HONOURED to be invited to return to the Apothecaries' Hall in the City of London for the 31st Meeting of the London Pain Forum on the evening of 28th November 2025 The meeting at Apothecaries' Hall will feature the updates on interventional pain management and neuromodulation. Dr Dalvina Hanu-Cernat is due to speak on "Interventional Pain Management Under Siege" and Dr Simon Thomson will speak on "Update on PSPS implementation, Closed loop SCS systems, Sub-perception SCS and multifidus dysfunction". We are also looking forward to the after dinner hot topic debates. All registered participants are invited to recommend a topic for the discussions.
Watch this space for further info, or email: ciaranwazir@londonpainforum.co.uk.
*The meeting at Apothecaries Hall has been approved for 3 CPD points by Royal College of Anaesthetists, London, UK
LPF MEEETING FACULTY

Dr Dalvina Hanu-Cernat FIPP
Course Director: 18th Interventional Pain Cadaver Workshop 2026
Vice-Chair, WIP Section UK
Senior Fellow, London Pain Forum
Consultant in Pain Medicine and Anaesthesia
Queen Elizabeth University Hospital
Birmingham, UK
Dr Simon J. Thomson
Past-President, International Neuromodulation Society
Consultant in Pain Medicine & Neuromodulation
Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals
Cambridge University Hospitals
United Kingdom
Interventional Pain Management & Neuromodulation Practice
London, UK
MEETING TIMETABLE
Venue: Apothecaries Hall, Black Friars Lane, London EC4V 6ER
18.30hrs-20.00hrs: Guest Lectures
20.00hrs-21.30hrs: Dinner
21.30hrs-23.00hrs: After Dinner Hot Topic Debates
CLOSE OF MEETING
CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION
*The meeting has been approved for 3 CPD points by Royal College of Anaesthetists, London, UK
ONLINE REGISTRATION
To register for the meeting at Apothecaries Hall, contact: ciaranwazir@londonpainforum.co.uk
HISTORY OF THE MEETING VENUE
Apothecaries' Hall, the oldest extant livery company hall in the City of London, was built on the site of a former Dominican priory and acquired by the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries in 1632. After the original hall was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666, a new one was built on the same site, completed in 1672, and later underwent significant renovations in the 1780s. The Hall has been the center of the Society's activities, including the large-scale manufacture of drugs, from its inception until 1922, though the Society continues its work as a medical licensing body today.





















