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Dive into the research topics where Mildred A. Iro is active.

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Featured researches published by Mildred A. Iro.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2016

Hospital admissions for viral meningitis in children in England over five decades: a population-based observational study

Natalie G Martin; Mildred A. Iro; Manish Sadarangani; Raphael Goldacre; Andrew J. Pollard; Michael J Goldacre

BACKGROUND A substantial reduction in bacterial meningitis has occurred in the UK following successful implementation of immunisation programmes. Most childhood meningitis in developed countries is now caused by viruses. Long-term trends in paediatric viral meningitis in England have not previously been reported. The objective of this study is to report on epidemiological trends over time in childhood viral meningitis in England. METHODS In this population-based observational study, we used routinely collected hospital discharge records from English National Health Service hospitals from 1968-2011 to analyse annual age-specific admission rates for viral meningitis, including specific viral aetiologies, in children younger than 15 years. FINDINGS We analysed hospital discharge records from Jan 1, 1968, to Dec 31, 2011. Hospital admission rates for viral meningitis from Jan 1, 1968, to Dec 31, 1985, varied annually, with a mean of 13·5 admissions per 100 000 children aged less than 15 years, per year (95% CI 13·0-14·0). Admission rates declined during the late 1980s, and the mean number of admissions from 1989-2011 was 5·2 per 100 000 per year (5·1-5·3). This decrease was entirely in children aged 1-14 years. Admission rates for infants aged less than 1 year increased since 2005, to 70·0 per 100 000 (63·7-76·2) in 2011, which was driven by an increase in admission of infants aged 90 days or less. In 1968-85, the majority of cases in children were in those aged 1-14 years (22 150 [89%] of 24 920 admissions). In 2007-11, 1716 (72%) of 2382 cases were in infants. Admissions for mumps-related meningitis almost disappeared following introduction of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine in 1988. Admissions with a specified viral aetiology have increased since 2000. INTERPRETATION Trends in viral meningitis admissions have changed substantially over the past 50 years, and probably reflect the impact of the MMR vaccine programme and the use of more sensitive diagnostic techniques. FUNDING None.


Vaccine | 2017

Persistence of bactericidal antibodies following booster vaccination with 4CMenB at 12, 18 or 24 months and immunogenicity of a fifth dose administered at 4 years of age-a phase 3 extension to a randomised controlled trial

Mildred A. Iro; Matthew D. Snape; Merryn Voysey; Sena Jawad; Adam Finn; Paul T. Heath; Gianni Bona; Susanna Esposito; Javier Díez-Domingo; Roman Prymula; Adefowope Odueyungbo; Daniela Toneatto; Peter Dull; Andrew J. Pollard

BACKGROUND 4CMenB is immunogenic in infants and toddlers. We assessed persistence of human complement serum bactericidal activity (hSBA) following a fourth dose administered at 12, 18 or 24months and characterised the antibody response to a fifth dose administered at 4years of age. METHODS A phase 3, open label, multi-centre extension to a randomised controlled trial conducted in four countries (number of centres): Czech Republic (nineteen), Italy (four), Spain (four) and the United Kingdom (four). Four-year-old children who were either 4CMenB-naïve or had previously received a variety of 3-dose infant priming schedules and a booster vaccine as toddlers (follow-on group) were recruited. Venous blood samples were obtained to determine hSBA against four reference strains; acting as targets to assess immunity to each of the vaccine antigens, NadA (5/99), fHbp (H44/76), PorA (NZ98/254), and NHBA (M10713) at baseline (prior to vaccination, all participants) and one month following a dose of 4CMenB for all vaccine-naïve and follow-on participants primed with the 2, 3, 4 schedule, and a third of follow-on participants primed with a 2, 4, 6month schedule. RESULTS At baseline (prior to vaccination), the proportion of participants (n=468) with hSBA titers⩾5 was similar across all followon groups: 89-100% against 5/99; 12-35% for H44/76; 8-12% for NZ98/254 and 53-80% for M10713 compared with 5%, 0%, 0%; and 60% respectively, for the vaccine-naïve controls (n=206). Following a dose of 4CMenB at 4years of age, this increased to 100% (5/99), 97-100% (H44/76), 80-95 % (NZ98/254) and 84-100% (M10713) (n=210), compared with 89%, 70%, 24%, and 76% respectively for vaccine-naïve controls (n=192). CONCLUSION Waning of protective antibodies occurred 24–36 months after toddler booster regardless of age at boost. This was least marked against target strains 5/99 and M10713. A robust memory response occurred after a booster dose given at 4 years of age.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2017

30-year trends in admission rates for encephalitis in children in England and effect of improved diagnostics and measles-mumps-rubella vaccination: a population-based observational study

Mildred A. Iro; Manish Sadarangani; Raphael Goldacre; Alecia Nickless; Andrew J. Pollard; Michael J Goldacre

BACKGROUND Encephalitis is a serious neurological disorder, yet data on admission rates for all-cause childhood encephalitis in England are scarce. We aimed to estimate admission rates for childhood encephalitis in England over 33 years (1979-2011), to describe trends in admission rates, and to observe how these rates have varied with the introduction of vaccines and improved diagnostics. METHODS We did a retrospective analysis of hospital admission statistics for encephalitis for individuals aged 0-19 years using national data from the Hospital Inpatient Enquiry (HIPE, 1979-85) and Hospital Episode Statistics (HES, 1990-2011). We analysed annual age-specific and age-standardised admission rates in single calendar years and admission rate trends for specified aetiologies in relation to introduction of PCR testing and measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccination. We compared admission rates between the two International Classification of Diseases (ICD) periods, ICD9 (1979-94) and ICD10 (1995-2011). FINDINGS We found 16 571 encephalitis hospital admissions in the period 1979-2011, with a mean hospital admission rate of 5·97 per 100 000 per year (95% CI 5·52-6·41). Hospital admission rates declined from 1979 to 1994 (ICD9; annual percentage change [APC] -3·30%; 95% CI -2·88 to -3·66; p<0·0001) and increased between 1995 and 2011 (ICD10; APC 3·30%; 2·75-3·85; p<0·0001). Admissions for measles decreased by 97% (from 0·32 to 0·009) and admissions for mumps encephalitis decreased by 98% (from 0·60 to 0·01) after the introduction of the two-dose MMR vaccine. Hospital admission rates for encephalitis of unknown aetiology have increased by 37% since the introduction of PCR testing. INTERPRETATION Hospital admission rates for all-cause childhood encephalitis in England are increasing. Admissions for measles and mumps encephalitis have decreased substantially. The numbers of encephalitis admissions without a specific diagnosis are increasing despite availability of PCR testing, indicating the need for strategies to improve aetiological diagnosis in children with encephalitis. FUNDING None.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2013

Varicella zoster virus central nervous system immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome presenting in a child

Mildred A. Iro; Fenella J. Kirkham; Jason H. M. Macdonald; Marc Tebruegge; Saul N. Faust; Sanjay Patel

A HIV-positive child presented with acute onset of right hemiplegia, facial palsy and dysphasia 4 weeks after commencing highly active antiretroviral therapy. Magnetic resonance imaging confirmed a left-sided cerebral infarct. Cerebrospinal fluid polymerase chain reaction was positive for varicella zoster virus. This is the first reported pediatric case of varicella zoster virus-related immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome involving the central nervous system.


BMJ Open | 2016

ImmunoglobuliN in the Treatment of Encephalitis (IgNiTE): protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial.

Mildred A. Iro; Manish Sadarangani; Michael Absoud; W. K. Chong; C A Clark; Ava Easton; V Gray; Rachel Kneen; Ming Lim; Michael Pike; Tom Solomon; Angela Vincent; L Willis; Ly-Mee Yu; Andrew J. Pollard

Introduction Infectious and immune-mediated encephalitides are important but under-recognised causes of morbidity and mortality in childhood, with a 7% death rate and up to 50% morbidity after prolonged follow-up. There is a theoretical basis for ameliorating the immune response with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), which is supported by empirical evidence of a beneficial response following its use in the treatment of viral and autoimmune encephalitis. In immune-mediated encephalitis, IVIG is often used after a delay (by weeks in some cases), while diagnosis is confirmed. Wider use of IVIG in infectious encephalitis and earlier use in immune-mediated encephalitis could improve outcomes for these conditions. We describe the protocol for the first ever randomised control trial of IVIG treatment for children with all-cause encephalitis. Methods and analysis 308 children (6 months to 16 years) with a diagnosis of acute/subacute encephalitis will be recruited in ∼30 UK hospitals and randomised to receive 2 doses (1 g/kg/dose) of either IVIG or matching placebo, in addition to standard treatment. Recruitment will be over a 42-month period and follow-up of each participant will be for 12 months post randomisation. The primary outcome is ‘good recovery’ (score of 2 or lower on the Glasgow Outcome Score Extended—paediatric version), at 12 months after randomisation. Additional secondary neurological measures will be collected at 4–6 weeks after discharge from acute care and at 6 and 12 months after randomisation. Safety, radiological, other autoimmune and tertiary outcomes will also be assessed. Ethics and dissemination This trial has been approved by the UK National Research Ethics committee (South Central—Oxford A; REC 14/SC/1416). Current protocol: V4.0 (10/03/2016). The findings will be presented at national and international meetings and conferences and published in peer-reviewed journals. Trial registration numbers NCT02308982, EudraCT201400299735 and ISRCTN15791925; Pre-results.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2015

Immunological effect of administration of sequential doses of Haemophilus influenzae type b and pneumococcal conjugate vaccines in the same versus alternating limbs in the routine infant immunisation schedule: an open-label randomised controlled trial

Mildred A. Iro; Ameneh Khatami; Andrew S. J. Marshall; David Pace; Merryn Voysey; Jennifer McKenna; Danielle Campbell; Simon Attard-Montalto; Adam Finn; Catherine White; Saul N. Faust; Alison Kent; Paul T. Heath; Emma MacLeod; Elaine Stanford; Helen Findlow; Rachael Almond; Xilian Bai; Ray Borrow; Matthew D. Snape; Andrew J. Pollard

BACKGROUND The use of different limbs for the administration of sequential doses of an intradermal rabies vaccine was shown to result in reduced vaccine immunogenicity. We aimed to assess whether this phenomenon also occurs with routine infant vaccines. METHODS In this open-label, randomised, controlled study, eligible healthy infants 6-12 weeks of age recruited through five clinical trials units (four in the UK and one in Malta) were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to two vaccination groups: consistent limb or alternating limb. Infants in the consistent limb group received the diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis-inactived polio-Haemophilus influenzae type b combined vaccine (DTaP-IPV-Hib) at 2, 3, and 4 months of age, and the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) at 2, 4, and 12 months, all administered to the right leg. Infants in the alternating limb group received DTaP-IPV-Hib in the left leg at 2 months and in the right leg at 3 and 4 months; and PCV13 in the left leg at 2 months, in the right leg at 4 months, and in the left arm at 12 months. All infants in both groups received the combined H influenzae type b and capsular group C Neisseria meningitidis tetanus toxoid conjugate vaccine (Hib-MenC-TT), administered in the left leg at 12 months. Randomisation was achieved by randomly generated codes, with permuted block size of 30, and was stratified by study site. Group allocation was not masked from study staff and parents of participants after enrolment, but group allocation was masked from laboratory staff assessing blood samples. The current study was a prespecified secondary objective of a parent phase 4 trial that assessed the induction of immunity following varying schedules of vaccination with glyco-conjugate capsular group C Neisseria meningitidis (Men C) vaccines in infancy. The objective of the current study was to compare the immunogenicity and reactogenicity of vaccines delivered in either consistent or alternating limbs. Immunogenicity was assessed by comparing serum IgG geometric mean concentrations at 5, 12, 13, and 24 months, analysed per protocol. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01129518. FINDINGS Between July 5, 2010, and Aug 1, 2013, we enrolled 509 infants and randomly allocated them to the consistent limb group (n=254) or the alternating limb group (n=255). Anti-H influenzae type b anti-polyribosylribitol phosphate IgG geometric mean concentrations were lower in the consistent limb group than in the alternating limb group at 5 months (consistent limb 0·41 μg/mL [95% CI 0·31-0·54] vs alternating limb 0·61 μg/mL [0·45-0·82]; p=0·0268) and at 12 months (0·35 μg/mL [0·28-0·43] vs 0·50 μg/mL [0·40-0·62]; p=0·0136). Anti-tetanus toxoid antibody IgG geometric mean concentrations were lower in the consistent limb group (1·63 IU/mL [95% CI 1·40-1·90]) than in the alternating limb group (2·30 IU/mL [1·97-2·68]) at 13 months (p=0·0008) and at 24 months (0·44 IU/mL [0·37-0·52] vs 0·61 IU/mL [0·51-0·73]; p=0·0074). Anti-pneumococcal IgG geometric mean concentrations were similar between both groups at all timepoints. The proportions of participants who had adverse events did not differ between the two groups. INTERPRETATION Use of different (alternating) limbs for sequential doses of routine infant vaccines does not reduce, and might enhance, immunogenicity. The underlying mechanism for this finding warrants further research. FUNDING NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre and GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals.


Canadian Medical Association Journal | 2017

Persistence of immunity after vaccination with a capsular group B meningococcal vaccine in 3 different toddler schedules

Manish Sadarangani; Tim Sell; Mildred A. Iro; Matthew D. Snape; Merryn Voysey; Adam Finn; Paul T. Heath; Gianni Bona; Susanna Esposito; Javier Díez-Domingo; Roman Prymula; Adefowope Odueyungbo; Daniela Toneatto; Andrew J. Pollard

BACKGROUND: One schedule for the capsular group B meningococcal vaccine 4CMenB is 2 doses that are administered 2 months apart for children aged 12–23 months, with a booster dose 12–24 months later. Our objective was to provide data on persistence of human serum bactericidal antibody (hSBA) titres in children up to 4 years of age after initial doses at 12–24 months, and immunogenicity of a booster dose at 48 months of age compared with vaccine-naive children. METHODS: Children previously immunized, as part of a randomized controlled trial, with 2 doses of 4CMenB vaccine at 12–24 months of age received a booster at 4 years of age. Vaccine-naive age-matched toddlers received 2 doses of 4CMenB. Human serum bactericidal antibody titres against reference strains H44/76, 5/99, NZ98/254 and M10713 were evaluated before and after innoculation with 4CMenB vaccine in 4-year-old children. RESULTS: Of 332 children in the study, 123 had previously received 4CMenB and 209 were vaccine-naive controls. Before the booster, the proportions of participants (previously vaccinated groups compared with controls) with hSBA titres of 1:5 or more were as follows: 9%–11% v. 1% (H44/76), 84%–100% v. 4% (5/99), 0%–18% v. 0% (NZ98/254) and 59%–60% v. 60% (M10713). After 1 dose of 4CMenB in previously immunized children, the proportions of participants achieving hSBA titres of 1:5 or more were 100% (H44/76 and 5/99), 70%–100% (NZ98/254) and 90%–100% (M10713). INTERPRETATION: We found that waning of hSBA titres by 4 years of age occurred after 2 doses of 4CMenB vaccine administered at 12–24 months, and doses at 12–24 months have a priming effect on the immune system. A booster may be necessary to maintain hSBA titres of 1:5 or more among those children with increased disease risk. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, no. NCT01717638


Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2017

Intravenous immunoglobulin for the treatment of childhood encephalitis.

Mildred A. Iro; Natalie G Martin; Michael Absoud; Andrew J. Pollard


Vaccine | 2017

Corrigendum to “Persistence of bactericidal antibodies following booster vaccination with 4CMenB at 12, 18 or 24 months and immunogenicity of a fifth dose administered at 4 years of age-a phase 3 extension to a randomised controlled trial” [Vaccine 35 (2017) 395–402]

Mildred A. Iro; Matthew D. Snape; Merryn Voysey; Sena Jawad; Adam Finn; Paul T. Heath; Gianni Bona; Susanna Esposito; Javier Díez-Domingo; Roman Prymula; Adefowope Odueyungbo; Daniela Toneatto; Peter M. Dull; Andrew J. Pollard


Vaccine | 2017

Corrigendum to "Persistence of bactericidal antibodies following booster vaccination with 4CMenB at 12, 18 or 24months and immunogenicity of a fifth dose administered at 4years of age-a phase 3 extension to a randomised controlled trial" [Vaccine 35 (2017) 395-402].

Mildred A. Iro; Matthew D. Snape; Merryn Voysey; Sena Jawad; Adam Finn; Paul T. Heath; Gianni Bona; Susanna Esposito; Javier Díez-Domingo; Roman Prymula; Adefowope Odueyungbo; Daniela Toneatto; Peter M. Dull; Andrew J. Pollard

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Adam Finn

University of Bristol

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Gianni Bona

University of Eastern Piedmont

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Javier Díez-Domingo

Universidad Católica de Valencia San Vicente Mártir

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