Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Bridget Wills is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Bridget Wills.


The Lancet | 2010

Artesunate versus quinine in the treatment of severe falciparum malaria in African children (AQUAMAT): an open-label, randomised trial.

Arjen M. Dondorp; Caterina I. Fanello; Ilse C. E. Hendriksen; Ermelinda Gomes; Amir Seni; Kajal D. Chhaganlal; Kalifa Bojang; Rasaq Olaosebikan; Nkechinyere Anunobi; Kathryn Maitland; Esther Kivaya; Tsiri Agbenyega; Samuel Blay Nguah; Jennifer L. Evans; Samwel Gesase; Catherine Kahabuka; George Mtove; Behzad Nadjm; Jacqueline L. Deen; Juliet Mwanga-Amumpaire; Margaret Nansumba; Corine Karema; Noella Umulisa; Aline Uwimana; Olugbenga A. Mokuolu; Ot Adedoyin; Wahab Babatunde Rotimi Johnson; Antoinette Tshefu; Marie Onyamboko; Tharisara Sakulthaew

Summary Background Severe malaria is a major cause of childhood death and often the main reason for paediatric hospital admission in sub-Saharan Africa. Quinine is still the established treatment of choice, although evidence from Asia suggests that artesunate is associated with a lower mortality. We compared parenteral treatment with either artesunate or quinine in African children with severe malaria. Methods This open-label, randomised trial was undertaken in 11 centres in nine African countries. Children (<15 years) with severe falciparum malaria were randomly assigned to parenteral artesunate or parenteral quinine. Randomisation was in blocks of 20, with study numbers corresponding to treatment allocations kept inside opaque sealed paper envelopes. The trial was open label at each site, and none of the investigators or trialists, apart from for the trial statistician, had access to the summaries of treatment allocations. The primary outcome measure was in-hospital mortality, analysed by intention to treat. This trial is registered, number ISRCTN50258054. Findings 5425 children were enrolled; 2712 were assigned to artesunate and 2713 to quinine. All patients were analysed for the primary outcome. 230 (8·5%) patients assigned to artesunate treatment died compared with 297 (10·9%) assigned to quinine treatment (odds ratio [OR] stratified for study site 0·75, 95% CI 0·63–0·90; relative reduction 22·5%, 95% CI 8·1–36·9; p=0·0022). Incidence of neurological sequelae did not differ significantly between groups, but the development of coma (65/1832 [3·5%] with artesunate vs 91/1768 [5·1%] with quinine; OR 0·69 95% CI 0·49–0·95; p=0·0231), convulsions (224/2712 [8·3%] vs 273/2713 [10·1%]; OR 0·80, 0·66–0·97; p=0·0199), and deterioration of the coma score (166/2712 [6·1%] vs 208/2713 [7·7%]; OR 0·78, 0·64–0·97; p=0·0245) were all significantly less frequent in artesunate recipients than in quinine recipients. Post-treatment hypoglycaemia was also less frequent in patients assigned to artesunate than in those assigned to quinine (48/2712 [1·8%] vs 75/2713 [2·8%]; OR 0·63, 0·43–0·91; p=0·0134). Artesunate was well tolerated, with no serious drug-related adverse effects. Interpretation Artesunate substantially reduces mortality in African children with severe malaria. These data, together with a meta-analysis of all trials comparing artesunate and quinine, strongly suggest that parenteral artesunate should replace quinine as the treatment of choice for severe falciparum malaria worldwide. Funding The Wellcome Trust.


The Lancet | 2006

The WHO dengue classification and case definitions: time for a reassessment

Jacqueline L. Deen; Eva Harris; Bridget Wills; Angel Balmaseda; Samantha N. Hammond; Crisanta Rocha; Nguyen Minh Dung; Nguyen Thanh Hung; Tran Tinh Hien; Jeremy Farrar

Dengue is the most prevalent mosquito-borne viral disease in people. It is caused by four dengue virus serotypes (DEN-1 DEN-2 DEN-3 and DEN-4) of the genus Flavivirus and transmitted by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. Infection provides life-long immunity against the infecting viral serotype but not against the other serotypes. Although most of the estimated 100 million dengue virus infections each year do not come to the attention of medical staff of those that do the most common clinical manifestation is non-specific febrile illness or classic dengue fever. About 250 000--500 000 patients developing more severe disease. The risk of severe disease is several times higher in sequential than in primary dengue virus infections. Despite the large numbers of people infected with the virus each year the existing WHO dengue classification scheme and case definitions have some drawbacks. In addition the widely used guidelines are not always reproducible in different countries--a quality that is crucial to effective surveillance and reporting as well as global disease comparisons. And as dengue disease spreads to different parts of the globe several investigators have reported difficulties in using the system and some have had to create new categories or new case definitions to represent the observed patterns of disease more accurately. (excerpt)


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2009

Diagnostic accuracy of NS1 ELISA and lateral flow rapid tests for dengue sensitivity, specificity and relationship to viraemia and antibody responses.

Vu Thi Ty Hang; Nguyen Minh Nguyet; Vianney Tricou; Sutee Yoksan; Nguyen Minh Dung; Tran Van Ngoc; Tran Tinh Hien; Jeremy Farrar; Bridget Wills; Cameron P. Simmons

Background Dengue is a public health problem in many countries. Rapid diagnosis of dengue can assist patient triage and management. Detection of the dengue viral protein, NS1, represents a new approach to dengue diagnosis. Methodology/Principal Findings The sensitivity and specificity of the Platelia NS1 ELISA assay and an NS1 lateral flow rapid test (LFRT) were compared against a gold standard reference diagnostic algorithm in 138 Vietnamese children and adults. Overall, the Platelia NS1 ELISA was modestly more sensitive (82%) than the NS1 LFRT (72%) in confirmed dengue cases. Both ELISA and LFRT assays were more sensitive for primary than secondary dengue, and for specimens collected within 3 days of illness onset relative to later time points. The presence of measurable DENV-reactive IgG and to a lesser extent IgM in the test sample was associated with a significantly lower rate of NS1 detection in both assays. NS1 positivity was associated with the underlying viraemia, as NS1-positive samples had a significantly higher viraemia than NS1-negative samples matched for duration of illness. The Platelia and NS1 LFRT were 100% specific, being negative in all febrile patients without evidence of recent dengue, as well as in patients with enteric fever, malaria, Japanese encephalitis and leptospirosis. Conclusions/Significance Collectively, these data suggest NS1 assays deserve inclusion in the diagnostic evaluation of dengue patients, but with due consideration for the limitations in patients who present late in their illness or have a concomitant humoral immune response.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2002

Coagulation Abnormalities in Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever: Serial Investigations in 167 Vietnamese Children with Dengue Shock Syndrome

Bridget Wills; Emmanuelle E. Oragui; Alick C. Stephens; Olufunmilayo Daramola; Nguyen Minh Dung; Ha Thi Loan; Nguyen Van Vinh Chau; Mary Chambers; Kasia Stepniewska; Jeremy Farrar; Michael Levin

The pathophysiological basis of hemorrhage in dengue infections remains poorly understood, despite the increasing global importance of these infections. A large prospective study of 167 Vietnamese children with dengue shock syndrome documented only minor prolongations of prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times but moderate to severe depression of plasma fibrinogen concentrations. A detailed study of 48 children revealed low plasma concentrations of the anticoagulant proteins C, S, and antithrombin III, which decreased with increasing severity of shock, probably because of capillary leakage. Concurrent increases in the levels of thrombomodulin, tissue factor, and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) indicated increased production of these proteins. Thrombomodulin levels suggestive of endothelial activation correlated with increasing shock severity, whereas PAI-1 levels correlated with bleeding severity. Dengue virus can directly activate plasminogen in vitro. Rather than causing true disseminated intravascular coagulation, dengue infection may activate fibrinolysis primarily, degrading fibrinogen directly and prompting secondary activation of procoagulant homeostatic mechanisms.


The Lancet | 2003

Interferon alfa-2a in Japanese encephalitis: a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial

Tom Solomon; Nguyen Minh Dung; Bridget Wills; Rachel Kneen; Mary Gainsborough; Tran Vinh Diet; Tran Thi Thuy; Ha Thi Loan; Vo Cong Khanh; David W. Vaughn; Nicholas J. White; Jeremy Farrar

BACKGROUND Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), although confined to Asia, causes about 35000-50000 cases and 10000 deaths every year, and is the most important cause of encephalitis worldwide. There is no known antiviral treatment for any flavivirus. Results from in-vitro studies and work in animals have shown inteferon alfa has antiviral activity on Japanese encephalitis and other flaviviruses; therefore, we aimed to assess the efficacy of inteferon alfa-2a in Japanese encephalitis. METHODS We did a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial of interferon alfa-2a (10 million units/m2, daily for 7 days) in 112 Vietnamese children with suspected Japanese encephalitis, 87 of whom had serologically confirmed infections. Our primary endpoints were hospital death or severe sequelae at discharge. Analysis was by intention to treat. FINDINGS Overall, 21 children (19%) died, and 17 (15%) had severe sequelae. Outcome at discharge and 3 months did not differ between the two treatment groups; 20 children in the interferon group had a poor outcome (death or severe sequelae), compared with 18 in the placebo group (p=0.85, difference 0.1%, 95% CI -17.5 to 17.6%), there were no long-term side effects of interferon. INTERPRETATION The doses of interferon alfa-2a given in this regimen did not improve the outcome of patients with Japanese encephalitis.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Genome-wide association study identifies susceptibility loci for dengue shock syndrome at MICB and PLCE1

Chiea Chuen Khor; Tran Nguyen Bich Chau; Junxiong Pang; Sonia Davila; Long Ht; Rick Th Ong; Sarah J. Dunstan; Bridget Wills; Jeremy Farrar; Van Tram T; Gan Tt; Nguyen Thi Cam Binh; Tri le T; Lien le B; Nguyen Minh Tuan; Nguyen Thi Hong Tham; Mai Ngoc Lanh; Nguyen Minh Nguyet; Nguyen Trong Hieu; Van N Vinh Chau N; Truong Thi Thu Thuy; Tan De; Sakuntabhai A; Yik Y. Teo; Martin L. Hibberd; Cameron P. Simmons

Hypovolemic shock (dengue shock syndrome (DSS)) is the most common life-threatening complication of dengue. We conducted a genome-wide association study of 2,008 pediatric cases treated for DSS and 2,018 controls from Vietnam. Replication of the most significantly associated markers was carried out in an independent Vietnamese sample of 1,737 cases and 2,934 controls. SNPs at two loci showed genome-wide significant association with DSS. We identified a susceptibility locus at MICB (major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I polypeptide-related sequence B), which was within the broad MHC region on chromosome 6 but outside the class I and class II HLA loci (rs3132468, Pmeta = 4.41 × 10−11, per-allele odds ratio (OR) = 1.34 (95% confidence interval: 1.23–1.46)). We identified associated variants within PLCE1 (phospholipase C, epsilon 1) on chromosome 10 (rs3765524, Pmeta = 3.08 × 10−10, per-allele OR = 0.80 (95% confidence interval: 0.75–0.86)). We identify two loci associated with susceptibility to DSS in people with dengue, suggesting possible mechanisms for this severe complication of dengue.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2011

Multicentre prospective study on dengue classification in four South-east Asian and three Latin American countries

Neal Alexander; Angel Balmaseda; Ivo C. B. Coelho; Efren Dimaano; Tran Tinh Hien; Nguyen Thanh Hung; Thomas Jänisch; Axel Kroeger; Lucy Chai See Lum; Eric Martinez; João Bosco Siqueira; Tran Thi Thuy; Iris Villalobos; Elci Villegas; Bridget Wills

Objective  To evaluate the existing WHO dengue classification across all age groups and a wide geographical range and to develop a revised evidence‐based classification that would better reflect clinical severity.


Journal of Virology | 2011

An In-Depth Analysis of Original Antigenic Sin in Dengue Virus Infection

Claire M. Midgley; Martha Bajwa-Joseph; Sirijitt Vasanawathana; Wannee Limpitikul; Bridget Wills; Aleksandra Flanagan; Emily Waiyaiya; Hai Bac Tran; Alison E. Cowper; Pojchong Chotiyarnwon; Jonathan M. Grimes; Sutee Yoksan; Prida Malasit; Cameron P. Simmons; Juthathip Mongkolsapaya; Gavin R. Screaton

ABSTRACT The evolution of dengue viruses has resulted in four antigenically similar yet distinct serotypes. Infection with one serotype likely elicits lifelong immunity to that serotype, but generally not against the other three. Secondary or sequential infections are common, as multiple viral serotypes frequently cocirculate. Dengue infection, although frequently mild, can lead to dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) which can be life threatening. DHF is more common in secondary dengue infections, implying a role for the adaptive immune response in the disease. There is currently much effort toward the design and implementation of a dengue vaccine but these efforts are made more difficult by the challenge of inducing durable neutralizing immunity to all four viruses. Domain 3 of the dengue virus envelope protein (ED3) has been suggested as one such candidate because it contains neutralizing epitopes and it was originally thought that relatively few cross-reactive antibodies are directed to this domain. In this study, we performed a detailed analysis of the anti-ED3 response in a cohort of patients suffering either primary or secondary dengue infections. The results show dramatic evidence of original antigenic sin in secondary infections both in terms of binding and enhancement activity. This has important implications for dengue vaccine design because heterologous boosting is likely to maintain the immunological footprint of the first vaccination. On the basis of these findings, we propose a simple in vitro enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to diagnose the original dengue infection in secondary dengue cases.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2011

Epidemiological Factors Associated with Dengue Shock Syndrome and Mortality in Hospitalized Dengue Patients in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Katherine L. Anders; Nguyen Minh Nguyet; Nguyen Van Vinh Chau; Nguyen Thanh Hung; Tran Thi Thuy; Le Bich Lien; Jeremy Farrar; Bridget Wills; Tran Tinh Hien; Cameron P. Simmons

Understanding trends in dengue disease burden and risk factors for severe disease can inform health service allocation, clinical management, and planning for vaccines and therapeutics. Dengue admissions at three tertiary hospitals in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, increased between 1996 and 2009, peaking at 22,860 in 2008. Children aged 6–10 years had highest risk of dengue shock syndrome (DSS); however, mortality was highest in younger children and decreased with increasing age (odds ratio [OR] = 0.52, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.36–0.75 in 6- to 10- year-old children and OR = 0.27, 95% CI = 0.16–0.44 in 11- to 15-year-old children compared with 1- to 5-year-old children). Males were overrepresented among dengue cases; however, girls had higher risk of DSS (OR = 1.19, 95% CI = 1.14–1.24) and death (OR = 1.57, 95% CI = 1.14–2.17). Young children with dengue had greatest risk of death and should be targeted in dengue vaccine and drug trials. The increased risk of severe outcomes in girls warrants further attention in studies of pathogenesis, health-seeking behavior, and clinical care.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Host and viral features of human dengue cases shape the population of infected and infectious Aedes aegypti mosquitoes

Nguyet Minh Nguyen; Duong Thi Hue Kien; Trung Vu Tuan; Nguyen Than Ha Quyen; Chau N. B. Tran; Long Vo Thi; Dui Le Thi; Hoa Lan Nguyen; Jeremy Farrar; Edward C. Holmes; Maia A. Rabaa; Juliet E. Bryant; Truong Thanh Nguyen; Huong Thi Cam Nguyen; Lan Thi Hong Nguyen; Mai Phuong Pham; Tai Thi Hue Luong; Bridget Wills; Chau Van Vinh Nguyen; Marcel Wolbers; Cameron P. Simmons

Dengue is the most prevalent arboviral disease of humans. The host and virus variables associated with dengue virus (DENV) transmission from symptomatic dengue cases (n = 208) to Aedes aegypti mosquitoes during 407 independent exposure events was defined. The 50% mosquito infectious dose for each of DENV-1–4 ranged from 6.29 to 7.52 log10 RNA copies/mL of plasma. Increasing day of illness, declining viremia, and rising antibody titers were independently associated with reduced risk of DENV transmission. High early DENV plasma viremia levels in patients were a marker of the duration of human infectiousness, and blood meals containing high concentrations of DENV were positively associated with the prevalence of infectious mosquitoes 14 d after blood feeding. Ambulatory dengue cases had lower viremia levels compared with hospitalized dengue cases but nonetheless at levels predicted to be infectious to mosquitoes. These data define serotype-specific viremia levels that vaccines or drugs must inhibit to prevent DENV transmission.

Collaboration


Dive into the Bridget Wills's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nguyen Thanh Hung

Boston Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge