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Dive into the research topics where Stephen Lockhart is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen Lockhart.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2014

An outpatient, ambulant-design, controlled human infection model using escalating doses of Salmonella Typhi challenge delivered in sodium bicarbonate solution.

Claire S. Waddington; Thomas C. Darton; Claire Jones; Kathryn Haworth; Anna Peters; Tessa M. John; Ben Thompson; Simon Kerridge; Robert A. Kingsley; Liqing Zhou; Kathryn E. Holt; Ly-Mee Yu; Stephen Lockhart; Jeremy Farrar; Marcelo B. Sztein; Gordon Dougan; Brian Angus; Myron M. Levine; Andrew J. Pollard

Oral delivery of escalating-dose Salmonella Typhi (Quailes strain) using sodium bicarbonate buffer solution in an outpatient, ambulant-design human infection study demonstrates safety, requires a lower challenge inoculum than that used in historical studies, and offers a unique insight into host–pathogen interactions.


Vaccine | 2000

A randomised, double-blind, controlled trial of the immunogenicity and tolerability of a meningococcal group C conjugate vaccine in young British infants

Mike English; Jenny MacLennan; J.M. Bowen-Morris; J. Deeks; M. Boardman; K. Brown; S. Smith; Jim Buttery; J. Clarke; Sally A. Quataert; Stephen Lockhart; Er Moxon

A double-blind, randomised, controlled trial was conducted in 248 British infants to assess the immunogenicity and tolerability of three doses of a meningococcal group C/CRM (197) conjugate vaccine (Lederle Laboratories, USA) given at 2, 3 and 4 months. Control children received three doses of Hepatitis B vaccine (Engerix B(R); SmithKline Beecham). At 5 months of age, 100% of children receiving the conjugate vaccine had specific immunoglobulin G concentrations >2.0 microg/ml (n=116) compared with only 4% of control children (n=121). Those receiving the conjugate also had 2.5- and 1.6-fold higher geometric mean concentrations of PRP and diphtheria antibodies, respectively. The vaccine was well tolerated.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Interferon-driven alterations of the host's amino acid metabolism in the pathogenesis of typhoid fever.

Christoph J. Blohmke; Thomas C. Darton; Claire Jones; Nicolas M. Suarez; Claire S. Waddington; Brian Angus; Liqing Zhou; Jennifer Hill; Simon Clare; Leanne Kane; Subhankar Mukhopadhyay; Fernanda Schreiber; Maria A. Duque-Correa; James C. Wright; Theodoros Roumeliotis; Lu Yu; Jyoti S. Choudhary; Asuncion Mejias; Octavio Ramilo; Milensu Shanyinde; Marcelo B. Sztein; Robert A. Kingsley; Stephen Lockhart; Myron M. Levine; David J. Lynn; Gordon Dougan; Andrew J. Pollard

Work in humans and mice highlights the role of tryptophan metabolism in the immunopathogenesis of typhoid fever, offering novel insight into clinical disease.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2009

Demonstration of immunologic memory using serogroup C meningococcal glycoconjugate vaccine.

Matthew D. Snape; Jenny MacLennan; Stephen Lockhart; Mike English; Ly-Mee Yu; Richard Moxon; Andrew J. Pollard

Background: Studies of glycoconjugate vaccines have traditionally used an immune challenge with a plain polysaccharide vaccine to demonstrate immunologic memory. Plain polysaccharide vaccines are poorly immunogenic in children and can induce subsequent immunologic hyporesponsiveness. We therefore assessed the use of glycoconjugate vaccines as an alternative method of demonstrating immunologic memory. Methods: Children immunized with hepatitis B vaccine or serogroup C meningococcal glycoconjugate vaccine (MenCC) at age 2, 3, 4 months received a plain polysaccharide meningococcal serogroup A/C vaccine (MenACP) or MenCC at age 12 months. A post hoc analysis of serum bactericidal activity responses to MenCC assessed whether this differed in MenCC primed and MenCC naive infants. Results: MenCC primed children displayed higher geometric mean serum bactericidal titers than MenCC naive children following MenACP (1518 compared with 30; P = 0.003). A similar difference was seen after a dose of MenCC to toddlers (MenCC primed: 8663, MenCC naive: 710; P < 0.001). The latter comparison became a borderline significance after adjusting for higher pretoddler immunization serum bactericidal geometric mean titers in the MenCC primed group (P = 0.068). Conclusions: Administration of glycoconjugate vaccines provides an important alternative method of demonstrating immunologic memory, avoiding the use of plain polysaccharide vaccines that are potentially deleterious in children. This has implications for the design of all future clinical trials of glycoconjugate vaccines.


JAMA | 2005

Immunogenicity and safety of a combination pneumococcal-meningococcal vaccine in infants: a randomized controlled trial.

Jim Buttery; Anna Riddell; Jodie McVernon; Tracey Chantler; L Lane; J Bowen-Morris; Linda Diggle; Rhonwen Morris; A Harnden; Stephen Lockhart; Andrew J. Pollard; Keith Cartwright; E.R. Moxon


Vaccine | 2007

A randomized study comparing the safety and immunogenicity of a conjugate vaccine combination containing meningococcal group C and pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide—CRM197 with a meningococcal group C conjugate vaccine in healthy infants: Challenge phase

Anna Riddell; Jim Buttery; Jodie McVernon; Tracey Chantler; L Lane; J Bowen-Morris; Linda Diggle; Rhonwen Morris; Stephen Lockhart; Andrew J. Pollard; Keith Cartwright; E.R. Moxon


Tuberculosis | 2014

Novel licensure pathways for expeditious introduction of new tuberculosis vaccines: A discussion of the adaptive licensure concept

Roxana Rustomjee; Stephen Lockhart; Jacqueline Shea; P. Bernard Fourie; Zoë Hindle; Gavin Steel; Gregory D. Hussey; Ann M. Ginsberg; Michael J. Brennan


International Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Demonstration of primary and asymptomatic DNAaemia in participants challenged with Salmonella Typhi (Quailes strain) during the development of a human model of typhoid infection

Thomas C. Darton; Cheron Jones; Claire S. Waddington; Gordon Dougan; Marcelo B. Sztein; Myron Levine; Brian Angus; Jeremy Farrar; Stephen Lockhart; Derrick W. Crook; Andrew J. Pollard; Liqing Zhou


Journal of Infection | 2015

LIVE ATTENUATED ORAL VACCINE, AGE AND ANTI-VI ANTIBODY STATUS AT BASELINE SIGNIFICANTLY AFFECT ATTACK RATE IN A HUMAN SALMONELLA TYPHI CHALLENGE MODEL

Thomas C. Darton; Claire Jones; Claire S. Waddington; Christoph J. Blohmke; Anna Peters; Kathryn Haworth; Chris Green; Catherine A. Jeppesen; Maria Moore; Ben Thompson; Tessa M. John; Robert A. Kingsley; Ly-Mee Yu; Merryn Voysey; Stephen Lockhart; Jeremy Farrar; Marcelo B. Sztein; Brian Angus; Myron Levine; Andrew J. Pollard


International Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Quantification of antibody secreting cell responses in a human challenge model of Salmonella Typhi infection

Claire Jones; Claire S. Waddington; Thomas C. Darton; Jaclyn Bowman; Jeremy Farrar; Gordon Dougan; Myron Levine; Stephen Lockhart; Marcelo B. Sztein; Derrick W. Crook; Brian Angus; Andrew J. Pollard

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Gordon Dougan

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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