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Featured researches published by Rhonwen Morris.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999

Meningococcal Serogroup C Conjugate Vaccine Is Immunogenic in Infancy and Primes for Memory

Peter Richmond; Ray Borrow; Elizabeth L. Miller; Sarah Clark; Francesca Sadler; Andrew J. Fox; Norman Begg; Rhonwen Morris; Keith Cartwright

The safety, immunogenicity, and immunologic priming of 2 dosages (2 microgram or 10 microgram) of a meningococcal C oligosaccharide-CRM197 conjugate vaccine was evaluated in 114 infants vaccinated at ages 2, 3, and 4 months. Antibody persistence and response to boosting with 10 microgram of meningococcal C polysaccharide were assessed. The meningococcal conjugate vaccine produced fewer local reactions than concurrent routine immunizations. Total serogroup C-specific immunoglobulin geometric mean concentration (GMC) increased from 0.3 microgram/mL before vaccination to 13.1 microgram/mL at age 5 months. Serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) geometric mean titers (GMTs) rose from <1:4 to 1:1057 at 5 months and fell by 14 months to 1:19. Following boosting, anti-C-specific immunoglobulin GMC rose to 15.9 microgram/mL and SBA GMT to 1:495. Antibody responses in the 10-microgram dose cohort were significantly higher at 5 months (P<.01) than in the 2-microgram dose cohort but were lower after polysaccharide boosting (P=.02). This meningococcal conjugate vaccine was well tolerated and immunogenic and induced immunologic memory in infants.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001

Ability of 3 Different Meningococcal C Conjugate Vaccines to Induce Immunologic Memory after a Single Dose in UK Toddlers

Peter Richmond; Ray Borrow; David Goldblatt; Jamie Findlow; Sarah Martin; Rhonwen Morris; Keith Cartwright; Elizabeth Miller

To test for immunologic memory after a single dose of meningococcal C conjugate (MCC) vaccine in toddlers, 226 children 12-18 months old were randomized to receive 1 of 3 MCC vaccines, with a C polysaccharide booster 6 months later. The protein conjugate was diphtheria mutant toxoid in 2 vaccines (MCC-CRM(197)) and was tetanus toxoid in the third (MCC-TT). One month after the MCC vaccines, 91%-100% of children had serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) titers > or =8, and 89%-100% had a > or =4-fold increase. Geometric mean titer (GMT) increased from <4 to 215 (95% confidence interval [CI], 166-279). MCC-TT induced higher SBA GMTs (P<.001) and higher proportions with SBA > or =8 (P=.02) than did the MCC-CRM(197) vaccines. By 6 months, GMTs had decreased to 55.1 (95% CI, 40-76), but IgG antibody avidity increased (P<.001). Induction of immunologic memory was confirmed by a GMT of 1977 (range, 1535-2547) after the polysaccharide booster and a further increase in avidity. This evidence justified the use of a single dose in a catch-up immunization program for children 1-18 years old.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003

Rapid Diagnosis of Bacteremic Pneumococcal Infections in Adults by Using the Binax NOW Streptococcus pneumoniae Urinary Antigen Test: a Prospective, Controlled Clinical Evaluation

Michael D. Smith; Petra Derrington; Rachel Evans; Marjorie Creek; Rhonwen Morris; David A. B. Dance; Keith Cartwright

ABSTRACT The diagnosis of severe pneumococcal infections is inadequate, relying heavily on culture of Streptococcus pneumoniae from blood or other normally sterile fluids, and is severely limited by prior administration of antibiotics. We evaluated prospectively the Binax NOW S. pneumoniae urinary antigen test, a rapid immunochromatographic assay, for the diagnosis of bacteremic pneumococcal infections in hospitalized adult patients. Antigen was detected in 88 of 107 cases overall, resulting in a test sensitivity of 82% (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 74 to 89%). Antigen detection was greater in those with pneumonia (67 of 77 [87%]) than in those without pneumonia (21 of 30 [70%]) (P = 0.04). Urinary antigen was also detected in 3 of 106 adult patients with community-acquired septicemic infections caused by other organisms, giving a test specificity of 97% (95% CI, 92 to 99%). For 45 pneumococcal bacteremia patients with a positive test on treatment day 1, urinary antigen excretion was monitored for the first week of antibiotic treatment. Antigen was still detectable in 83% (29 of 35 tested; 95% CI, 66 to 93%) on treatment day 3. Detection of urinary antigen is a valuable, sensitive, and rapid test for the early diagnosis of bacteremic pneumococcal infections in adult patients, even after antibiotic treatment has commenced.


Vaccine | 1999

Immunogenicity and reactogenicity in UK infants of a novel meningococcal vesicle vaccine containing multiple class 1 (PorA) outer membrane proteins.

Keith Cartwright; Rhonwen Morris; Hans C. Rümke; Andrew J. Fox; Ray Borrow; Norman Begg; Peter Richmond; Jan Poolman

The development of effective vaccines against serogroup B meningococci is of great public health importance. We assessed a novel genetically engineered vaccine containing six meningococcal class 1 (PorA) outer membrane proteins representing 80% of prevalent strains in the UK. 103 infants were given the meningococcal vaccine at ages 2, 3 and 4 months with routine infant immunisations, with a fourth dose at 12-18 months. The vaccine was well tolerated. Three doses evoked good immune responses to two of six meningococcal strains expressing PorA proteins contained in the vaccine. Following a fourth dose, larger bactericidal responses to all six strains were observed, suggesting that the initial course had primed memory lymphocytes and revaccination stimulated a booster response. This hexavalent PorA meningococcal vaccine was safe and evoked encouraging immune responses in infants. Vaccines of this type warrant further development and evaluation.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2006

Immunogenicity and boosting after a reduced number of doses of a pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in infants and toddlers.

David Goldblatt; Jo Southern; Lindsey Ashton; Peter Richmond; Polly Burbidge; Juliana Tasevska; Annette Crowley-Luke; Nick Andrews; Rhonwen Morris; Ray Borrow; Keith Cartwright; Elizabeth L. Miller

Background: The minimum number of doses of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine required for protection is not known. We studied the immunogenicity of a reduced schedule in infants and toddlers. Methods: U.K. infants were given either 2 or 3 doses (at 2 and 4 or 2/3/4 months of age) of a 9-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (9VPCV) followed by boosting at 12 months of age. In a separate study, toddlers (12 months) received 1 or 2 doses (2 months apart) of 9VPCV followed by pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine at 18 months of age. Results: For infants, serotype-specific IgG geometric mean concentrations were similar post-primary immunization between the groups with both showing avidity maturation and similar booster responses. For toddlers, the primary response to 4 of the 9 serotypes was lower in the 1- compared with the 2-dose group (type 6B, 0.77 versus 7.1; type 14, 4.67 versus 14.98; type 19F, 5.05 versus 7.75; type 23F, 2.48 versus 5.05), although for all serotypes booster responses were similar between groups, and the postprimary responses in the 1-dose group were at least as high as those after infant immunization. Conclusions: The 2-dose infant priming schedule of 9VPCV is comparable with the 3-dose schedule and may thus be equally protective, whereas 1 dose in toddlers may suffice for a catch-up.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Antibody Persistence and Immunological Memory at Age 4 Years after Meningococcal Group C Conjugate Vaccination in Children in the United Kingdom

Ray Borrow; David Goldblatt; Nick Andrews; Jo Southern; Lindsey Ashton; Sarah Deane; Rhonwen Morris; Keith Cartwright; Elizabeth Miller

Antibody persistence and immunological priming for 2 formulations of a meningococcal group C (menC) conjugate (MCC) vaccine (containing 2 or 10 microg of menC polysaccharide) administered at 2, 3, and 4 months of age was investigated by boosting vaccine recipients at age 13-16 months or 4 years with 10 microg of unconjugated menC polysaccharide. At age 4 years, geometric mean titers (GMTs) and concentrations of menC-specific immunoglobulin G and serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) had decreased to prevaccination levels. Geometric mean avidity indices increased after the primary vaccination until age 13-16 months and then remained constant until age 4 years. One month after boosting at age 4 years, menC immunoglobulin G and SBA levels increased significantly. The postbooster SBA GMT for the 2-microg vaccination (2181.2; 95% confidence interval [CI], 975.9-4875.1) was 2-fold higher than that for the 10-microg vaccination (931.6; 95% CI, 338.0-2568.1). This is the first demonstration of immunological memory at 4 years of age in children receiving MCC vaccine on the United Kingdoms 2/3/4-month immunization schedule.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2000

Immunogenicity and reactogenicity of a pneumococcal conjugate vaccine administered combined with a Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate vaccine in United Kingdom infants.

Sharon Choo; Lynn Seymour; Rhonwen Morris; Sally A. Quataert; Steve Lockhart; Keith Cartwright; Adam Finn

BACKGROUND Streptococcus pneumoniae is a major disease burden in young children and the incidence of antibiotic-resistant pneumococcal strains is increasing. Multivalent pneumococcal saccharide-protein conjugate vaccines have recently been developed. OBJECTIVES To assess the immunogenicity and reactogenicity of a 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (7VPnC) administered as a separate injection or as a combined injection with Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccine (HbOC) at 2, 3 and 4 months of age. METHODS Randomized controlled trial of 368 healthy UK infants receiving routine vaccines only (control group), routine vaccines and 7VPnC as a separate injection (separate group), or routine vaccines and 7VPnC combined with HbOC (combined group) at 2, 3 and 4 months. The control group received 7VPnC at 5, 6 and 7 months. All groups received pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine at 13 to 16 months. Anticapsular IgG antibodies to 7VPnC serotypes were measured at 2, 5, 13 and 14 months and safety data collected. RESULTS IgG antibody concentrations at 5 months were higher in the two treatment groups compared with the controls for all 7VPnC serotypes (P < 0.001) and higher in the separate group than the combined group for five 7VPnC serotypes (P < 0.05). For both treatment groups antibody concentrations were higher at 14 months (range, 6.6 to 25.3 microg/ml) than at 5 months (range, 0.6 to 2.5 microg/ml) for all 7VPnC serotypes (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION 7VPnC was well-tolerated, safe and immunogenic when administered as a separate or as a combined 7VPnC/HbOC injection. Although antibody responses were lower in the infants who received the combination compared with those who received 7VPnC as a separate injection, marked anamnestic responses to polysaccharide challenge were observed, suggesting that both groups were immunologically primed.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2000

Induction of immunological memory in UK infants by a meningococcal A/C conjugate vaccine

Ray Borrow; Andrew J. Fox; P. C. Richmond; Sarah Clark; Francesca Sadler; Jamie Findlow; Rhonwen Morris; Norman Begg; K. Cartwright

The induction of immunological memory to serogroup A and C polysaccharides in UK infants immunized with three doses of a meningococcal A/C oligosaccharide CRM197 conjugate vaccine was investigated. Forty UK infants vaccinated previously with three doses of a meningococcal A/C oligosaccharide-CRM197 conjugate vaccine at 2, 3 and 4 months of age, were revaccinated at a mean age of 145.6 weeks with either a 10 or 50 microg dose of licensed meningococcal A/C polysaccharide vaccine. Serogroup-specific antibody and serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) responses were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and serum bactericidal assays, respectively. Following challenge, anti-serogroup A and C polysaccharide antibody levels rose from pre-booster geometric mean concentrations (GMC) of 3.1 and 2.1 microg/ml respectively to 19.6 and 21.0 microg/ml 1 month post-booster. Serum bactericidal antibody geometric mean titres (GMTs) for serogroups A and C increased 156- and 113-fold from 2.1 and 7.1 pre-booster respectively to 327.4 and 800.7 post-booster. A serogroup A control group of 45 children received a 10 microg dose of licensed meningococcal A/C polysaccharide vaccine (with no prior history of serogroup A vaccination) had serogroup A SBA GMTs of 2.3 pre-vaccination rising to 8 post-vaccination with corresponding GMCs of 0.8 and 10.8 microg/ml. These rises in SBA following serogroup A/C conjugate vaccination are indicative of immunological priming.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2004

Effects of Prior Polysaccharide Vaccination on Magnitude, Duration, and Quality of Immune Responses to and Safety Profile of a Meningococcal Serogroup C Tetanus Toxoid Conjugate Vaccination in Adults

Jo Southern; Sarah Deane; Lindsey Ashton; Ray Borrow; David Goldblatt; Nick Andrews; Paul Balmer; Rhonwen Morris; J. Simon Kroll; Elizabeth Miller

ABSTRACT Extensive use of meningococcal AC polysaccharide (MACP) vaccines has raised concerns about induction of immunologic hyporesponsiveness to C polysaccharide. We investigated the immunogenicity and safety of a meningococcal C-tetanus conjugate (MCC-TT) vaccine in naïve adults and prior MACP vaccinees. Laboratory staff (n = 113) were recruited; 73 were naïve to meningococcal vaccination, and 40 had previously received ≥1 dose of MACP vaccine. Blood was taken prior to MCC-TT vaccination and 1 week, 1 month, and 6 months later. At each time point, proportions of subjects with serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) titers of ≥8 or ≥128 were similar (P > 0.46); >94% of subjects achieved titers of ≥128 at 1 month. However, the geometric mean titer (GMT) of SBA at 1 month was higher in the naïve (1,757; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1,102 to 2,803) than in the previously vaccinated (662; 95% CI, 363 to 1,207) group (P = 0.02), and similarly at 6 months (P < 0.001). Conversely, geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) of serogroup C-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) were significantly higher in the previously vaccinated group pre-MCC-TT and at 1 week; the groups were similar at 1 month, and there was some evidence that the GMC for the previously vaccinated group was higher at 6 months. Qualitative differences in antibodies between groups were demonstrated by using the SBA/IgG ratio, though avidity measures were similar for the two groups throughout the study. MCC-TT was well tolerated, with similar safety profiles in the two groups. Pain in the arm and headache were the most frequently reported events following vaccination. The study shows that MCC-TT is safe and immunogenic in naïve and previously MACP-vaccinated adults, though the magnitude and persistence of postvaccination SBA responses in the latter group were lower.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2005

Diagnosis of Invasive Pneumococcal Infection by Serotype-Specific Urinary Antigen Detection

John P. Leeming; Keith Cartwright; Rhonwen Morris; Siobhan Martin; Michael D. Smith

ABSTRACT Widespread use of conjugate pneumococcal polysaccharide-protein vaccines may alter the spectrum of pneumococci producing invasive disease. Novel sensitive diagnostic methods would be valuable for monitoring the epidemiology of pneumococcal disease within populations and vaccine recipients. Ideally, these methods should allow determination of the serotype of the infecting clone. Serotype-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for 13 capsular polysaccharides (types 1, 3, 4, 5, 6A, 6B, 7A, 9V, 14, 18C, 19A, 19F, and 23F) were developed. Experiments with pure capsular polysaccharide demonstrated that the assays were sensitive (0.01 to 1.0 ng/ml) and specific. These assays were used to detect capsular polysaccharide in urine from 263 adult patients with proven (blood culture-positive) invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumonia of unknown etiology and from patients with positive blood cultures yielding bacteria other than pneumococci (control group). Among 76 patients with invasive pneumococcal disease from whom blood culture isolates had been serotyped, 62 (82%) had infections with pneumococci of serotypes represented in the ELISA panel. Capsular antigen matching the serotype of the blood culture isolate was detected in the urine of 52 of these patients, giving a sensitivity of 83.9% for the target serotypes. The tests were significantly more sensitive for urine from patients with pneumococcal pneumonia (89.8%) than for urine from patients with nonpneumonic invasive infection (61.5%; P < 0.05). Data from the control group indicated a specificity of 98.8%. These assays should prove valuable in epidemiological investigation of invasive pneumococcal infection in adults, particularly if combined with a sensitive C-polysaccharide detection assay to screen for positive samples.

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David Goldblatt

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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Nick Andrews

Public health laboratory

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Lindsey Ashton

University College London

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Andrew J. Fox

Manchester Royal Infirmary

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Norman Begg

Public health laboratory

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