The morning sessions will be run jointly with immunology. This second session will cover the crossover aspects of biochemistry and immunology, focussing on ‘tricky’ autoantibodies commonly performed in biochemistry, such as TPO, TRAb and intrinsic factor, followed by a session on the CSF kappa assay used in the investigation of multiple sclerosis.
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Alison Whitelegg
Alison Whitelegg is a Consultant clinical scientist in Immunology at University Hospital Southampton and the Immunology clinical lead at Portsmouth University Hospitals NHS Trust. She leads laboratory immunology services across both organisations, overseeing diagnostic pathways, service development, and the delivery of high-quality patient care.
Recently, Alison has been leading the practical rollout of the CSF kappa light chain index test for multiple sclerosis across the South 6 Pathology Network, helping bring this important diagnostic tool into routine clinical use.
Alison Whitelegg also plays a national leadership role as Chair of the Immunology Professional Committee, supporting the development and standards of Immunology Clinical Scientists across the UK. She has worked in the NHS for 20 years and remains committed to training and mentoring the next generation of clinical scientists.
Her academic background includes a PhD from the Pirbright Institute and postdoctoral research at the Anthony Nolan Research Institute, with a focus on T-cell and vaccine-specific immune responses.
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Emma Stevenson
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Dr Emma Stevenson is a Principal clinical scientist at Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
In the Association for Laboratory Medicine, Emma is the chair of the Biochemistry Education Group and Deputy director of Education, Training and Workforce. She is chairing the LabMedUK26 Training day.
In addition to education and training, Emma’s main role in the laboratory is looking after quality, including EQA, IQC and measurement uncertainty and she was a member of the RCPath’s Chemical Pathology National Quality Assurance Panel.
Within the laboratory, her current interests are vitamin B12 and Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers.
Emma is Biochemistry Training Day Chair on Monday 8 June.
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