CME credits
The 15th EUROPEAN LUPUS MEETING, LISBON , Portugal 04/03/2026 – 07/03/2026, has been accredited by the European Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (EACCME®) with 13.0 European CME credits (ECMEC®s). Each medical specialist should claim only those hours of credit that he/she actually spent in the educational activity.
Through an agreement between the Union Européenne des Médecins Spécialistes and the American Medical Association, physicians may convert EACCME® credits to an equivalent number of AMA PRA Category 1 CreditsTM. Information on the process to convert EACCME® credit to AMA credit can be found at https://edhub.ama-assn.org/pages/applications
Live educational activities, occurring outside of Canada, recognised by the UEMS-EACCME® for ECMEC®s are deemed to be Accredited Group Learning Activities (Section 1) as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.
EACCME® credits
Each participant can only receive the number of credits he/she is entitled to according to his/her actual participation at the event once he/she has completed the feedback form. Cf. criteria 22 of UEMS 2023.07.
In order to help you issue individual certificates to each participant, please find below the breakdown of ECMEC®s per day:
Date Credit
04/03/2026 1.5
05/03/2026 5.5
06/03/2026 4.0
07/03/2026 2.0
The EACCME® awards ECMEC®s on the basis of 0,5 ECMEC® for 30 minutes of CME with a maximum of 8 ECMEC®s per day. cf. Chapter XIII of UEMS 2023.07.
CME Provider
AIM Education – Provider n. 93
Viale Forlanini, 23 – 20134 Milan, Italy
Tel. +39 02 56601.1
cme@aimgroup.eu
www.aimeducation.it


ng predictive models for diagnosis, treatment response, and long-term prognosis in SLE and LN.
My background in Medicine, Immunology and Genetics make a unique combination and provide me with the tools I need to successfully carry my projects. For nearly 30 years of my research career I focused in the identification of the genetic basis of SLE as a first building block towards understanding how genes lead to cellular abnormalities that eventually to clinical disease. A main goal of my research is to understand the mechanisms behind disease pathogenesis, identify new biomarkers for prediction of disease outcomes, flares and remission, and find new therapeutic targets, understanding the mechanisms of response and non-response to therapies, and define the heterogeneity of SLE. I am totally committed to the work for lupus, and I believe that only through careful longitudinal analysis of the patients, and proper molecular analyses, will we be able to advance our understanding of this disease. I am using systems biology approaches, -omics data integration and clustering, scRNASeq and other omics methods and bioinformatics approaches in my research. We use also animal models to study their similitudes with the human disease and the understanding of the function of lupus susceptibility genes. By coordinating large multicenter studies in Europe (PRECISESADS – 2014-2019, and 3TR – 2019-2026), I gained important experience in this and in the relationship with the pharmaceutical industry.
In the clinic, I lead the outpatient clinic for SLE patients and systemic connective tissue diseases, providing a renovated approach to their treatment strategies which refers to the latest treat-to-target perspective and optimized drug combination. Besides, I hold continuous multidisciplinary interactions with colleagues from other fields e.g. nephrologists and pulmonologists aimed at harmonizing the approach to our patients and at integrating the latest advancements in rheumatology to deliver the best possible care.