Will Thompson, PhD & Erik J. Soderblom, PhD
Paracelsus Hall
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
LC-MSMS 301
Development and Validation of Quantitative LC-MS/MS Assays for Use in Clinical Diagnostics
Russell Grant, PhD & Brian Rappold
Papageno Hall
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
Metabolomics
Metabolomics 202
Metabolomics: Approaches, Applications and Challenges
Julijana Ivanisevic, PhD & Elizabeth Want, PhD
Doppler Hall
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
Microbiology
Proteomic Microbiology 201
Bottom-Up and Top-Down Proteomic Approaches for Bacterial Identification and Characterization, a Focus on MALDI-TOF and Advanced Technologies
Jean Armengaud, PhD, Stefan Zimmermann, MD
Trapp Zimmer
Not
in
Session
Not
in
Session
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
STARTS <
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30
Proteomics
Proteomics 201
Clinical Proteomics
Cory Bystrom, PhD & Chris Shuford, PhD
Trakl Hall
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30


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Data Science 101 :: Breaking up with Excel: An Introduction to the R Statistical Programming Language


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Level:Beginner - Intermediate
Prerequisites:Knowledge of Excel; able to bring a laptop; able to pre-install software on their laptop...Namely: R and R-studio; willingness to break up with Excel.
Location:Mozart 5
Instructor(s):Daniel Holmes, MD & William Slade, PhD

Daniel Holmes, MD did his undergraduate degree in Chemical Physics from the University of Toronto with a focus on Quantum Mechanics. He went to medical school at the University of British Columbia (UBC) where he also did his residency in Medical Biochemistry. He is a Clinical Associate Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at UBC and Division Head of Clinical Chemistry at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver. Interests include laboratory medicine statistics, clinical endocrinology, clinical lipidology and clinical mass spectrometry. Assay development efforts in the last two years have focused on assays specialized endocrine testing.

William Slade, PhD did his undergraduate degree in Biology from Concord University with a focus on Recombinant Gene Technology. He completed a PhD in Biological Sciences at Virginia Tech with a focus on Biological Mass Spectrometry before postdoctoral work at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the Analytical Chemistry department. He is currently a Researcher in the Mass Spectrometry Research and Development group at Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings in Burlington, North Carolina. His interests include clinical mass spectrometry and informatics.

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: Have you ever tried to do Deming regression in Excel only to discover that it is not available? Have you had your figure rejected by a journal because the resolution was not good enough? Have you wished that you could figure out a way to stop manually transcribing your LC-MS/MS results into the LIS?

Well, your wait is over because this year at MSACL we will be offering a course for complete programming newbies that will help you get going analyzing real data related to LC-MS/MS assay development, validation, implementation and publication. The only background expected is the ability to use a spreadsheet program. The skills that you will acquire will allow you to take advantage of the many tools already available in the R language and thereafter, when you see that your spreadsheet program does not have the capabilities to do what you need, you will no longer have to burst into tears. You will be empowe-R-ed.

The course will be run over ~16 hrs and time will be evenly split between didactic sessions and hands-on problem solving with real data sets. The instructors will adopt a “no student left behind policy”. Students will be given ample time to solve mini problems taken from real life laboratory work and focused on common laboratory tasks. All attendees will need to bring a laptop with the R language installed R Studio interface installed. Students may use Windows, Mac OSX or Linux environments. Both R and R studio are free and open-source. No cash required.

Students should be prepared for learning what computer programming is really like. This may involve some personal frustration but it will be worth it.

Obtaining the Software

Instructions for installing the R language are here: http://cran.r-project.org/
Instructions for installing R Studio are here: http://www.rstudio.com/

Course Description

The course will cover:

  • The major types of R variables: vectors (numerical, character, logical), matrices, data frames and lists.
  • The important classes: numeric, character, list and changing between them
  • Importing data from Excel
  • Dealing with non-numeric instrument data: the “<10”s and “>1000”s.
  • Manipulating your data: sub-setting, which, match, sort, unique, cut
  • Simple statistical tests: mean, median, quantiles (normal ranges), t-tests, ANOVA, Wilcoxon.
  • Data merges: matching rows between sets
  • Exporting data to Excel-like format.
  • Regressions: Ordinary Least Squares,Passing Bablok, Deming, weighted regressions.
  • Non-linear regressions
  • Looping: Doing things repeatedly
  • Writing your own functions
  • Making highly customized graphs: scatter plots, regression lines, histograms, box plots, qq-plots
  • Putting it all together projects:
    • Preparing method comparison regression and Bland Altman plots
    • Preparing mass spectrometry data for upload to LIS.

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€80€96€120
Academic / Non-Profit€240€288€360
Commercial / Industry€400€480€600
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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Data Science 201 :: Going Further With R: Tackling Clinical Laboratory Data Manipulation and Modeling


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Level:Intermediate
Prerequisites:Completed “Breaking Up With Excel” and/or familiar with basic R concepts; able to bring a laptop; able to pre-install software on their laptop...Namely: R and R-studio
Location:Mozart 4
Instructor(s):Patrick Mathias, MD, PhD & Randall Julian, PhD

Patrick Mathias, MD, PhD, completed his undergraduate degree in Electrical Engineering at Duke University, followed by a master’s degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He then completed a MD degree and a PhD in Bioengineering from the University of Illinois, with a focus on nanophotonics and label-free biosensors. He completed residency training in Clinical Pathology as well as a Clinical Informatics fellowship at the University of Washington. He is currently the Associate Director of the Informatics division in the Department of Laboratory Medicine at the University of Washington. His clinical and research interests lie in improving electronic health record systems to improve ordering and interpretation of laboratory tests, developing infrastructure for novel analytical technologies in the clinical laboratory, and applying analytics to improve laboratory operations and clinical care at a population level.

Randy Julian, PhD, is Founder and CEO of Indigo BioAutomation located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Randy earned a Ph.D. in Chemistry from Purdue University in 1993 and then worked in Discovery Chemistry at Eli Lilly for 14 years. At Lilly Dr. Julian worked on natural product discovery, high throughput screening for RNA anti-viral compounds and researched methods for using proteomics to optimize drug candidates in animal models. Randy founded Indigo based on informatics technology developed during his time with Lilly. Indigo now provides laboratory data analysis software which uses machine intelligence to automatically analyze over 100 million sample results per month for every major clinical laboratory in the US. Dr. Julian is an active member of the clinical mass spectrometry community, teaches short courses in statistics, informatics and analytics. Randy is the past Chairman of the Human Proteome Organization’s Standards Initiative. He is the coauthor of two international standards for analytical data. He was also the chairman of the ASTM committee on mass spectrometry data standards. Dr. Julian maintains an active research relationship with the faculty at Purdue University where he is an Adjunct Professor of Chemistry.

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: Having completed your first steps into the wonderful world of data analysis with R, would you like to go further? You’ve learned the basics of R, so now it’s time to put that knowledge to work and tackle some interesting clinical applications. Along the way you will also be introduced to even more of capabilities of R and the tools developed by the amazing R community.

The course will be run over two days and time will be split between lecture sessions, individual problem solving, and a highly interactive group-level data mining of real data sets (there may even be prizes). Like the introductory course, this class will maintain the “no student left behind policy”. Students will be given time to solve problems taken from real life laboratory work and to do some more advanced analysis on large scale data sets. All attendees will need to bring a laptop with the R language installed and R Studio interface installed. Students may use Windows, Mac OSX or Linux environments. Both R and R studio are free (as in “Free Beer”) and open-source.

Students should be prepared continue to expand their skill in programming – which, as you learned in the introductory course can be a little frustrating, but not as frustrating as not being able to get the computer to do what you want at all!

Obtaining the Software

Instructions for installing the R language are here: http://cran.r-project.org/
Instructions for installing R Studio are here: http://www.rstudio.com/

Course Description

The course will cover:

  • Using the “Tidyverse”: a powerful collection of tools for working with R
  • Conceptual basis for keeping data “tidy”
  • Using the Import -> Tidy -> Transform -> Visualize -> Model -> Communicate pipeline
  • Parsing non-tabular data formats such as XML and JSON
  • Importing data from various sources including databases and web scraping
  • Data wrangling and tools for cleaning up data before attempting anything
  • Data visualization with the ggplot2 library
  • Functional programming concepts for efficient iteration (purrr’s map functions)
  • Fitting models which contain numeric and non-numeric data
  • Introduction to R-Markdown for report generation
  • Looping: Doing things repeatedly
  • Writing your own functions
  • Making highly customized graphs: scatter plots, regression lines, histograms, box plots, qq-plots
  • Putting it all together projects:
    • Preparing method comparison regression and Bland Altman plots
    • Preparing mass spectrometry data for upload to LIS.

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€80€96€120
Academic / Non-Profit€240€288€360
Commercial / Industry€400€480€600
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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Lab Medicine 101 :: Basics of Laboratory Medicine


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Level:Beginner
Prerequisites:None.
Location:Mozart 3
Instructor(s):Prof. Dr. med. Michael Vogeser

Dr. Michael Vogeser is specialist in Laboratory Medicine and senior physician at the Hospital of the University of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany (Institute of Laboratory Medicine). As an Associate Professor he is teaching Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine.The main scope of his scientific work isthe application of mass spectrometric technologies in routine clinical laboratory testing as translational diagnostics. Besides method development in therapeutic drug monitoring and endocrinology a further particular field of his work isquality and risk management in mass spectrometry and in clinical testing in general.Michael has published >150 articles in peer reviewed medical journals and is secretary of the German Association of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (DGKL) (2016 – 2019).

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
Not in Session Not in SessionLunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
STARTS <
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: This 8-hour course aims to make scientists familiar with the basic concepts of clinical pathology and laboratory medicine. Typical processes and workflows in the various categories of clinical laboratories are described and discussed. Topics that are addressed include in particular:

- Basic technologies (photometry, immunoassays, electrochemical methods, cytometry, immuno-fluorescence, etc.)

- Automation and working characteristics of analyzer configurations including total laboratory automation

-Concept of total testing process including pre- and post-analytical processes

- Performance characteristics

- Quality management

- Regulatory background

- Sample materials

- Clinical decision making, reference ranges, decision levels, diagnostic and clinical algorithms

- Logistics, sample transport

- Economic considerations

- Characteristics of IVD industry

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€60€72€90
Academic / Non-Profit€180€216€270
Commercial / Industry€300€360€450
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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LC-MSMS 101 :: Getting Started with Quantitative LC-MS/MS in the Diagnostic Laboratory


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Level:Beginner
Prerequisites:None.
Location:Mozart 2
Instructor(s):Judy Stone, PhD & Grace van der Gugten

Judy Stone, MT (ASCP), PhD, DABCC is Sr. Technical Specialist in the Mass Spectrometry Laboratory at the University of California, San Diego Health Center for Advanced Laboratory Medicine. Her research is focused on small molecule method development, interfacing and automation for clinical LC-MSMS. She was faculty chair for the 2009 AACC certificate program “Using Mass Spectrometry in the Clinical Laboratory” and she teaches a workshop at the annual AACC meeting on “Troubleshooting for LC-MSMS”.

Grace Van Der Gugten is LC-MS/MS Applications Development Specialist at St Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver BC. She is passionate about developing the most user friendly and streamlined LC-MS/MS assays as possible for routine use in the Special Chemistry Mass Spec Lab. She loves troubleshooting, especially when the cause of problem has been discovered and the issue solved!

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: Is your laboratory under pressure to purchase an LC-tandem MS or is the ROI you wrote last year haunting you now? This short course is designed for attendees implementing quantitative LC-tandem MS for patient testing who have laboratory medicine experience but no mass spectrometry training - CLS bench analysts, supervisors, R&D scientists, and laboratory directors. Theoretical concepts necessary for a robust implementation of clinical mass spectrometry will be presented – but the emphasis is on practical recommendations for:

  • LC-MS/MS system purchasing
  • site preparation and installation
  • defining preliminary MSMS and LC parameters for your first method
  • selecting and optimizing sample preparation for your first method
  • choosing internal standards, solvents, and water, making reagents and calibrators
  • adjusting sample preparation, LC and MSMS parameters to achieve the desired assay performance
  • establishing data analysis & review criteria and an interface to the LIS
  • pre-validation stress testing and method validation
  • preventative maintenance and troubleshooting
  • maintaining quality in production.

Our goal is to present just enough theory so you can report high quality results, while opening a window to the depth and complexity of clinical mass spectrometry such that your appetite is whetted to learn more.

Previous exposure to the principles of clinical method validation, either didactic or practical, is assumed. A glossary of common LC-MSMS terms/acronyms, and diagrams delineating basic LC and MSMS instrument components and functions will be emailed to attendees a week prior to the beginning of the course. This material will also be addressed at the beginning of the course, but the initial learning curve can be steep and review prior to the course will be beneficial if you have absolutely no previous exposure with LC-MSMS.

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€80€96€120
Academic / Non-Profit€240€288€360
Commercial / Industry€400€480€600
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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LC-MSMS 202 :: Practical LC-MS Maintenance and Troubleshooting


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Level:Intermediate
Prerequisites:Experience with LC-MS systems.
Location:Paracelsus Hall
Instructor(s):J. Will Thompson, PhD & Erik J. Soderblom, PhD

Will Thompson received his Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill under Professor James Jorgenson in 2006. Following his Ph.D. he pursued a career in the application of UHPLC with high resolution mass spectrometry in the Disease and Biomarker Proteomics group of Dr. Arthur Moseley at GlaxoSmithKline, leaving GSK in 2008 to join Dr. Moseley in establishing the Duke Proteomics Core Facility. Dr. Thompson is currently the Assistant Director of the Duke Proteomics and Metabolomics Shared Resource, and a Research Assistant Professor in Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology. His research interests involve improving the throughput and sensitivity of unbiased and targeted proteomics and metabolomics approaches, with an eye towards generating assays which are easily translatable to the diagnostic laboratory.

Erik J. Soderblom, PhD currently holds a joint appointment as a Research Scientist at Duke University’s Proteomics and Metabolomics Core Facility and as an Assistant Research Professor in Duke University’s Department of Cell Biology. He received a PhD in Molecular and Structural Biochemistry from North Carolina State University in 2008, prior to joining the Core Facility. His expertise lies in the utilization of various liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) platforms to support a wide variety of research efforts from small scale basic science studies to larger scale clinical proteomics studies. Dr. Soderblom has over 10 years’ experience in differential expression proteomics using single and multi-dimensional nanoscale capillary chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometers, targeted proteomic analysis using triple quadrupole mass spectrometers (MRM) or high-resolution mass spectrometers (PRM), and comprehensive analysis of post-translational modifications such as phosphorylation and acetylation. As part of his normal responsibilities, Dr. Soderblom is involved in routine maintenance and troubleshooting of both LC and MS components across various instrument platforms, including design and execution of system suitability analysis to assess platform performance over time.

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: The general goal of the course is to enable practitioners of LC-MS/MS in the clinical laboratory to quickly recognize and diagnose specific problems with instrumentation, in order to decrease downtime and cost of repairs. The course includes ‘best practices’ for instrumentation installation, upkeep and maintenance, practical troubleshooting workflows for LC and MS, and will use problem sessions to reinforce skillsets. Although the course uses examples from specific instrumentation for demonstration, the content is geared to be vendor-neutral and applicable to all LC-MS systems. Additionally, we will provide an opportunity to have instrumentation troubleshooting questions from your laboratory addressed by the facilitators.

Brief outline of course content:

  • General “Best Practices” for Successful LC/MS Operation
    1. Best Practices; Getting Started on the Right Foot
    2. Breaking the System Down
    3. System Suitability! What is it, and how do I properly implement?
  • Focus on Liquid Chromatography
    1. Diagnostics using the “heartbeat” of your Chromatographic system
    2. Key System components and where things go wrong
    3. LC troubleshooting workflow
    4. Maintenance Intervals; service contract or do-it-yourself?
    5. Problem sets
  • Focus on Mass Spectrometry
    1. Discussion of Source, Transfer Optics, Vacuum and how each is critical to your system
    2. MS Troubleshooting workflow
    3. Ion optics cleaning and upkeep; what is ‘charging’?
    4. Problem sets
  • Integrated System
    1. Ionization
    2. System Communications
    3. Multi-vendor configurations
    4. Strategies to simplify
    5. Integrated real-lab problem scenarios and team exercises

While some basics of instrument component operation will be covered, it will be most beneficial to scientists with experience actively using LC-MS/MS as an analysis tool. While an in-depth discussion of how to operate each individual instrument is surely outside the scope of any short course, specific system setups will be used as examples and attendees will be encouraged to ask questions about specific systems in their own laboratories.

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€80€96€120
Academic / Non-Profit€240€288€360
Commercial / Industry€400€480€600
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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LC-MSMS 301 :: Development and Validation of Quantitative LC-MS/MS Assays for Use in Clinical Diagnostics


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Level:Advanced
Prerequisites:The target audience should have extensive familiarity with LC-MS/MS systems.
Location:Papageno Hall
Instructor(s):Russell Grant, PhD & Brian Rappold

Russell Grant, PhD received his PhD in chromatographic and mass spectrometric technologies from Swansea University in 1995. He continued his scientific training in various industrial settings which have included: senior scientist at GSK, principal scientist at Cohesive Technologies, Technical Director at Eli Lilly and Director of Mass Spectrometry at Esoterix Endocrinology.

Dr. Grant has pioneered the use of direct injection technologies, chromatographic systems multiplexing, utility of automation and new analytical platforms for application in bioanalytical applications. His research goals are focused upon improvements in speed, sensitivity and quality of LC-MS/MS analytical systems and assays.

Brian Rappold is the Director of Mass Spectrometry at LabCorp. He is a renowned expert in the field of method development and validation of mass spectrometry assays for clinical diagnostic use, teaching courses on this subject at numerous scientific conferences. His extensive knowledge and clinical perspective has granted him several opportunities to present his research internationally on the topics of hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography for bio-analysis, multiplexed mass spectrometric detection of amino acidopathies and the origins and solutions of ion suppression in electrospray ionization. He currently serves as the chair of Clinical Chemistry for the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (ASMS) and has served on the Metabolomics and Small Molecule Analysis/Toxicology Scientific Committee for The Association for Mass Spectrometry: Applications to the Clinical Laboratory (MSACL). His research interests include the realization of open-access mass spectrometric systems and antibody-capture/mass spectrometry applications to diagnostic medicine.

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: This 16-hour course will briefly introduce the key aspects of the LC-MS/MS experimental workflow and then focus on processes and experimental designs for assay development and analytical validation of assays to be employed within clinical diagnostics.

The first day will describe method development in detail, including how-to guides for initial optimization of mass spectrometry systems, chromatographic development and sample preparation schemes. Techniques and technologies for streamlining analytical performance will also be described. Transitional experiments from development to validation will be discussed in detail to stress test methodologies prior to analytical validation.

Day two will cover all details pertinent in validation of LC-MS/MS analytical workflows. Experimental designs for all aspects of validation, putative acceptance criteria and analytical solutions will be shown. Key validation criteria of selectivity, carry-over, matrix effect, accuracy, precision, linearity, stability and inter-assay correlation will be described using multiple case studies.

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€80€96€120
Academic / Non-Profit€240€288€360
Commercial / Industry€400€480€600
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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Metabolomics 202 :: Metabolomics: Approaches, Applications and Challenges


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Level:Beginner to Intermediate
Prerequisites:LC/MS hands on experience.
Location:Doppler Hall
Instructor(s):Julijana Ivanisevic, PhD & Elizabeth Want, PhD

Julijana Ivanisevic, PhD is the head of the Metabolomics Research Platform (Senior Lecturer) at the Faculty of Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne. Her research expertise is in mass spec­trometry-based metabolomics applications to biomedical research (brain metabolism, ageing, cancer metabolism), evolutionary biology and ecology. Her postdoctoral research was at the Center for Metabolomics at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, USA.

Elizabeth Want, PhD is a Senior Lecturer in Molecular Spectroscopy in the Department of Surgery and Cancer at Imperial College, London and the Director of the Imperial International Phenome Training Centre. She joined Imperial College in 2006 after working as a postdoctoral researcher at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA. Her research at Imperial College involves the development, optimisation and application of LC-MS methodologies for the analysis of biological samples, largely in the context of metabolic phenotyping. She applies these methods to biomedical research areas including toxicology, cardiovascular disease, neonatal disease and development, and neurological diseases.

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview:

Metabolome: Downstream of Genome

  • Central Dogma of Molecular Biology – From Genotype to Metabotype
  • Historical Perspective of Metabolomics
  • Technological platforms (NMR, GC/MS, LC/MS) and Applications
  • OmicChallenge – Metabolite Diversity

Approaches in Metabolomics

  • Targeted versus Untargeted (work on the front end vs. work on the back end, instrumentation, etc.)
  • Experimental Design and Sample Preparation (depending on the approach)
  • Choice of Analytical Platform (depending on the approach and metabolites of interest)
  • OmicChallenge – « Big » Data Reduction

Data (Pre)Processing in Untargeted Experiments

  • Step by step from peak picking to peak grouping and annotation
  • Open-access platforms
  • Hands-on XCMS Online
  • Omic Challenge – Metabolite Identification

Statistical Analysis, Metabolite Identification and Mapping onto Pathways

  • Univariateversus Multivariate Statistics (SIMCA, MetaboAnalyst)
  • Metabolite Matching against Metabolite Databases (METLIN, HMDB, LIPIDMAPS, MassBank)
  • Metabolite Set Enrichement Analysis and Network Modeling (MetaboAnalyst, KEGG, BioCyc, Mummichog, Ingenuity)
  • Omic Challenge – Integration with other Omic Technologies in a Biologically Relevant Context

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€80€96€120
Academic / Non-Profit€240€288€360
Commercial / Industry€400€480€600
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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Proteomic Microbiology 201 :: Bottom-Up and Top-Down Proteomic Approaches for Bacterial Identification and Characterization, a Focus on MALDI-TOF and Advanced Technologies


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Level:Beginner - Intermediate
Prerequisites:None.
Location:Trapp Zimmer
Instructor(s):Jean Armengaud, PhD, Stefan Zimmermann, MD

Jean Armengaud, PhD is best known for his work on proteogenomics of bacteria and the characterization of pathogens and radiotolerant organisms. He directs a mass spectrometry research unit located near Avignon in France that is dedicated to proteomics-based identification and quantitation of pathogens and environmentally relevant bacteria.

Stefan Zimmermann, MDis head of the division bacteriology at the department of infectious disease (University Hospital Heidelberg). He uses mass spectrometry for identification of bacteria and fungi in the routine workflow of the lab for up to ten years. He is interested in MS applications beyond identification, like antibiotic susceptibility testing and subtyping of pathogens.

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
Not in Session Not in SessionLunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
STARTS <
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: This course will present an overview of bottom-up and top-down techniques for microbial identification using mass spectrometry-based technologies as well as their use in determination of microbial characteristics such as antibiotic resistance profiles. Topics to be discussed include:

  • Comparison of bottom-up versus top-down proteomic approaches,
  • Why top down proteomics is well-suited for microbial identification and characterization,
  • Discrimination of closely related strains by top-down proteomics approaches.,
  • Collection and interpretation of MALDI-TOF data,
  • Proteogenomics as a means for improving annotations based on genomic sequence analysis and its use in identification of key protein markers in MALDI-TOF spectra.
  • The concept of proteoforms as a means of categorizing the PTM states of proteins.
  • The application of these techniques and technologies to antibiotic resistance determination,
  • Novel methodologies that are currently emerging for the analysis of difficult samples, such as mixtures of pathogens and spores present within complex matrices.
  • Recent advances for pathogen quantitation by tandem mass spectrometry.
  • Use of MALDI-TOF for identification of viruses, molds and parasites.

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€60€72€90
Academic / Non-Profit€180€216€270
Commercial / Industry€300€360€450
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.


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Proteomics 201 :: Clinical Proteomics


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Level:Intermediate - Advanced
Prerequisites:Practical knowledge of quantitative mass spectrometry.
Location:Trakl Hall
Instructor(s):Cory Bystrom, PhD & Chris Shuford, PhD

Dr. Cory Bystrom serves as Director of Research and Development at Cleveland HeartLab where he is responsible for novel biomarker identification, validation and commercialization with an emphasis on quantitative biological mass spectrometry. Dr. Bystrom has over a decade of experience as a laboratory leader and chemist. Prior to joining CHL, he was at Quest Diagnostics Nichols Institute as associate director of research and development with responsibilities for development of tests and identification of analytical strategies for commercialization of new biomarkers. He also has held research and development roles at Oregon Health Science University, Fonterra, and Pharmacia and Upjohn.

Chris Shuford, Ph.D., is Technical Director for research and development at LabCorp’s Center for Esoteric Testing in Burlington, North Carolina. Chris received his B.S. in Chemistry & Physics at Longwood University and obtained his Ph.D. in Bioanalytical Chemistry from North Carolina State University under the tutelage of Professor David Muddiman, where his research focused on applications of nano-flow chromatography (<500 nL/min) for multiplexed peptide quantification using protein cleavage coupled with isotope dilution mass spectrometry (PC-IDMS). In 2012, Chris joined LabCorp’s research and development team where his efforts have focused on development of high-flow chromatographic methods (>1 mL/min) for multiplexed and single protein assays for clinical application.

Course Contact Hours
Sunday PM Monday AM Lunch Monday PM Tuesday AM
STARTS <
Sunday
14:00-18:00
Monday
9:00-13:00
Lunch
Monday
13:00-14:00
Monday
14:00-18:00
> ENDS
Tuesday
9:00-12:30

Overview: This course will explore the background of clinical proteomics and approaches to method development and validation. We will provide the motivation for using mass spectrometry to quantify proteins in clinical research and in clinical care. The promise of mass spectrometry to improve the accuracy and precision of results is only realized with robust methods. In order to prepare participants to begin to develop their own robust methods for quantification we will focus on the following topics:

  • Why mass spec for peptides and proteins
  • Optimization of digestion and other aspects of the method
  • Internal standards
  • Calibration
  • Immunoaffinity enrichment
  • Validation
  • Quality control
  • Case studies

EarlyBird
Deadline
Jul 11, 2018
Regular
Deadline
Aug 01, 2018
After
Aug 01, 2018
Student / Post-Doc (Trainee)€80€96€120
Academic / Non-Profit€240€288€360
Commercial / Industry€400€480€600
*Short Course Registration is separate from Conference Registration.