Overview

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is an increasingly important challenge in cancer care, influencing infection risk, treatment delivery, patient outcomes, and supportive care strategies across the oncology pathway. This three-part webinar series is designed for scientists and researchers with an interest in AMR who want to better understand the clinical realities, emerging evidence, and future challenges at the intersection of infection and cancer.

Bringing together experts in oncology, infectious diseases, immunology, and antimicrobial stewardship, the series will explore why cancer patients are uniquely vulnerable to resistant infections, how antimicrobials influence treatment outcomes, and what future models of stewardship could look like in oncology and palliative care settings.

The series is chaired by Prof Anna Olsson Brown and kindly supported by an educational grant from bioMérieux

As part of the Microbiology Society's Knocking out AMR project, the Society presents 'Defining the Problem'. 
For this webinar, we have speakers:

Prof Anna Olsson-Brown, Professor of Clinical Cancer Trials and a Consultant in Medical Oncology, 

Dr Helena Carreira, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

This opening session will examine the growing relevance of AMR in cancer care. Speakers will discuss the scale of the problem, the evidence linking resistant infections to outcomes in oncology patients, and the complex relationship between antimicrobial use and cancer treatment success. The webinar will also explore the clinical balance between minimising AMR risk while maintaining life-saving treatment pathways and improving patient prognoses.

Programme
Date and Time Title Speakers

08.06.26

11:30–12:30 (BST)

Defining the Problem

Prof Anna Olsson-Brown, Professor of Clinical Cancer Trials and a Consultant in Medical Oncology, 

Dr Helena Carreira, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Registration

Sign up to attend this series of seminars below. You will receive an email with information about each upcoming presentation, including joining instructions, a Zoom link, and any other relevant information, two days before each seminar. A second reminder email will be sent one hour before each seminar. Unfortunately, if you have signed up less than one hour before the seminar, you will not be able to attend until the next seminar in the series.

Please note all times listed in the programme are UK time.

 

Technology
All seminars will be run via Zoom, a link for which will be sent to you via email prior to the meeting. Please ensure you have updated to the latest version of the Zoom desktop or mobile application (version 5.3 or higher is recommended).