Call for Abstracts

The World Congress of Bronchology and Interventional Pulmonology (WCBIP) 2026 is excited to invite you to contribute to the upcoming Congress.

We are currently accepting submissions for abstracts which may feature in the Congress scientific and educational programme, as well as educational poster sessions.

Submitting your work is an excellent way to contribute to the largest meeting in Interventional Pulmonology.

If you are interested in contributing, please submit via the portal by 23:59 AEST 25 May 2026.

Guidelines

  • All abstracts must be original work
  • Submission acknowledges consent to publication of the abstract in the Congress Abstract Book and App.
  • All abstracts must be submitted in English, please do not rely on Google Translate
  • If your abstract has been previously presented, please ensure you disclose
    • where / when your material was presented or published during submission
  • Accuracy is the responsibility of the author, please ensure you have proofread your document carefully
  • Your abstract must be prepared using the abstract template
    • Please save the template file using your surname and the first 5 words of your title as the file name
    • You will upload this document as part of your abstract submission
    • The abstract body text (excluding headings, title and author information) should be limited to 300 words
  • You may upload a supporting video with your abstract, please have a video platform or share link URL ready to include via the submission portal (note: videos are optional)
  • You can view an example abstract here
  • If you need assistance, contact wcbip2026@theconferencecompany.com

Registration

  • The presenting author will be required to register and pay for the Congress to have their abstract(s) in the final program. Failure to register will result in withdrawal of the abstract. Presenting authors must register by 30 September 2026
  • If for any reason the nominated presenting author cannot attend, a replacement author can give the presentation. If no authors are available to give the presentation, the abstract must be withdrawn

Abstract Submission

Your abstract(s) must be submitted online with additional details using the submission portal.

Presentation type

Abstracts can be submitted as two types:

  • Oral or poster (your abstract will be considered for limited oral presentation slots, declined orals are considered for posters)
    • Select oral presentations may be selected for a slot in the main scientific program
  • Poster only (if you do not wish to be considered for an oral presentation and prefer to present your research as a poster)
 
Themes

All abstracts must be nominated to a specific theme corresponding to the content of the abstract. The theme selection forms part of the online abstract submission form.

Please note, at the scientific committee’s discretion your abstract(s) may be reassigned to an alternative theme.

  • AI and education/training
  • Airways disease
  • Central airways obstruction
    • Malignant
    • Non malignant
  • Discretion of scientific committee (if you are unsure of appropriate theme)
  • ILD
  • Infectious diseases
  • Lung cancer
    • Diagnosis
    • Therapeutics
  • Nursing/allied health
  • Paediatrics
  • Pleural
  • Pulmonary nodules
    • Diagnosis
    • Therapeutics

Abstract Preparation Instructions

Failure to adhere to these instructions may result in rejection of the abstract.

a) Title

The title should be in sentence case, brief and as precise as possible. It should be relevant to the key original point of information contributed by the study and should preferably be descriptive, e.g. “Caffeine primes neutrophil oxidative function”, rather than ambiguous, e.g. “The effects of caffeine on neutrophil function”.

b) Authors

Follow on from the title in upper/lower case with the presenting author listed first. The presenting author’s name should be in bold and underlined. 

c) Affiliations

Affiliations for the authors should be listed in the following order: Department, Institution, State and Country. The entire address section should be in italics. Where the abstract includes authors from different departments, place the presenting author’s department first, followed by other departments, using superscript numerals to link all authors with departments.

d) Text

In general “structured” abstracts convey information more economically and succinctly. If using abbreviations, give the full term, with the abbreviation in parentheses. Universally recognised abbreviations (e.g. FEV1, see Approved Abbreviations below) need no explanation. Do not use non-standard abbreviations in the title of the abstract.

e) Introduction/Aim

The first sentences should state explicitly the background, rationale, aims, goal or purpose of the study.

f) Methods

A concise description of the methods should follow. The details of this depend on the originality of the technique or approach used. Abstracts without methodological details are regarded as deficient.

g) Results

Results should be provided in a quantitative manner in adequate detail. In some cases a small table(s) may be a useful means of presentation (maximum of two per abstract), however the abstract, including tables, must comply with the specified formatting requirements. Statements such as “The results will be discussed” are not acceptable.

h) Statistics

Use the following format: x±y (state whether SEM or SD); n=z, p=q; e.g. 60±6 (SEM); n=10, p<0.05.

i) Conclusions

The Conclusions should be clearly stated and must be referable to the results provided.

j) Grant Support

Any funding should be briefly acknowledged at the bottom of the abstract.

k) References

References are generally unnecessary, but if required should be limited to a maximum of 3, numbered in the text and listed immediately below the text (within the specified area) in the following sequence: Authors, Journal, Year, Volume, First and Last pages, e.g. I Cerveri et al, Chest, 2004, 125, 1714-1718.

l) Word Count

The abstract body text (excluding headings, title and author information) should be limited to 300 words. The abstract must fit on a single page, including diagrams and tables. Text within diagrams or tables is excluded from the word count. Please use Arial font size 11, single spacing.

m) Approved Abbreviations

Abbreviations for microorganisms should follow standard scientific notation, i.e. the first letter of the genus in capitals followed by the species name in lower case (e.g. P. aeruginosa). By convention, the entire abbreviation is printed in italics or underlined.

FEV1                            forced expiratory volume in 1 second

FEV6                            forced expiratory volume in 6 seconds

FEF25-75                      mean mid-expiratory flow

PEF                             peak expiratory flow

FVC                             forced vital capacity

TLC                             total lung capacity

FRC                             functional residual capacity

RV                               residual volume

VC                               vital capacity

DLCO, TLCO                diffusing capacity

PD20                            provocative dose for 20% fall

PC20                            provocative concentration for 20% fall

PaO2, PaCO2              arterial partial pressure of oxygen, carbon dioxide

SpO2                           oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry

V’CO2                          carbon dioxide production

V’O2                             oxygen consumption

V’E                              minute ventilation

Units of measure should conform to current scientific usage and can be abbreviated when they follow a number (e.g. cm, mL, g, mg, nmol, °C). Unusual units should be defined in full.