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7a 54b 10297e
Your Microbes and Mental Health
Your brain and your digestive system are intricately linked. They interact so closely that some say theyshould be taken as one system. The link is the vagus nerve, a direct neuronal connection between the gutand the brain. It turns out the gut can bidirectionally communicate with the brain via the vagus nerve,known as the gut–brain axis.
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Page 2 of 3
labroots
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THE LAB
Unable to find a lab that runs this test in the greater Louisville area, UofL is now sending out its
tests to a lab in a neighboring state—Tennessee, to be exact.
“The HPV test alone, for a certain group of women, is a [more] sensitive method of getting the
correct snapshot on that patient’s cervical health than a combination of other tests,” such as
doing a Pap and a co-test says board-certified cytopathologist Bradly D. Clark, MD, medical
director, Women’s Health Laboratories, Poplar Healthcare/Women’s Health Laboratories,
Memphis, Tenn. “It’s very efficient in its design in that you just do one test and have a better
sensitivity than you would by doing cytology.”
The primary HPV screening tool, developed by Roche and performed on its cobas molecular
platform, was approved for FDA use in early 2014. This screening method looks for presence
of HPV nucleic acid in patients 25 years or older. Fourteen subtypes of high-risk HPV are
detected. The two subtypes known to play the largest role in cervical dysplasia—HPV 16 and
HPV 18—are discerned by the cobas method. Simultaneously, the cobas system also provides
pooled-results detection of twelve other high-risk subtypes. The molecular testing uses a small
portion of the liquid-based ThinPrep Pap test, which is standard in many provider settings.
In this new screening scheme, a patient who is negative for the HPV screen is placed on the
provider’s standard screening interval(s). A patient who is found positive for either HPV 16 or
HPV 18 is immediately referred to colposcopy. For the patient who is positive for the pooled
HPV 12 subtypes, a Pap slide is prepared and reviewed by the cytology department. The next
steps for that patient are driven by the reading of that slide. “In this new setting, a negative
cobas HPV primary screening test provides about twice the reassurance for a patient they’re
not going to develop a high-grade lesion in the next three years,” Clark says.
The medical profession, using cytology-based screening, has done a fantastic job of reducing
the amount of cervical dysplasia, Clark notes. “But we’re up against technology now, since
cytology has limitations,” he says. “Instead of co-testing [Pap slide plus HPV test], why can’t we
just shortcut the entire method? Start, instead, with just an HPV test.”
Pap screening schemes have seen several iterations in the past generation. First, we saw the
yearly Pap. Then came the attenuated interval, which spaced the Paps between every three
to five years, depending on the age of the patient. Yet another iteration was addition of co-test
(HPV test) to negative Pap test for patients 30 years or older.
For patients who are infected with a high-risk HPV, it generally it takes several years for it to
develop into something serious, such as a high-grade lesion or worse, into cancer. “So, if you
have that extended period of time, why would you Pap on a yearly basis?” Clark says. “This
rational Pap testing interval for patients 25 years or older, uses a more sensitive method versus
the ASC-US triage strategy we have used in the recent past. Instead, a positive cobas HPV test
identified those at greatest risk.
Despite his embrace of the new testing algorithm, Clark’s not ready to write an obit for
cytology just yet. “GYN cytology and the Pap slide are not going away,” he says. “The primary
screening by HPV is used for those age 25 and above. Pap slides will still be necessary for
those in a younger age group.
And further, slide interpretation will be necessary for the 12-pooled HPV positive, he says.
“We’ve got a better technology now, and so the idea of doing a yearly Pap slide—that
paradigm is being challenged—being replaced by a Pap every three or five years. Now there is
the arrival of the primary HPV screening,” Clark says.
Making the Change to Primary Screening for HPV
Page 1 of 3
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By Judy O’RourkeJanuary 26, 2015
Making the decision to move from co-testing to primary Human papillomavirus (HPV) screening was one thing. Implementing it has been another, for one medical group.
The University of Louisville Physicians-Family and Geriatric Medicine (UofL), Louisville, Ky, had contracted with one of the largest providers of diagnostic testing services in the United States in the past. They were forced to find a different lab when they decided to implement primary HPV screening alone for all women 25 years and older, and continue to screen with primary cytology and HPV triage for those 21 to 24 years.
THE FACILITY
Diane M. Harper, MD, MPH, MS oversees HPV testing at UofL, which includes three clinic sites: Cardinal Station Family Medicine offices, Newburg Family Medicine offices, and the Centers for Primary Care. The staff comprises some 44 providers in total (including residents). Harper says her goal was to change the standard of care for women’s health cervical cancer screening, and that meant opting for the only test approved by the FDA in 2014 for primary screening, the cobas HPV Test, from Roche Diagnostics.
“The benefits are our ability to better detect those women who are at real risk of having a CIN-3 lesion, and not identifying nondiseased women,” Harper says. “[The cobas HPV Test] has a high true-positive rate, with minimal false-positives identified.”(Invasive squamous carcinoma of the cervix is caused by a progression of preinvasive precursor lesions, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), or dysplasia, with CIN-3 being considered severe.)
Harper, professor and chair of the Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine, University of Louisville, has more than 140 peer-reviewed, published works on this topic. She also holds joint appointments in the Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the School of Medicine, Bioengineering in the Speed School of Engineering, and Epidemiology and Population Health and Health Promotion and Behavioral Health Sciences in the School of Public Health and Information Sciences; has served as an advisor to the World Health Organization for the past 15 years; and reviews research grants at the federal level for NCI, PCORI, AHRQ and the European Commission on Research, in addition to the Wellcome Trust, as well as others.
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Making the Change to Primary Screening for HPV
Credit: National Cancer Institute (NCI)
This image is from the National Cancer Institute’s Building on Opportunities in Cancer Research: An Annual Plan and Budget Proposal for Fiscal Year 2016.
www.cancer.govSource: Schiller JT and Lowy DR. Understanding and learning from the success of prophylactic
human papillomavirus vaccines. Nat Rev Microbiol 2012; 10(10): 681-692.
Making the decision to move from co-testing to primary Human papillomavirus (HPV) screening was one thing. Implementing it has been another, for one medical group.
Making the Change to Primary Screening for HPVThe University of Louisville Physicians-Family and Geriatric Medicine (UofL),Louisville, Ky, had contracted with one of the largest providers of
TRENDING
April 15, 2015 | Written By: Jennifer Ellis
3a 41b 3100e
Making the decision to move from co-testing to primary Human papillomavirus (HPV) screening was onething. Implementing it has been another, for one medical group.
The University of Louisville Physicians-Family and Geriatric Medicine (UofL), Louisville, Ky, hadcontracted with one of the largest providers of diagnostic testing services in the United States in the past.They were forced to find a different lab when they decided to implement primary HPV screening alone forall women 25 years and older, and continue to screen with primary cytology and HPV triage for those 21to 24 years.
The facility
Diane M. Harper, MD, MPH, MS oversees HPV testing at UofL, which includes three clinic sites: CardinalStation Family Medicine offices, Newburg Family Medicine offices, and the Centers for Primary Care. Thestaff comprises some 44 providers in total (including residents). Harper says her goal was to change thestandard of care for women's health cervical cancer screening, and that meant opting for the only testapproved by the FDA in 2014 for primary screening, the cobas HPV Test, from Roche Diagnostics.
“The benefits are our ability to better detect those women who are at real risk of having a CIN-3 lesion,and not identifying nondiseased women,” Harper says. “[The cobas HPV Test] has a high true-positiverate, with minimal false-positives identified.”(Invasive squamous carcinoma of the cervix is caused by aprogression of preinvasive precursor lesions, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), or dysplasia, withCIN-3 being considered severe.)
Harper, professor and chair of the Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine, University of Louisville,has more than 140 peer-reviewed, published works on this topic. She also holds joint appointments in theDepartments of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the School of Medicine, Bioengineering in the SpeedSchool of Engineering, and Epidemiology and Population Health and Health Promotion and BehavioralHealth Sciences in the School of Public Health and Information Sciences; has served as an advisor to theWorld Health Organization for the past 15 years; and reviews research grants at the federal level for NCI,PCORI, AHRQ and the European Commission on Research, in addition to the Wellcome Trust, as well asothers.
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This image is from the National Cancer Institute's Building on Opportunities inCancer Research: An Annual Plan and Budget Proposal for Fiscal Year 2016.
Image Credit: National Cancer Institute (NCI)
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Microbiology is the study of microscopic organisms. Although much is now known in the field of microbiology, somesuggest that we have studied only one percent of all of the microbes in any given environment. BioConference Livebrings the Microbiology research community together online through live video webcasts and real-time virtualnetworking. Attendees will have the chance to discover new concepts, tools and techniques that they can apply totheir own research and diagnosis. In addition, attendees can earn free CME and CE Credits. READ MORE
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SPEAKERS INCLUDE:
Paul Flecknell, MA,VetMB, PhD -Professor/Director,Comparative BiologyCentre, The MedicalSchool, University ofNewcastle
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Angela Kerton,B.VetMed Cert LASMRCVS - Head ofVeterinary Services andCBS Training Unit,Imperial College London
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Dan Rothen, DVM -Research AssistantProfessor of Surgery,University of Miami
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Delphine Bouard DVM -PSurgery Consultant,Vetslius
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CLINICAL & MOLECULAR DX
Bleached Lipids as New Biomarkers forSepsis?
Sepsis is one of the most serious medicalconditions that can scare even the best-traineddoctors. When sepsis hits, things move quicklyfrom bad to worse, resulting with death ifdiagnosis is slow and treatments are delayed.To quicken detection time and improve sepsisoutcome, a team of researchers from St ...
PLANTS & ANIMALS
Sleeping With a Pet Could Help YouSleep Better At Night
Do you allow your pets you sleep with you inthe same room when night time rolls around?There are some people that feel that pets in thesame bedroom can hinder the ability to sleep,whether it’s because they make noises, causeitching, hog the bed, or increase the heat of thegeneral area creating ...
SPACE & ASTRONOMY
SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket Remains Will BeDisposed of Properly
Less than two weeks ago, rocket remnants,measuring around 33 feet by 13 feet, from whatwere thought to be from SpaceX’s Falcon 9rocket that exploded in mid-air shortly aftertake-off during an attempt to re-supply theInternational Space Station earlier this year,were discovered off of the coast of ...
CLINICAL & MOLECULAR DX
TSRI Team Finds Unique Anti-DiabetesCompound Using Powerful New Drug-Discovery Method
Scientists from The Scripps Research Institute(TSRI) have deployed a powerful new drugdiscovery technique to identify an anti-diabetescompound with a novel mechanism of action.The finding, which appeared online ahead ofprint in Nature Communications, may ...
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Here's How Astronauts Feel About Seeing the Earth From AboveUnless you’re an astronaut, you probably don’t get to see Earth from upabove. Astronauts get a good view of the Earth from the InternationalSpace Station, and every single day, they watch the ...
Using Gene Drives To Eliminate Insect-borne DiseasesThe term "gene drives" refers to the ability of specific genes to "drive"themselves as well as nearby genes through populations over manygenerations. These genetic elements are able to spread even ...
Here's How a Space Suit WorksA space suit is an astronaut’s last line of defense in space. Whensomething goes wrong, and seals don’t work on the International SpaceStation, or another spacecraft, astronauts have to put on ...
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LabRoots 2016 1211 LabRoots 2016
LABROOTS WILL:
• Produce webinar with live streaming video (or
audio), along with PowerPoint slides and Q&A
• Create registration page with your questions
• Customized background with your creative
and logo (video window and slide sit on top of
background)
• Promote the webinar with active online
marketing: email campaigns, banner ad, social
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• Feature on-demand for six months, hosted on
the LabRoots website
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SHOWCASE YOUR COMPANY'S LEADERSHIP ON IMPORTANT INDUSTRY TOPICS
Partner with LabRoots to produce, host, and promote a scientific webinar featuring your content, products or services .
Webinar Metrics: 825 Registrants • 300 Live Viewers • 400 On-demand Viewers • Over 10,000 Website Views
WEBINARS
LabRoots 2016 1413 LabRoots 2016
“WEBINARS ON STEROIDS” Create your own virtual
event, where you can host a series of webinars on the
LabRoots virtual platform with a customized look and
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CUSTOM VIRTUAL EVENTS
LabRoots 2016 1615 LabRoots 2016
CUSTOM VIRTUAL EVENTS
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LabRoots 2016 1817 LabRoots 2016
LABROOTS VIRTUAL EVENTS
Become part of the world’s largest online scientific conference series, BioConference Live, and help the advancement of science through online learning . Introduce your company to new customers and highlight your brand to existing users .
LabRoots Virtual Events Metrics: 800 Booth Visitors • 900 Webinar Viewers • 12,950 Attendees Per Event • 92% Attendees Enter Exhibit Hall • 3 Hours Spent Logged In
LabRoots 2016 2019 LabRoots 2016
GEOGRAPHY
JOB TITLE
Technician 24%Lab Management 21%
Medical Doctor/Specialist 13%Facility Manager/Director 11%
Research Scientist 10%Executive 8%
Educator/Faculty 7%Student 4%
Other 2%
TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
Clinical Laboratory 26%Hospital 17%
Medical Center 14%Research Institute 10%
Education Institution 10%Biotech Company 9%
Pharmaceutical 6%Government 5%
Other 3%
SPECIALTY
Clinical Chemistry 19%Immunology 17%
Microbiology 15%Infectious Disease 10%
Genetics & Genomics 10%Virology 9%
Oncology 8%Blood Screening 6%
Biochemistry 4%Other 2%
65% North America
18% Europe
9% Asia
1% Oceania
3% Africa4%
South America
MOLECULAR DIAGNOSTICSAPRIL 6-7, 2016PROJECTED REGISTRANTS: 15,000 | PROJECTED ATTENDANCE: 10,000
GEOGRAPHY
Genetics & Genomics 24%Bioinformatics 16%
Molecular Biology 14%Clinical Diagnostics 12%
Cancer Research 8%Molecular Diagnostics 8%
Biochemistry 7%Biotechnology 7%
Other 4%
SPECIALTY TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
66% North America
17% Europe
8% Asia
1% Oceania
4% Africa4%
South America
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Education Institution 28%Research Institute 25%Biotech Company 15%
Clinical Laboratory 10%Pharmaceutical 7%
Government 5%Hospital 3%
Non-Profit Organization 3%Medical Center 2%
Other 2%
GENETICS & GENOMICSMAY 11-12, 20162015 REGISTRANTS: 22,736 | 2015 ATTENDANCE: 13,941
JOB TITLE Research Scientist 26%
Lab Management 11%Genetic Counselor 10%
Technician 8%Educator/Faculty 8%
Student 8%Principal Investigator 7%
Post Doc 6%Facility Manager/Director 5%
Executive 4%Medical Doctor/Specialist 3%
Other 4%
LabRoots 2016 2221 LabRoots 2016
Clinical Microbiology 23%General Microbiology 18%
Immunology 11%Laboratory Testing 10%
Virology 9%Environmental Microbiology 8%
Infectious Disease 7%Food Microbiology 6%
Genetics & Molecular Biology 5%Other 3%
GEOGRAPHY
JOB TITLE
59% North America
22% Europe
8% Asia
2% Oceania
3% Africa6%
South America
Technician 23%Research Scientist 21%Lab Management 17%
Facility Manager/Director 12%Medical Doctor/Specialist 9%
Educator/Faculty 6%Student 5%
Executive 4%Other 3%
MICROBIOLOGY & IMMUNOLOGYSEPTEMBER 7-8, 20162015 REGISTRANTS: 16,570 | 2015 ATTENDANCE: 10,296
SPECIALTY
Clinical Laboratory 29%Research Institute 25%
Medical Center 9%Government 8%
Hospital 8%CRO 7%
Education Institution 6%Biotech Company 5%
Other 3%
TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
JOB TITLE
GEOGRAPHY
64% North America
19% Europe
9% Asia
2% Oceania
2% Africa4%
South America
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
Education Institution 18%Medical Center 18%
Research Institute 15%Clinical Laboratory 13%
Hospital 12%Biotech Company 9%
Pharmaceutical 5%Government 4%
Non-Profit 3%Other 3%
Research Scientist 25%Medical Doctor/Specialist 21%
Technician 14%Lab Management 12%
Student 10%Educator/Faculty 8%
Executive 8%Other 2%
CANCER RESEARCH & ONCOLOGYOCTOBER 5-6, 20162015 REGISTRANTS: 21,677 | 2015 ATTENDANCE: 12,954
SPECIALTY
Cancer Research 30%Oncology 16%
Genetics & Molecular Biology 15%Clinical Diagnostics 13%
Biochemistry 10%Biotechnology 6%
Chemistry 4%Bioinformatics 3%
Other 3%
LabRoots 2016 2423 LabRoots 2016
GEOGRAPHY
TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
Clinical Laboratory 24% Hospital 22%
Medical Center 20%Research Institute 12%
Education Institution 10%Biotech Company 7%
Government 5%Other 2%
SPECIALTY
60% North America
20% Europe
13% Asia
1% Oceania
2% Africa4%
South America
Technician 22%Lab Management 20%
Medical Doctor/Specialist 18%Research Scientist 16%
Executive 10%Educator/Faculty 7%
Student 4%Other 3%
JOB TITLE
Laboratory Testing 20%Molecular Diagnostics 13%
Clinical Diagnostics 10%Personalized Medicine 10%
Clinical Research 9%Point of Care 6%
Infectious Disease 6%Cancer Research & Oncology 6%
Informatics 5%Vitamin D 3%Nutrition 3%
Allergy 2%Cardiology 2%
Hematology 2%Diabetes 2%
Other 1%
CLINICAL DIAGNOSTICS & RESEARCHNOVEMBER 2-3, 20162015 REGISTRANTS: 25,374 | 2015 ATTENDANCE: 15,239
GEOGRAPHY
JOB TITLE
Veterinarian 23%Technician 21%
Research Scientist 15%Facility Manager/Director 14%
Lab Management 10%Educator/Faculty 8%
Executive 4%Student 3%
Other 2%
TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
Research Institute 28%Education Institution 20%
Veterinary Hospital 17%Biotech Company 15%
Pharmaceutical 8%Clinical Laboratory 4%
Hospital 3%Government 3%
Medical Center 2%
SPECIALTY
Animal Sciences 30%Veterinary Sciences 26%
Biotechnology 10%Neuroscience 8%
Genetics 7%Cancer Research 7%
Biochemistry 4%Molecular Biology 3%
Toxicology 3%Other 2%
64% North America
19% Europe
10% Asia
1% Oceania
3% Africa3%
South America
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS 2017 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
LABORATORY ANIMAL SCIENCESFEBRUARY 8-9, 20172016 REGISTRANTS: 21,560 | 2016 ATTENDANCE: 13,378
LabRoots 2016 2625 LabRoots 2016
GEOGRAPHY
JOB TITLE
Lab Management 17%Technician 15%
Research Scientist 15%Medical Doctor/Specialist 13%Facility Manager/Director 9%
Executive 7%Regulatory Affairs 7%Educator/Faculty 6%
Chief Level Officer 5%Student 4%
Other 2%
TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
Medical Center 18%Clinical Laboratory 15%
Education Institution 13%Research Institute 11%
Hospital 11%Government 8%
Biotech Company 7%Pharmaceutical 6%
Non-Profit Foundations 5%Venture Capital/Investment Firms 3%
Other 3%
SPECIALTY
Cancer Diagnostics, Liquid Biopsies and Biomarkers 25%
Therapies For Rare Diseases 20%Next-Gen Sequencing 15%
Biobanking 15%Personalized Cancer Therapeutics 15%
Healthcare IT/Data Storage and Analytics 10%
65% North America
15% Europe
10% Asia
2% Oceania
4% Africa4%
South America
PRECISION MEDICINEFEBRUARY 22-23, 20172016 REGISTRANTS: 15,000 | 2016 ATTENDANCE: 10,000
GEOGRAPHY
TYPE OF ORGANIZATION
Research Institute 24%Education Institution 19%
Hospital 16%Clinical Laboratory 11%
Medical Center 10%Biotech Company 8%
Pharmaceutical 5%Government 4%
Other 3%
SPECIALTY
Neuroscience 34%Clinical Diagnostics 13%
Medicine 11%Biotechnology 8%
Cancer Research 8%Animal Sciences 8%
Toxicology 5%Biochemistry 4%
Genetics 4%Pharmacology 3%
Other 2%
JOB TITLEResearch Scientist 30%
Post Doc 11%Technician 10%
Principal Investigator 9%Psychologist/Psychiatrist 8%
Medical Doctor/Specialist 7%Lab Management 7%
Facility Manager/Director 5%Educator/Faculty 5%
Executive 3%Student 3%
Other 2%
59% North America
21% Europe
10% Asia
1% Oceania
4% Africa5%
South America
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
NEUROSCIENCEMARCH 15-16, 20172016 REGISTRANTS: 23,045 | 2016 ATTENDANCE: 14,118
LabRoots 2016 2827 LabRoots 2016
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BANNER ADS
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750,000 Emails $60,000
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NEWSLETTERS
WEBINARS & VIRTUAL EVENTS NEWSLETTER
One Month (3 – 468x60 banners) $1,000/Month
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Sponsorship Position 468x60 $500
Per Newsletter / Category
*See page 11 for the categories to choose from
WEBINARSAUDIO WITH POWERPOINT $10,500
3-Pack Webinar Series $18,950
10-Pack Webinar Series $43,500
VIDEO WITH POWERPOINT $14,500
3-Pack Webinar Series $24,500
10-Pack Webinar Series $49,500
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CUSTOM VIRTUAL EVENT
BASIC CUSTOM EVENT $30,000
*For a 12 month period
Build Out Venue:
Exhibit Hall
Auditorium
Resource Center
Lounge
Production
Support
License
Hosting
Marketing
NUMBER OF WEBINARS:
*Studio costs covered by sponsor
1-5 webinars: $7,500 each
6-10 webinars: $5,000 each
11+ webinars: $4,000 each
TRANSLATION SERVICES:
Per language / per webinar $3,500
ADDITIONAL OPTIONS:
Custom Virtual Lab $20,000
Virtual Learning $10,000
Job Fair $5,000 - $10,000
PACE Continuing Education $2,500
CME Continuing Education $5,000 - $10,000
Gamification $5,000
Poster Sessions $5,000
CONTACT LABROOTS FOR A
CUSTOM PACKAGE BUILT TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
TRIAL1 Banner Ad for 1 Month
3 Newsletter Sponsorships 1 Email Blast to 10K
Recipients
$5,250
FACEBOOKPER POST PER PAGE $150
*See page 7 for social media pages
MONTHLY PACKAGES
10 posts $1,500
25 posts $3,000
50 posts $5,000
100 posts $10,000
CUSTOM RICH CONTENT CAMPAIGNSCUSTOM ARTICLE CAMPAIGN $7,500 Program Includes:
• 1,500 word article written by a LabRoots author
• PDF of article and a full-bleed printable version
• 468x60 banner ad in an upcoming edition of our Trending eNewsletter
• 5 social media posts on the most relevant LabRoots Facebook groups
• Article housed on LabRoots .com website
CUSTOM INFOGRAPHIC CAMPAIGN $5,000 Program Includes:
• Infographic article written by a LabRoots author
• PDF of article and a full-bleed printable version
• 468x60 banner ad in an upcoming edition of our Trending eNewsletter
• 5 social media posts on the most relevant LabRoots Facebook groups
• Infographic article housed on LabRoots .com website
COMBINED CUSTOM ARTICLE AND INFOGRAPHIC CAMPAIGNS $10,000 Program Includes:
• 1,500 word article and infographic written by a LabRoots author
• PDF of article and infographic and a full-bleed printable version of each
• 2 468x60 banner ads in an upcoming edition of our Trending eNewsletter
• 10 social media posts on the most relevant LabRoots Facebook groups
• Article and infographic housed on LabRoots .com website
LabRoots 2016 3029 LabRoots 2016
KEY EVENT PARTNER: $50,000*Including Hotspots
• Most prominent position at BioConference Live
with top level branding throughout the event
• Banner Ad placed in the location of your choice
• Keynote presentation: live in-studio video
presentation (no concurrent presentations)
• 4 Track presentations: live webinar presentation
(concurrent presentations)
• Introduction of the speakers given by the
sponsor along with short pitch of company
products or services
• 3 virtual booths with preferred position in
exhibition hall (optional or additional speaker)
• Lobby Greeting
• Complete Registration List
• Pre-event newsletter sponsorship to
5 x newsletters
• Pre-event marketing to existing registrants (entire
list one blast)
• Pre-event email campaign to 3rd party list (25,000)
• Logo on registration page
• 4 Announcements each day of the event
promoting your virtual booth or webinar
LABROOTS VIRTUAL EVENTS
PLATINUM SPONSOR: $30,000*Including Hotspots
• Banner Ad placed in the location of your choice
• Keynote presentation: live in-studio video
presentation (no concurrent presentations)
• 2 Track presentations: host a live video
presentation within an agenda track
• Introduction of the speakers given by the
sponsor along with short pitch of company
products or services
• 3 virtual booths with preferred position in
exhibition hall (optional or additional speaker)
• Complete Registration List
• Pre-event newsletter sponsorship to
3 x newsletters
• Pre-event marketing to existing
registrants (entire list one blast)
• Pre-event email campaign to
3rd party list (15,000)
• Logo on registration page
• 3 Announcements each day of the event
promoting your virtual booth or webinar
PRESENTING SPONSOR: TRACK SESSION $9,000 ($7,000 *1st Time Exhibitors)
*Upgrade to Keynote Session: $15,000
• If in studio, sponsor covers studio costs
• Host a live video presentation within an
agenda track
• 2 announcements per day
• Capture detailed lead information on all
presentation attendees
• Includes a virtual exhibit booth
• Logo on Registration Page
EXHIBITING SPONSOR: $4,500 ($2,900 1st Time Exhibitors)
*Custom Booths with Hotspots: $6,000
• Present your existing web pages, documents,
videos, webinars, surveys, and other digital
assets in a virtual exhibit booth
• Gain exposure in a directory that is searched
by thousands of prospects looking for solution
providers
• 1 announcement per day
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booth visitors
• Logo on Registration Page
RATE CARD
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Pop-up messages to the attendees within the event
promoting your company’s virtual booth or webinar .
The announcements are clickable linking attendees
directly to your booth or webinar .
1 Announcement $250
5 Announcements $1,000
BANNER ADS (Within virtual events)
Add your logo or display ad to the virtual event, and
link to your virtual booth:
Lobby (4-5 spots): $1,500 – $2,500
Auditorium (2 spots): $2,000
Resource Center (2 spots): $1,500
Poster Hall (2 spots): $1,500
Lounge (4 spots): $1,000
LabRoots 2016 3231 LabRoots 2016
CONTACT US
SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIESLabRoots provides next generation digital marketing opportunities which allow you to target your
message to specific groups of scientists and medical experts . For pricing, custom proposals or general
information please contact the appropriate representative below:
HEADQUARTERS
Tel: +1 .714 .463 .4673
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Dave Galuppo
Director, Sales
dave .galuppo@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .512 .761 .4899
Colleen Doran
Key Account Manager
colleen .doran@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .510 .532 .5648
Kevin Ward
Senior Sales Manager
kevin .ward@laboots .com
Tel: +1 .908 .619 .5359
Charlie Payne
Senior Sales Manager
charles .payne@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .859 .537 .6937
MARKETING
Shay Masand
Director, Marketing
akshay .masand@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .917 .545 .5297
Liz Sears
Creative Director
liz .sears@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .619 .249 .1895
Rachel Brown
Marketing Manager
rachel .brown@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .714 .960 .0358
Jennifer Ellis
Digital Content Manager
jen .ellis@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .530 .386 .6101
PRODUCTION
Tracy Salcido
Director, Production
tracy .salcido@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .714 .930 .3518
Hawa Rabie
Online Events Manager
hawa .rabie@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .310 .410 .9754
Sarvestah Granneman
Online Events Manager
sarvestah .granneman@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .714 .463 .4673
Tyler Salcido
Booth Production Associate
tyler .salcido@labroots .com
Tel: +1 .714 .390 .0877
LET’S TALK SCIENCELET’S TALK MEDICINE
LabRoots 2016 3433 LabRoots 2016
LABROOTS, INC.
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