Strategic Plan 2010 - 2015 - Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine
Transcription
Strategic Plan 2010 - 2015 - Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine
The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Strategic Plan 2010 - 2015 Contents 2 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Mission 4 Executive Summary 5 Objective 6 Strategic Aims 7 Background 8 Strategic Aim 1: Research Diseases and research capabilities Research Themes: Clinical epidemiology and diagnostics Malaria Dengue Rickettsial infections, Leptospirosis and other zoonoses CNS infections Tuberculosis Influenza and other respiratory infections Melioidosis and Staphylococcal infections Enteric infections Medicine quality Strategic Aim 2: Developing People 10 12 14 16 18 20 Strategic Aim 3: Developing Institutions 36 Strategic Aim 4: Public Engagement and Outreach 38 Strategic Aim 5: Dissemination 40 Strategic Aim 6: Strengthening Governance, Management and Financial Planning 42 Monitoring Progress 44 Current Membership of Key Committees 44 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 Strategic Plan 2010-2015 3 Mission Targeted clinical and public health investigation, using the best science, yielding appropriate and affordable interventions to make a significant impact on morbidity and mortality in the tropics. 4 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Executive Summary I nfectious diseases remain a very real global threat, and still account for over half the deaths in the developing world. The Wellcome Trust Asia Major Overseas Programmes (MOPs) conduct medical research in the most populated area of the world, where most of the world’s preventable deaths occur. The region is a global hot spot for the emergence of new infectious diseases, and it leads the world in drug resistance. The emergence and spread of artemisinin resistant malaria and multi-drug resistant (MDR) TB, the scourge of fake and substandard anti-infective drugs, and the spectre of potentially devastating epidemics of emerging infectious diseases all pose serious risks for the world. In addition Asia is going through an unprecedented period of social and environmental change. The future impact of these changes is difficult to predict but they will influence disease patterns both directly and indirectly. Currently a third of the region’s population, twice the population of sub-Saharan Africa, lives on less than two dollars a day. This is two-thirds of the developing world’s poor. With a burgeoning population and continuing high levels of poverty in both rural and urban areas, and in the context of a global economic downturn, the region faces greater challenges to health than ever before. The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network plans to capitalise on our clinical and scientific research capacity, excellent relationships with local partners, multinational networks, and strategic geographic position as a regional hub. Our work keeps health research as the focus with an integrated science programme and a particular interest in the interface between human and animal health. Our training and public engagement programme from schools to post-docs and lay people is helping to build a critical mass of Asian clinicians, scientists and the communities in which we are based dedicated to the development of the region and the health of its people. The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network, the product of more than 30 years sustained investment by the Trust, is uniquely placed to address effectively and comprehensively the complex public health problems faced by Asia and the world, and to make a truly significant impact on human health both in the region and globally. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 5 Objective O ur objective is to improve the health and reduce the human disease burden in the developing world. Our research focus is Asia, as many infectious disease threats originate in this area, but many of the principles are globally applicable. We have shown that major Strategic Aims improvements in medicine can derive from a well integrated, broad based, multidisciplinary, multinational, clinical and laboratory research network. We aim to inform health policy, change practice, and reduce the mortality from diseases in the tropics. 1 2 3 6 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Research: To conduct research into major health problems which threaten Asia and beyond. We will focus on a number of research themes, chosen for their public health importance both regionally and globally. Developing People: To develop a critical mass of internationally recognised Asian clinicians and scientists dedicated to the continued development of research capacity in the region and the health of its people. Developing Institutions: To create an integrated and well coordinated network of internationally recognised clinical and laboratory research sites across Asia and beyond, to deliver health advances addressing local and global health needs. To foster long-lasting and integrative collaborations with local institutions and hospitals to build both research and administrative capacity. 4 Public Engagement & Outreach: 5 Dissemination: 6 Strengthening Governance, Management and Financial Planning: To engage with the communities who host us and hence inspire and involve current and future generations in medical research. To provide and propagate research evidence of the highest quality and clinical relevance, upon which policy, both locally and globally, can be based. To build operational excellence through integrated business units, enabling us to continue realising the extraordinary research opportunities of our Network. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 7 Background Kathmandu T he WT Asia Tropical Medicine Research Network (the Network) comprises the two Wellcome Trust Major Overseas Programmes (MOPs) and their collaborative research sites and partners. The Thailand/Laos MOP has a scientific and administrative hub in Bangkok based at the Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University (the ‘Bangkok Unit’), and major research units on the Thai-Burmese border (the Shoklo Malaria Research Unit, or SMRU) and at Mahosot Hospital in Vientiane, Laos (LOMWRU). The Bangkok Unit, its field sites, and SMRU, comprise the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit (MORU). The Viet Nam MOP has its scientific and administrative hub in Ho Chi Minh City embedded in the Hospital for Tropical Diseases (the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit - OUCRU). The Viet Nam Programme has major research units in Hanoi, based at the National Institute of Health and Epidemiology, in Jakarta, Indonesia, based at the Eijkman Institute (EOCRU), and in Kathmandu, Nepal at the Patan Academy of Health Sciences. In addition to these major sites, there are a number of study sites located across the region, including: Ubon Ratchathani (Thailand), Chittagong (Bangladesh); Rourkela (India), Siem Reap (Cambodia), Beijing (China) and Rangoon (Burma). Each study site is linked to one of the administration hubs in Bangkok or HCMC. Together the sites form a clinical research Network across Asia. There is also a network of collaborative research sites in Africa, conducting the AQUAMAT study in severe childhood malaria, and in South America through the DENCO programme on dengue. Rourkela Chittagong Shantou Hanoi Vientiane Rangoon Mae Sot Bangkok Udon Thani Manila Ubon Ratchanthani Siem Reap Pailin Ho Chi Minh City Colombo Singapore The Network started over thirty years ago in Bangkok and has now grown from a single research unit in a single country to a network across Asia and beyond. Jayapura Timika Makassar Bandung MOP hubs Darwin Network research sites & major collaborators Key events in the first 30 years of the Network 1979 Bangkok Unit opens; work focuses on malaria and snakebites. 1981 First publication – Quinidine in falciparum malaria, The Lancet 1986 SMRU opens; studies in Ubon Ratchathani (Thailand) start 1991 Viet Nam Unit starts 2000 Laos Unit starts 2002 Chittagong collaboration starts 2003 Rourkela collaboration starts 2005 AQUAMAT Network formed in Africa 2006 Hanoi and Siem Reap collaborations start 2007 Indonesia and Nepal collaborations start Strategic Aims ”We aim to conduct research into major health problems which threaten Asia. We will focus on a number of research themes, chosen for their public health importance both regionally and globally”. Strategic Aim 1: Research W e aim to reduce the burden of infectious diseases research plans from across the Network, and each of locally and globally through an integrated the two MOPs is involved in every theme. Because approach that combines clinical and epidemiological the research portfolios of the MOPs have evolved in research with allied laboratory studies in a stimulating a complementary fashion, for every theme one MOP training environment. has more experience and expertise than the other, so We strive to be at the leading edge of innovation in will take the role of ‘Theme Leader’. This will facilitate applied clinical research, to extend our understanding the transfer of skills and technology between MOPs of disease and the most effective and throughout the Network. intervention strategies, to provide At any one time for each theme “...for each research the evidence on which policy an individual researcher will theme, an individual can be made and offer a vision represent the ‘Theme Leader’ for collaborative international MOP, and be responsible for the researcher will represent cooperation with a centre of gravity coordination of research efforts the ‘Theme Leader’ MOP, based firmly where the problems are across the Network. and be responsible for the most acute. Scientific strategy and We aim to lead the world in our research priorities for the coordination of research approach in these areas. We believe Network are coordinated by efforts across the Network.” that through its research activities the WT Asia MOP Network the WT Asia MOP Network has Executive Committee, which made a major contribution to regional and global comprises the directors/senior staff of all the major health. We have published more papers in the New research sites, including Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, England Journal of Medicine over the last five years SMRU, Hanoi, Laos, Jakarta and Kathmandu. This than any other single group globally and our research meets at least once a year, and works closely with the has played a major role in national and global policy in MOP management/strategic committees (see figure all our major areas of research. on page 41). Nick White is the standing Chairman of We retain the ability to respond flexibly to emerging the Network, providing wise counsel and political and threats, and through the relationships built within scientific oversight of its activities. Chairmanship of the host countries over decades we are trusted with the Network Executive Committee itself rotates between opportunity to do so. the members on an annual basis to ensure a constant This section addresses the research priorities across fresh perspective on organising the Committee’s the Network. We currently support a comprehensive activities. portfolio of work across a wide variety of infections and One of the Committee Chair’s roles is to host the our focus is on diseases that affect rural populations WT Asia MOP Network Annual Scientific Meeting, in Asia. The Thailand and Viet Nam Programmes at which the latest research and operational issues from each have foci of activity with multiple synergies across the network are presented and discussed. This and major overlap in the following areas; clinical meeting provides an opportunity for scientists from epidemiology, malaria, clinical trials, pharmacology, across the Network to meet and share ideas, expertise, statistics, mathematical modelling & genetics. There and resources. It also facilitates coordination of activities are continuous exchanges between the two research by MOP Theme Leaders. Programmes to ensure co-ordination and integration. Oversight of scientific strategy is provided by the From 2010 to 2015 all research work of the Network two International Scientific Advisory Boards, and by will be assigned to one of ten cross-MOP ‘research the MOP Governing Committees and the WT Asia themes’. Every research theme contains and unifies MOP Network Governing Board. 10 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Strategic Plan 2010-2015 11 Diseases and Research Capabilities fec tio n nz a& s M ala ria othe rr M es ed pi ra ici to ne ry M q in ua eli fec lit oi y do tio Ri isi ns c & ket s an d ot tsi S h a Tu er z l in tap f be oo ec hyl rc no tio oc ul os ses ns, occa is Le l pt inf os e pi ctio ro sis ns ue in In fl er ic En t in S D en Research capabilities CN Di se as es fec tio ns gu e Our research focuses on a number of diseases based on public health importance globally and regionally. We apply our extensive research capabilities to tackling these diseases, and have the capacity at any given time to adapt to a changing environment. The diagram below shows a summary of our current capabilities, with the areas of research focus highlighted by blue intersections. Diagnostics Drug resistance Therapeutics/RCT’s/ Pharmacology Immunology Modelling/Epidemiology/ Mapping Host and pathogen genetics Pathogenesis/Pathophysiology Health economics Global networks Effects of urbanisation and environmental change Advocacy 12 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Strategic Plan 2010-2015 13 Research theme: Clinical Epidemiology and Diagnostics Microbiology laboratories 13 involved in clinical epidemiology studies 1 5 1 6 2 9 3 4 4 2 5 7 3 6 10 7 8 8 9 10 11 12 13 Chiang Rai SMRU Bangkok Vientiane Luang Nam Tha Houaphan Salavan HCMC Hanoi Siem Reap Jakarta Jayapura Kathmandu (Thailand) (Laos) (Viet Nam) (Cambodia) (Indonesia) (Nepal) 12 11 Theme leader: Thailand/Laos MOP Now Determining the clinical epidemiology of disease is essential for defining the research agenda most appropriate to improve health. Infectious diseases remain the most important medical problem in the rural tropics. In our studies in five countries across Southeast Asia we have found considerable heterogeneity in both the clinical epidemiology and patterns of infectious disease and anti-infective drug resistance. We cannot safely generalise therefore, and so need to define and characterise this variability to choose specific diagnostics and empirical therapies. The absence of laboratory facilities and point of care tests capable of making accurate laboratory diagnoses of a range of common infectious diseases in rural areas, and indeed in many poor countries, perpetuates uninformed and inappropriate empirical treatments and contributes to millions of deaths each year from infectious diseases in the developing world. Even diagnosing malaria is beyond the capabilities of many rural clinics and hospitals. The vast majority (>90%) of diagnosis is still clinical and syndromic, and treatment is empirical, and resistance data very sparse. 14 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Future In the diverse rural and urban populations with whom we work we will define the specific causes of disease syndromes, the degree of their geographical heterogeneity, and the patterns of antimicrobial drug resistance. • We will investigate the role of nutritional deficiencies and the affect of these on infectious disease susceptibility and outcome. • We will use the latest technology to develop practical tools for defining the infective clinical epidemiology in resource-poor areas, and using the results to inform empirical treatment regimens, the deployment of appropriate diagnostics, clinical trials to optimise therapy, and health policy. • We will assess the potential public health impact and cost-effectiveness of defining the clinical epidemiology and its heterogeneity. Bangkok Melioidosis, leptospirosis, rickettsial diseases HCMC TB, Influenza, encephalitis, Streptococcus suis Kathmandu Typhoid Siem Reap General microbiology SMRU Acute respiratory infections (bacterial and viral), general microbiology Vientiane General microbiology, rickettsial diseases, virology Chittagong General microbiology, rickettsial diseases, virology •All laboratories are considered a joint resource by the Network, and sites with special expertise share this with other sites as and when required, either by transferring techniques or by shipping samples for analysis. For example, with help from the HCMC lab both SMRU and Laos will develop TB diagnostic capacity to conduct epidemiological studies of TB prevalence and the level of drug resistance. We plan to build a new Biosafety Level 3 laboratory in SMRU to further this aim. • We will determine the causes of fever, especially rickettsial, neorickettsial and viral diseases, in urban and rural Laos, in rural Indonesia, Viet Nam and Nepal and along the Thai-Burmese border (EOCRU, BKK, Laos, SMRU, Cambodia, HCMC). We will study the role of nutritional factors (general malnutrition, B1 deficiency, noma) in these populations. • We will set up three new microbiology labs in provincial Laos and conduct clinical epidemiological studies to assess the disease heterogeneity and the cost-effectiveness of implementing region specific empirical treatment guidelines. We plan a new microbiology lab in Chittagong to support studies on typhoid and CNS infections. • We will continue to develop and evaluate diagnostic tests for common, treatable infectious diseases in the region, both for use as gold standards in the laboratory and for rapid diagnosis at the bedside. • Mathematical modelling will be used to inform the optimum use of diagnostics and new treatment algorithms based on clinical epidemiological data (BKK, HCMC). • Geo-spatial mapping will be used as an aid to mapping disease prevalence and to inform public health interventions (Hanoi, Nairobi). How The Network has excellent clinical microbiology laboratory facilities in a number of sites across Asia. As well as being general microbiology labs, they have between them nurtured considerable specific expertise across a wide range of infectious diseases: Strategic Plan 2010-2015 15 Research theme: Malaria Clinical malaria sites 1 SMRU (Thailand) 2 Suang Phung (Thailand) 3 Bangkok (Thailand) 4 Savannakhet (Laos) 5 Pailin (Cambodia) 6 HCMC (Viet Nam) 7 Binh Phuc Province (Viet Nam) 8 Jayapura (Indonesia) 9 Chittagong (Bangladesh) 10 Rourkella (India) 11 Beira (Mozambique) 12 Kinshasa (DRC) 13 Kilifi (Kenya) 14 Mbarara (Uganda) 15 Korogwe (Tanzania) 16 Muheza (Tanzania) 17 Rwamagana (Rwanda) 18 Nyanza (Rwanda) 19 Ilorin (Nigeria) 20 Kumasi (Ghana) 21 Bobo Dioulasso (Burkino Faso) 22 Banjul (The Gambia) 23 10 9 1 24 7 22 3 21 20 5 6 19 12 14 17 18 8 13 1516 24 Malaria labs 23 Cambridge (Sanger) 3 Bangkok 6 HCMC 24 Jakarta (UK) (Thailand) (Viet Nam) (Indonesia) 11 Malaria causes around one million deaths annually and remains a huge and underestimated problem in Asia which bears almost all the global burden of vivax malaria, and a significant proportion of the falciparum malaria burden. Research carried out in both MOPs over the past 30 years has made many advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of malaria, and has defined the current treatment of uncomplicated malaria, severe malaria and malaria in pregnancy. We have pioneered the use of artemisinin-based combination therapies which are now first-line treatment world-wide. We have shown that compared to quinine artesunate reduces mortality in severe malaria in Asia. Recently we have described for the first time the emergence of artemisinin resistance in Western Cambodia; this is potentially the biggest threat to malaria control worldwide. 16 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network • • How Theme leader: Thailand/Laos MOP Now • Understand the mechanisms which control relapse in vivax malaria, and optimise radical treatment strategies. • Determine the factors responsible for the emergence and spread of antimalarial drug resistance, and optimise methods to prevent, retard, and if possible reverse these. • Identify the biological, pharmacological and molecular mechanisms underlying artemisinin resistance in P. falciparum and find alternative antimalarial treatment for the resistant phenotype. • Characterise the pathology and pathophysiology of severe and uncomplicated falciparum and vivax malaria in adults and children, and define and quantitate the processes in falciparum and vivax malaria in pregnancy that reduce birthweight. Future We aim to improve the treatment of malaria globally. There is renewed enthusiasm and considerable support for malaria elimination. The focus of our work is in Asia, which has a huge and underestimated burden of both falciparum and vivax malaria, but our research should improve the management of malaria throughout the tropical world, both directly and indirectly. Specifically, we aim to: • Reduce the mortality and morbidity of malaria in adults, children, and in pregnancy by optimizing antimalarial, adjunctive and supportive treatment, and the treatment of concomitant diseases. • Optimise the treatment of uncomplicated vivax and falciparum malaria in areas with high prevalences of drug resistance, haemoglobinopathies and G6PD deficiency. We will coordinate and deploy the considerable malaria expertise and scientific and clinical resources present in both MOPs to achieve these aims. We will: • Complete the large multicentre mortality study comparing parenteral artesunate and quinine in the treatment of severe malaria in African children (AQUAMAT). Currently recruiting in 11 sites in 9 countries. • Conduct multicentre studies of adjuvant and supportive therapies in severe malaria, and follow these up with appropriate multicentre studies in severe malaria in both adult and children (Chittagong, Rourkela, EOCRU, HCMC, AQUAMAT sites). • Conduct studies on the pathology and pathophysiology of both adult and paediatric severe malaria using a variety of different approaches. • Conduct studies on strategies to improve intensive care treatment for severe illness including severe malaria in hospitals in South and Southeast Asia. • Evaluate and optimise new antimalarial combination treatments based upon a sound pharmacokinetic / pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) rationale (SMRU, • • • • BKK, HCMC). All clinical studies will include drug measurements for correlation of drug concentration with outcome. New methodologies to enable the accurate measurement of drug levels from dried blood spots will be developed to facilitate field studies and studies in paediatric populations. Develop PK-PD models to suggest strategies to prevent the de-novo emergence and spread of antimalarial resistance, the design of intermittent preventive treatments, and drug deployment in elimination efforts (BKK, HCMC). Characterise antimalarial drug resistance, particularly artemisinin resistance in P. falciparum, using clinical, in vivo, pharmacological, and molecular techniques (genomics, transcriptomics). Develop phenotyping and genotyping methods, and develop and evaluate methods to prevent the spread of these resistant parasites to the rest of the world (Cambodia, BKK, SMRU, HCM, Laos, Sanger Institute, NTU in Singapore). Perform clinical trials on new antimalarials for artemisinin resistant malaria. Use mathematical modelling to inform the best strategies for containing and eliminating drug resistant malaria (BKK, HCMC). Conduct studies in vivax malaria to understand the pathophysiology, natural history, and population genetics of the disease, and the role and safety of primaquine and other antimalarials in its radical cure (EOCRU, SMRU, HCMC, BKK, Sanger Institute). Develop methods for the assessment of antimalarial drug transmission blocking activity and apply these in field studies (EOCRU, SMRU, BKK). Continue to conduct pathophysiological and treatment studies of malaria in pregnancy (SMRU). We lead the studies on the pharmacokinetics of antimalarials in pregnancy as part of the Malaria in Pregnancy Consortium with studies in Asia, Africa and South America. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 17 Research theme: Dengue Theme leader: Viet Nam MOP 6 5 4 3 Dengue research sites 2 7 9 1 8 1 10 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 HCMC Hanoi Bangkok SMRU Vientiane Luang Nam Tha Salavan Attapeu Siem Reap Manila • We will evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of new rapid diagnostic tests for dengue in the field situation. There have been many problems with the accuracy of such tests but new assays are available and could greatly improve the management of undifferentiated fever. • On a population basis we will study the interaction between human immunity and viral genomics and antigenicity, and use this to explore the disease epidemiology and the antigenic evolution of the virus. How Now Dengue is the most important mosquito-borne viral infection of humans and an enormous public health burden in affected countries. The Network has been at the forefront of clinical dengue research for the last 15 years, with extensive research carried out on the immunology, pathophysiology and treatment of the infection. Almost all of this work has been in Viet Nam, though research on dengue diagnostics has been carried out in Thailand and Laos. Research highlights include: • The first major prospective descriptive study to GCP standards of the clinical disease, leading to the new WHO evidence-based clinical classification of dengue. • The largest ever randomised trials of fluid management, the mainstay of treatment for shock caused by dengue. • First Phase II randomised RCTs of specific dengue treatments – Chloroquine (In press), steroids (finish 2010) and new antiviral compounds (start Q2 2010). • Research on better diagnostic tests for resource-poor settings. 18 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Future • We will continue to study the ongoing Wellcome Trust-funded cohort of children recruited at birth (10,000 strong) to assess the early-life risk factors for symptomatic and secondary dengue infection. • We plan to conduct a global, multi-centre, prospective assessment of the clinical utility of the new evidence-based dengue classification scheme in partnership with WHO and TDR. • As it is unclear whether viral burden is a direct driver of the pathophysiology of severe dengue, we will conduct “proof of concept” clinical studies to assess the pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic effects on viraemia and clinical endpoints such as capillary permeability. • We will conduct Phase II clinical trials of therapeutic interventions in severe dengue. Initial candidates are immune-modulators, platelet infusions and antivirals. • We will determine the dose of contemporary dengue virus required to infect Aedes aegypti mosquitos. This information is important for predicting the effects of reductions in viraemia in patients on disease transmissibility. The Network is in the strongest possible position to carry out research on global health threat, with an extensive collaborative partnership with many major hospitals in Viet Nam as well as important children’s hospitals in Thailand, Cambodia and Indonesia giving access to >50,000 patients with dengue per year. The Network has strong links with the global dengue community through the DENCO consortium, WHO (Chairmanship of the WHO/TDR Dengue and Emerging Viral Diseases Reference Group), the Paediatric Dengue Vaccine Initiative (PDVI), and dengue genomics and drug discovery groups in Singapore. If, as anticipated, a candidate treatment drug is identified, the Network will be able to use its pharmacology and virology expertise to conduct PK/ PD studies (BKK & HCMC), and tap its own extensive clinical resources and those of its partners to conduct pivotal, large multi-centre Phase III studies along the lines of the SEAQUAMAT and AQUAMAT studies in severe malaria. We will liaise with the National Institute of Malaria and Entomology in Hanoi to carry out the mosquito infectivity work. We will use mathematical modelling to inform the best strategies for reducing transmission through reducing viraemia, and for controlling the spread of a putative drug resistant virus (HCMC, BKK, Imperial). Antigenic cartography will be carried out in collaboration with Derek Smith’s group in Cambridge University and Andrew Rambault of Edinburgh University, who also work with the Network on influenza and scrub typhus (HCMC, BKK). Strategic Plan 2010-2015 19 Research theme: Rickettsial infections, Leptospirosis and other zoonoses Theme leader: Thailand/Laos MOP 3 2 1 Clinical study sites and laboratories 5 1 2 4 6 3 7 8 4 5 6 7 8 Now Tropical rickettsioses, leptospirosis, and zoonoses in general are the most under-recognised and understudied of infectious diseases, yet they are responsible for a huge disease burden in the developing world. This underrecognition is due to a combination of the poor and disadvantaged nature or the afflicted populations, and the genuine technical difficulties in diagnosing these common infections accurately. Most bacterial zoonoses are easily treatable, but only if the diagnosis is made, or at least suspected, and appropriate antibiotics administered. Lack of awareness of these diseases leads to inappropriate empirical therapy that results in preventable morbidity and mortality. Over the past decade we have carried out research to define the epidemiology, pathophysiology and best treatment of scrub typhus, murine typhus and leptospirosis in Southeast Asia. Highlights have included: • Revealing the clinical importance of scrub typhus, leptospirosis, and murine typhus as major causes of treatable non-malarial fever in rural Asia. 20 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Bangkok SMRU Chiang Rai Udon Thani Vientiane Savannakhet Siem Reap HCMC • Development of sequence typing schemes for leptospirosis and Orientia tsutsugamushi (the cause of scrub typhus) • Discovering that the recent epidemic of leptospirosis in Thailand was caused by a single ecologically successful virulent clone of Leptospira interrogans. • The largest ever treatment trials in leptospirosis, scrub typhus and murine typhus. • Studies to understand and define the pathophysiologies of leptospirosis and scrub and murine typhus, including the roles of cytokines and coagulopathy in these infections. Evidence from pathology studies that dendritic cells rather than endothelial cells may be the primary target cells for O. tsutsugamushi. The substantial work already carried out and planned on zoonotic causes of meningitis (Streptococcus suis) and encephalitis (e.g. Japanese encephalitis, Rabies) are covered in the ‘CNS infection’ theme, and the work on influenza is in the ‘Influenza and other Respiratory Infections’ theme. Future As part of the Network’s commitment to the One World One Health concept we plan to invest heavily in this theme over the next 5 years. Specifically we plan to: • Continue to define the epidemiology and contribution to disease burden of rickettsial infections, leptospirosis, fascioliasis and other zoonoses in Southeast Asia. • Determine whether there is significant antibiotic resistance in rickettsial diseases in Southeast Asia, and if so which alternative treatment regimens are the most effective. • Continue our investigation of the pathophysiology of rickettsial infections, identifying for scrub typhus and murine typhus the target cells, routes of invasion, and seeking molecular correlates of pathogenicity. We will work to define the human immune response to scrub typhus and murine typhus with a view to developing effective vaccines. • Optimise the typing methods that are essential for understanding the epidemiology, population genetics, ecology and pathophysiology of these infections. We will optimise further the MLST typing scheme for O. tsutsugamushi, and use it to determine the clinical epidemiology and population genetics of scrub typhus in both patients and the reservoir trombiculid mites. We will also develop a novel MLST scheme for R. typhi, the cause of murine typhus, and extend the spectrum of our MLST scheme for Leptospira spp. to include other pathogenic Leptospira species. • As a global molecular epidemiological resource, we will develop and curate the websites for all the Programme’s schemes, in collaboration with the curators of the mlst.net web site based at Imperial College, London. We will combine our spatial and molecular epidemiological capabilities to aid the global mapping of a number of major underdiagnosed, understudied, zoonotic pathogens (including Leptospira spp., Rickettsia spp., Streptococcus suis, and Fasciola). Working with zoologists studying the legal and illegal animal trade in Southeast Asia we will identify and track the epidemiology of known and unknown zoonotic pathogens. How Clinical work on zoonotic diseases will be closely integrated with the epidemiological studies outlined in the ‘Clinical Epidemiology and Diagnostics’ Theme, and will be carried out in sites across Southeast Asia (EOCRU, BKK, Laos, SMRU, Cambodia, Kathmandu, HCMC). Laboratory work on culturing the pathogens will take place principally in the BioSafety Level 3 Laboratories in Vientiane, HCMC and BKK. The high capacity culture facilities at the Australian Animal Research Laboratory in Geelong, Australia, will be used for large scale cell culture when appropriate (collaboration with CSIRO). Molecular and immunological work will be carried out in the adjacent laboratories and at collaborating laboratories in the region (Singapore (GIS), Melbourne (CSIRO)), in Europe (Imperial College, WTSI, University of Marseille), and in the US (UTMB, Texas). We will work with the Wildlife Conservation Society to sample live and dead wildlife and market workers in wildlife markets in Viet Nam to identify known and unknown pathogens which may cross the species barrier and cause human disease. The Network’s emphasis on zoonotic diseases will be even greater in 2011 to 2016 if the Viet Nam MOP’s Strategic Award application (WT-VIZIONS) is successful. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 21 Research theme: CNS Infections Theme leader: Viet Nam MOP Clinical study sites and laboratories 8 7 1 2 4 3 6 5 2 1 Now Over the past 15 years the Network, led by the Viet Nam MOP, has become a world leader in clinical research in infections of the CNS. Highlights have included the large clinical studies conducted on bacterial and tuberculous meningitis (HCMC), severe cryptococcal meningitis (HCMC, Ubon Ratchathani), viral encephalitis (HCMC), and the aetiology of CNS infections in Laos (Vientiane). However many questions remain concerning the aetiology, pathophysiology and treatment of meningitis and encephalitis. Through the Working Group on Bacterial Meningitis we have established a global network to develop standard definitions and protocols for research in infections of the CNS to facilitate multicentre studies and allow better comparisons between studies. Future We plan to: • Conduct clinical epidemiological and in depth laboratory studies to determine the aetiology and epidemiology of CNS infections across Asia. The causes of bacterial meningitis vary with time, location, age, and patient factors such as occupation and underlying conditions. Knowing the cause in 22 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network 3 4 5 6 7 8 HCMC Provincial hospital network Vientiane Luang Nam Tha Siem Reap Ubon Ratchathani Chittagong Kathmandu • • • a particular setting is essential if effective antibiotic treatment is to be given. For encephalitis, even with the best diagnostics, the underlying cause is unknown in 70% of adults and 60% of children. • Develop evidence-based syndromic management of “encephalitis”. As in even the best resourced settings it is usual for no causative pathogen to be identified, the most fruitful approach to improving outcome is likely to involve empirical treatment of the clinical syndrome of encephalitis with a cocktail of antiviral, antibacterial and immuno-modulatory drugs. • Carry out a prospective study on the cause of hearing loss in S. suis infections, and carry out animal studies to assess the role of dexamethasone in preventing this common and disabling complication. • Conduct a clinical trial of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) for the treatment of severe Hand, Foot and Mouth disease (HFMD). An increase in the incidence of encephalitis in children is thought to be due to the emergence of enterovirus 71 variants associated with HFMD and neurological complications. IVIg has been used to treat HFMD, but the evidence base for this is non-existent. After in vitro assessment of the neutralizing activity of • IVIg from several countries a multi-centre treatment trial will be set up. Assess whether, in the light of the successful treatment of a patient with bat lyssavirus infection with amantadine and ribavirin, a treatment trial of rabies is appropriate and ethically sound. Conduct multicentre treatment trials to improve the therapy of cryptococcal meningitis in both HIV positive and negative patients. Candidate interventions include new antifungal regimens and adjuvant therapies such as dexamethasone. Study the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of behind the link between CNS infections and altered sodium homeostasis. Hyponatraemia is common in both cryptococcal meningitis and TB meningitis, and a predictor of death in the latter. Investigate how the blood brain barrier affects the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamics of drugs used to treat CNS infections, and use this information to improve treatment. Specifically we shall study valacyclovir in encephalitis, antifungal drugs in cryptococcal meningitis, and albendazole in eosinophilic meningitis, and conduct clinical trials of new drug regimens where appropriate. • Investigate whether pathogen characteristics determine the severity and outcome of CNS infections, using a variety of approaches including pathogen typing and population genetics, the nature of the human immune response, and assessment of antimicrobial drug resistance. How The use of multiple study sites across several countries will provide our CNS infection studies with sufficient power to address the above clinical and scientific questions. Central microbiology support and training will be provided by HCMC, with local laboratories providing general diagnostic support. Molecular and immunological laboratory support will be from HCMC, BKK, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, the University of Wageningen in the Netherlands, China CDC and Imperial College, London. Pharmacology support in terms of assay development, drug measurement and PK/PD analysis will be carried out by the pharmacology departments and mathematical modeling groups in BKK and HCMC. Clinical study sites Epidemiology Cryptococcal meningitis HCMC, Vientiane, Siem Reap, BKK, 14 provincial hospitals across VN, Kathmandu, Chittagong HCMC, Vientiane, Siem Reap, 14 provincial hospitals across VN, Chittagong, Kathmandu HCMC, Hanoi, Ubon Ratchathani HFMD HCMC, Siem Reap, 14 provincial hospitals across VN TB meningitis S. suis meningitis HCMC, Hanoi HCMC, Hanoi Encephalitis studies Strategic Plan 2010-2015 23 Research theme: Tuberculosis Clinical study sites and laboratories Theme leader: Viet Nam MOP 1 2 2 3 3 HCMC Vientiane SMRU • 1 Now The Network’s TB research has until now been focused largely on the Viet Nam MOP’s work on tuberculous meningitis (TBM), a terrible disease which kills 25% of HIV-ve and 60% of HIV+ve patients. Research highlights have included: • A large clinical trial showed that dexamethasone increased survival in TBM, and hence changed treatment recommendations globally. • Further research during and subsequent to the trial has shown that this protective effect does not appear to be due to an attenuation of the inflammatory immune response, is associated with decreased matrix metaloproteinase-9 in the CSF, and may be mediated clinically through a reduction in hydrocephalus and cerebral infarction. • Detailed clinical and microbiological descriptions of the disease in the large cohort studied by the MOP. • Identification of several host and pathogen genetic factors affecting susceptibility to TBM. However the mortality from TBM remains high, particularly in HIV+ve patients (still >60%). In other very resource-poor parts of the region the burden of TB and the impact of drug-resistance remains largely unknown. 24 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Future Our vision for TB research across the Network is to build on the VN MOP’s TBM experience and develop a wider research agenda involving continuing to improve treatment of TBM, improving diagnostics of TB generally, and with help from the HCMC lab defining the incidence and improving the treatment of drug-resistant TB in Laos and along the Thai-Burmese border. Guided by our studies on the epidemiology of drug resistance we plan ultimately to design and conduct large multi-centre treatment studies of pulmonary TB. Specifically we plan to: • Conduct in TBM a randomised clinical trial comparing standard anti-TB treatment with standard treatment ‘reinforced’ by levofloxacin (which has good CSF penetration) and high dose rifampicin (HCMC). • Determine whether there are significant patient populations under-dosed on current treatment regimens, with the attendant risks of treatment failure and the development of drug resistance. We will carry out PK/PD studies of HIV and anti-TB treatment in TBM, PK studies iof anti-TB drug levels in blood and CSF in children, further PK studies of second-line drugs, and investigate the • • • influence of pharmacogenetic factors on the PK of isoniazid and other anti-TB drugs (HCMC, BKK). Conduct studies on the best methods for diagnosing TB in Viet Nam, Nepal, Laos and Thailand. We will develop clinical/laboratory algorithms for the diagnosis of paediatric TB/TBM and adult TBM, and we will conduct a clinical trial comparing optimised MODS and the MTBDR-plus test for the early assessment of drug sensitivity (HCMC, SMRU, Kathmandu, Vientiane). We plan to develop and evaluate an operating system for the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis in remote inaccessible rural areas (SMRU, Vientiane). Determine the epidemiology of MDR and XDR TB in Laos, and in the migrant population on both sides of the Thai-Burmese border. Determine whether characterization of resistance mutations can inform treatment strategies for drug resistant TB. Results from ongoing studies linking drug-resistance mutations with treatment outcome will be used to inform a clinical trial to test the combination of rapid molecular testing for mutations with tailored treatment regimens (HCMC). Investigate the impact of co-morbidities on disease progression in TBM. We will examine the impact of Hepatitis B/C and HIV co-infections in TBM, and how the interactions affect viral and bacterial replication. We will also assess using sensitive deep sequencing techniques whether resistance to ARVs develops first in body compartments such as the brain where ARV levels may be low (HCMC). • Build on our findings of host genetic susceptibility factors in TBM and conduct a multi-centre, Asiawide, genome-wide genetic association study to identify genetic risk factors for pulmonary TB. Functional studies will be carried out to determine the mechanism(s) behind these associations (HCMC, Hanoi, Thailand, Laos, Singapore). • Determine the impact of pathogen genotype on M. tuberculosis epidemiology using a combination of clinical epidemiology with GIS mapping, SNP typing and whole genome analysis (HCMC, Hanoi, WTSI). This will be carried out primarily in Viet Nam but will be extended to Laos and Thailand once studies there are underway. How TB laboratory expertise is well developed in HCMC, and will be shared with the new TB research sites in SMRU and Vientiane. There is already a TB laboratory in Mahosot Hospital in Vientiane, which has been renovated and should be fully functional soon. We plan to build a new TB laboratory in SMRU, which will be an extension of the existing microbiology laboratory. A TB treatment programme has already been initiated in SMRU. Given the scale of the TB problem in Laos and Burma as expertise develops in Vientiane and SMRU there will be enormous scope for involvement in and contribution to multicentre studies initiated by the VN MOP. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 25 Research theme: Influenza and other Respiratory Infections Clinical study sites and laboratories 1 2 2 Theme leader: Viet Nam MOP 3 4 4 3 HCMC Hanoi Bangkok SMRU 1 Now As in many resource-poor regions acute respiratory infections (ARIs) are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in Southeast Asia. Although pneumococcal disease remains a major scourge, the importance of viral infections as a common cause of severe disease is increasingly evident. Gram-negative pathogens such as Klebsiella pneumoniae are a frequent cause of severe pneumonia in adults. The Network leads the world in clinical influenza research, and conducts research on respiratory infections of all aetiologies. Highlights over the last five years include: • First detailed clinical description of H5N1 Avian influenza in humans, and subsequent studies on the clinical manifestations of H1N1 (2009) influenza (HCMC, Hanoi). • Understanding the pathophysiology of H5N1 infection, in particular the role of high viral load and cytokine response (HCMC, Hanoi). • Groundbreaking population level studies on the human epidemiology of H5N1, seasonal, and H1N1 (2009) influenza (HCMC, Hanoi). • Advances in the pharmacology of anti-influenza drugs, developing novel highly sensitive assays for the neuraminidase inhibitors, and conducting pharmacokinetic studies to assess dose regimens and safety in both healthy volunteers and patients with severe influenza (BKK, Hanoi, HCMC). 26 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network • Conducting clinical trials aimed at improving the treatment of severe influenza (HCMC, Hanoi, BKK, Indonesia). • Studies of respiratory infections in a prospective cohort of children in a refugee camp on the Thai-Burmese border, demonstrating the clinical importance of viral ARIs (SMRU). For the past five years we have been at the heart of the NIH-funded Southeast Asian Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Network (SEAICRN), which has funded and coordinated influenza research and research capacity building across Asia. Future Across the Network we plan to: • Develop optimal diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to respiratory infections. • Assess the utility of surveillance and modelling of pathogens and populations in humans, wildlife and farm animals for the timely detection or prediction of emerging pathogens and the informing of public health responses. • Continue to characterise the causes of severe infant respiratory infections in a rural refugee and migrant worker population with very high infant mortality, and determine appropriate empirical treatments and preventive measures. •Determine the role of urban air pollution in the susceptibility to pulmonary infection and disease severity, and whether the use of facemasks can improve respiratory health. •Investigate which host and population level factors influence the circulation and susceptibility to avian and seasonal influenza. •Conduct pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic studies and clinical treatment trials to assess the optimal treatment for severe influenza infection. A study of plasma therapy as adjuvant treatment for H5N1 influenza will be considered in China and Viet Nam. How We will aim to complete the existing research agenda of SEAICRN, and will continue to use this unique clinical research network to conduct further epidemiological and treatment studies in influenza and other infectious diseases (Jakarta, BKK, HCMC, Hanoi). Expertise on the detection and characterisation of respiratory pathogens exists in the laboratories in HCMC and in SMRU. These two centres will work together to optimise and harmonise methodologies for diagnosis of respiratory infections, including RT-PCR and point of care (PoC) tests. They are positioned close to the clinical study sites where diagnostic utility and the impact of test availability on appropriate antibiotic and antiviral usage can be assessed (HCMC, SMRU). The birth cohorts in HCMC, Dong Thap and SMRU will continue to be followed up prospectively to provide insight into the aetiology and frequency of respiratory infections and the role of asymptomatic carriage. Study protocols will be harmonised to allow comparison between these very different settings (SMRU, HCMC, Dong Thap). To inform the public health response to both seasonal and pandemic influenza and the optimal application of interventions, the community cohort set up in North Viet Nam will be studied to gain a detailed understanding of the incidence and the way that influenza is transmitted within the local community (Hanoi). Samples from this cohort will also be used to identify and study examples of in vivo and in vitro heterotypic protective immunity to influenza viruses (Hanoi, HCMC). DNA from patients with H5N1 infection and their relatives has been collected across the Network and in China in collaboration with China CDC to identify genetic risk factors for this infection using genomewide linkage and association studies The results will inform future candidate gene and phenotype studies (Hanoi, HCMC, BKK). We will continue to liaise with multiple government and non-governmental agencies in Viet Nam and Cambodia in conducting surveillance for novel influenza viruses in animals. We will use deep sequencing and phenotypic prediction to predict pandemic candidate viruses, population immune landscaping to predict human virus evolution, and mathematical modelling of human economic optimization and virus circulation to determine the impact of compensation and culling practices. Pharmacokinetic studies will be conducted to determine the correct dose of anti-influenza drugs in obese individuals, in pregnancy, and in the very young, and to assess whether there are any clinically important drug interactions between the neuraminidase inhibitors. Whether or not probenicid prevents the transport of active oseltamivir into respiratory secretions will also be assessed. In vitro PK/PD studies will investigate the potential synergistic anti-influenza action of antivirals in combination, with clinical trials to follow if the results are promising (BKK, HCMC). In a polluted setting we will investigate the effect on health status of wearing the R95 Particulate Respirator face mask in a 2-year community based study in which non-smoking volunteers will be randomised to wearing this mask. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 27 Research theme: Melioidosis and Staphylococcal infections Theme leader: Thailand/Laos MOP Clinical study sites and laboratories 7 4 2 3 1 2 3 1 5 4 6 5 6 7 Now Although one is a Gram negative soil saprophyte and the other a Gram positive human coloniser, the diseases caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei (melioidosis) and Staphylococcus aureus have similarities in clinical features and pathophysiology which often requires the application of similar investigative tools. Both diseases preferentially attack compromised hosts, both are characterized by abscess formation and persistence, both are notoriously difficult to treat in terms of antibiotic resistance and the duration of antibiotic treatment required to prevent relapse, and both are major killers. They are both important causes of community-acquired bacteraemia across Southeast Asia, and S. aureus is the leading cause of hospital-acquired infections across the world. 28 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Ubon Ratchathani Bangkok Khon Kaen Vientiane Siem Reap HCMC Hanoi The Thailand MOP has carried out more research on melioidosis than any other organisation, and over the past 20 years has conducted extensive laboratory and clinical studies to define the pathophysiology and optimise the diagnosis and treatment. Staphylococcal infection is not thought of as a tropical disease, and is consequently under-recognised and under-studied in the resource-poor world. In fact we have shown that the burden of disease is likely to be as high or higher in these settings, with spread of nosocomial infections a major clinical burden in hospitals, and virulent clones of community-acquired Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) the cause of serious infections which are impossible to treat with available antibiotics. Future Over the next five years we plan to: • Improve the antibiotic treatment of melioidosis. We will complete the ATOM study comparing meropenem with ceftazidime in acute severe melioidosis, and the MERTH study of 3 versus 2 oral drugs in the eradication phase of treatment. We will also conduct a population pharmacokinetic study of co-trimoxazole in melioidosis eradication treatment, and combine this with in-vitro drug susceptibility data to determine the optimum drug regimen. • Investigate potential adjunctive and supportive treatments for melioidosis. We will conduct a prospective study of the effect of diabetes and glibenclamide on pro-inflammatory cytokine and chemokine secretion in experimental and human melioidosis. In a study of more than 1,000 melioidosis patients, we found that survival was significantly better for diabetics taking glibenclamide on admission compared to diabetics who were not. We also plan to determine whether it is possible to develop and simple, safe method to optimise glucose control in sepsis in this setting, and whether this improves outcome. • Investigate whether polymorphisms affecting TLRmediated responses of the innate immune system predispose to excessive inflammation during both melioidosis and S. aureus infection, contributing to poor outcomes from these infections. • Develop evidence-based programmes for disease prevention for both S. aureus infection and melioidosis. A case-control study will be conducted examining the association between activities of daily living and risk of melioidosis, with a view to developing simple interventions to reduce the risk of disease acquisition. Field studies investigating methods of environmental control of Burkholderia pseudomallei will also continue. For Staphylococcal infections we aim to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of interventions to reduce disease due to MRSA and other hospital pathogens, using a combination of observational studies, mathematical modelling, and ultimately an intervention trial. • Conduct preliminary microbiological and immunological studies towards the development of an effective T cell-inducing vaccine against melioidosis. How Both the clinical staphylococcal and clinical melioidosis work will centre on our permanent laboratory and clinical study site in Sappasithiprasong Hospital in Ubon Ratchathani, with work also being conducted in other collaborative hospitals in Northeast Thailand, in Siem Reap, and in Viet Nam (HCMC and Hanoi). Melioidosis clinical trials will continue to be conducted with the Thailand Melioidosis Clinical Trials Group, centred in Khon Kaen University. Microbiological and molecular work will be carried out in BKK, and in the UK as part of our extensive collaboration on these two diseases with the WTSI and the University of Cambridge. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 29 Research theme: Enteric Infections Theme leader: Viet Nam MOP 9 Clinical study sites and laboratories 8 3 5 4 6 1 2 2 3 7 1 4 5 6 7 8 9 Now Enteric infections contribute significantly to global morbidity and mortality. As population growth focuses in poor areas and one in six people do not have access to safe water and four in ten even lack access to basic sanitation, the morbidity from enteric diseases will inevitably increase. We have worked on a number of important enteric infections, including enteric fever (typhoid and paratyphoid – in Viet Nam, Nepal and Laos), Shigellosis (Viet Nam) and Hepatitis E (Laos and Nepal). For enteric fever in particular the MOPs have made major contributions to understanding the genomics, mechanisms of drug resistance, and pathophysiology and treatment of the disease. Antimicrobial drug resistance remains the biggest clinical problem in the management of enteric fever. Future We plan to map the spatial epidemiology of enteric pathogens using GIS methodologies, and use this information combined with environmental, clinical and pathogen genotyping data, to determine risk factors and patterns of transmission (Dong Thap, Nepal, Hanoi, HCMC, Sanger). We will continue work on the pathophysiology of enteric fever, determining using a variety of approaches how variability in the host immune response affects disease susceptibility (VN, Nepal and Bangladesh). 30 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network HCMC Hanoi Dong Thap Vientiane Luang Nam Tha Houaphan Salavan Chittagong Kathmandu How The laboratories in HCMC have extensive expertise in the microbiology and immunology of enteric fever. They will continue to share their expertise with the laboratories in Laos and Nepal, and additionally work with the Thai/Bangladeshi team setting up enteric fever studies in Chittagong. The clinical trials of fluoroquinolones and other treatments for enteric fever will all incorporate a PK/PD component, working with the Network pharmacology laboratories (BKK, HCMC). Our research on Hepatitis E will build on existing epidemiological and clinical infrastructure in Nepal, and existing Network experience in Bangkok and Laos. We will continue our systematic programme aimed at improving the treatment of enteric fever. We will standardise trial design and ensure that antibiotic treatment trials are adequately powered. We will compare the new fluoroquinolones against the older more established and failing ones, and also assess the efficacy of cabapenems, combination therapies and the treatment of severe disease. We will carry out in vitro studies of time dependent killing of S. Typhi and S. Typhi mutants by all available fluoroquinolones (HCMC, Dong Thap, Nepal). Antimicrobial drug resistance in the Enterobacteriaceae is a global problem. We aim to explore the role of the commensal flora as a reservoir for drug resistance genes by isolating and sequencing novel plasmids circulating within the gut flora (VN, Sanger). We will conduct a randomised controlled multicentre trial comparing the efficacy of ofloxacin versus gatifloxacin for 3 days for the treatment of children infected with Shigella spp. in Viet Nam. This study will be conducted at HTD and Huu Nghi Hospital, Dong Thap. Stool or rectal swab will be cultured for Shigella and Salmonella and drug resistance testing will be performed on all isolates. We will investigate the role of Hepatitis E infection in pregnancy in a large epidemiological study in Nepal, where transmission is high and preliminary data suggests it is a very important cause of maternal mortality. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 31 Research theme: Medicine Quality Theme leader: Thailand/Laos MOP Now Poor medicine quality is a major neglected public health problem - a ‘mortality gap’ between clinical research and policy making and what patients actually receive. The Network, led by the Laos Unit, has been heavily involved in investigating, publicising and addressing 32 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network this problem, particularly with regard to counterfeit antimalarial drugs. We are founding members of the Counterfeit Drug Forensic Investigation Network (CODFIN) component of the Gates ACT Consortium grant. Future We plan to expand our previous research to obtain objective evidence, which is currently very sparse, on the extent of the problem and locations of manufacturers, and to evaluate rapid quality tests. We will use this information in advocacy for interventions and to build effective collaborations and data sharing between medicine regulators, police, customs, health workers, scientists and manufacturers. We will continue to sample antimalarial medicine quality in Southeast Asia and beyond, and expand this work to other anti-infectives, especially anti-TB therapy. We will continue long term chemical stability studies of antimalarial medicines in the field in Laos and in the laboratory to obtain independent evidence of their effective longevity and to define degradation products so that substandard and degraded medicines can be distinguished with more confidence. We will evaluate and compare new Raman, NIR and ion-mobility hand held rapid screening tools for assessing medicine quality in outlets in Laos and Africa (F. Fernandez, Georgia Tech and M. Green, CDC) and assess their potential impact. If these are accurate and easy to use they could empower drug inspectors to make rapid, inexpensive screening chemical assessment of medicines in the field. How We will build on our existing Network, our membership of CODFIN/ACT Consortium and our links with the wider tropical medicine community to coordinate widespread, statistically valid sampling in Asia and Africa and evaluate sampling techniques and interpretation of forensic data with INTERPOL/ IMPACT. We will continue close collaboration with the laboratories of F. Fernandez (Georgia Tech), D. Mildenhall (GNS), and M. Green & S. Smith (CDC) on the development and assessment in the field and in the laboratory of innovative new chemical and biological forensic techniques to understand the epidemiology and source of poor-quality medicines. Our hope is that this work will help advocate change globally, so that this essential but neglected component of effective medical care is given the attention it needs. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 33 Strategic Aim 2: Developing People “To develop a critical mass of internationally recognised Asian clinicians and scientists dedicated to the continued development of research capacity in the region and the health of its people”. Now The present capacity to initiate and lead health sciences research in Asia is limited, and as a consequence the health research agenda largely continues to be set and driven by external agencies and institutions to an unacceptable degree. Many factors contribute to this lack of capacity, including: • A paucity of established research programmes and networks with a sufficient critical mass of high quality researchers; a lack of appropriate career structures • A failure by some agencies to recognise that capacity building and strengthening need to be long term and conducted on a substantial scale. In particular there is a lack of emphasis on postdoctoral research support and many Asian researchers find themselves without support and often with inappropriate levels of administrative and teaching responsibilities. This in turn means that individuals cannot develop the necessary research experience to allow them to compete internationally for funding or credibly mentor the next generation of research trainees. A further great impediment to research, in some countries where the MOPs work, is the paucity of scientific and technical staff able to perform the laboratory and QA fundamental work essential for research. The WT Asia MOPs Network has over the years recognised the deficit and worked hard to mitigate it in the context of our research programmes. This has been either ad hoc, by for example employing and training research assistants on fellowships and projects, or as part of the Training Programmes that the two MOPs have initiated and developed over the past decade. Both MOPs are have met the stringent standards to become UK Open University Affiliated Research Centres (ARCs), through which we can register and supervise Open University MSc and PhD students. We also supervise BSc, MSc and PhD students through Mahidol and Oxford Universities and the University of Natural Sciences HCMC. We have developed 34 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network a core PhD didactic training course held one afternoon a week and lasting for one year and available for all PhD students registered through the MOPs. This is coordinated through the HCMC and BKK MOPs but is available on line and via video link in real time to all satellite centres with PhD students. Attendance will be mandatory for all PhD students from 2011. We believe this to be a unique programme and seeks to ensure that all PhD students across our Network have basic knowledge and skills across the range of disciplines required by a modern post-doctoral scientist including science, administration, management, presentation skills, grant and manuscript writing. The MOP training programmes have begun to bear fruit. From 2005 to 2010 students in the two MOPs have successfully completed and been awarded 35 BScs, 31 MScs and 52 PhDs. Many of these PhD students have gone onto to post-doctoral positions within national institutions, universities or hospitals, have secured international funding or taken posts in major international universities, or have gone on to work within the private sector. • To build leadership capacity by supporting senior researchers to develop their publication, training, teaching, strategic management and mentoring skills. • To help build well trained, experienced, highly motivated clinical research teams that can contribute to the development of both institutional as well as national clinical research capacity through the training and involvement of medical, nurses, scientists, pharmacists, technicians, data management and related staff in all aspects of clinical trials and allied laboratory science. • We aim to specifically champion training and regional capacity enhancement in the areas of translational research, public health and health systems research, epidemiology, clinical trials, mathematical modelling and health economics, bioinformatics, biotechnology and public engagement. How Our expanded training and capacity development strategy will be based on the existing MOP-based training programmes, in enhanced and integrated forms. These will continue to facilitate MSc and PhDbased training, but will also focus on more practical skills-based training aimed at increasing the quality of health care provision and research participation. This latter category is important everywhere but of particular relevance in more resource-poor regions in the Network where the baseline skills base is low. It will consist of vocational scientific, administration, management, grant and manuscript writing, clinical and laboratory training, short courses, and language training. The two Clinical Trials Units will carry out training on all aspects of clinical research, including ICH-GCP compliance and ethics. We will develop a combined Network-wide approach to resource further training and capacity building. This will be coordinated by the Network Executive Committee and will consist of: • Better coordination of the activities of the two MOP Training Committees. • Development of dedicated training facilites in HCMC, Hanoi, Bangkok, Jakarta and Vientiane. • Network-wide fora for students to meet and exchange ideas and experiences, through the annual Network meeting, discipline-specific gatherings and video-conferencing. • Joint applications for funding, including our planned application for a Strategic Award for Training in 2011 which will focus on the development of middle and senior career research leaders through a dedicated collaborative WT-Asia Leadership Programme. Future We want to build on the success of the current training programmes, expanding their scope and capabilities to achieve the following strategic training aims: • To provide a coherent career development track for health researchers across Asia. • To target key areas of health related research that needs particular strengthening in Asia: Public Health, Clinical Research, Bioinformatics and Mathematics, Biotechnology, and Translational Research. • To strengthen regional research capacity through supporting outstanding individuals linked to the Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network and through developing networks with universities and research centres within the region. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 35 Strategic Aim 3: Developing Institutions “To create an integrated and well coordinated network of internationally recognised clinical and laboratory research sites across Asia and beyond, to deliver health advances addressing local and global health needs. To foster long-lasting and integrative collaborations with regional institutions and hospitals to build both research and operational capacity”. Now Over the past three decades the research offices, labs and clinical facilities of the WT Asia Research Network have evolved in symbiotic manner with the institutions which host us. These institutions vary enormously across the region, from University Faculties through large regional referral and provincial hospital, smaller district hospitals, small health clinics right down to isolated refugee camps with no prior health system. In every setting we aim to ensure that working with the Network strengthens the institution, that we put in much more than we take out. In Bangkok, the Faculty of Tropical Medicine of Mahidol University in which we are embedded is world renowned for its research output - it is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year - an achievement we have been proud to have contributed to both directly and indirectly over the years. At the same time the support and contribution of the Faculty has been critical for the success of the MOP’s success. Through the collaboration with the MOP the Faculty has international standard malaria, microbiology and pharmacology laboratories, all manned by staff who are also academic members of the Faculty. Because of its isolation and the areas where it works the development of the health care and research facilities at SMRU have been a particular achievement, one which has depended on the dedication of the staff and the population which they serve, as well as the support of the local Thai health services and of the Faculty of Tropical Medicine in Bangkok. In Viet Nam we have received fantastic support over the last 18 years from the Hospital for Tropical Diseases and the Ministry of Health. In the spirit of true collaboration the Institute of Clinical Sciences which houses the Unit was built with funds from the Vietnamese government as a long term investment in research excellence, and much of equipment and running costs are provided largely by the MOP. HTD is currently building new wards which will include the first dedicated facility in Viet Nam for the care of people 36 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network living with HIV with space for outreach, counselling, education and training and a second block for the investigation of patients. We have been fully engaged in the development of these new facilities and will be actively involved in work in them. In Hanoi the offices of the network are hosted both by the National Institute of Tropical and Infectious Diseases and the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology. The WT Asia MOP Network has refurbished the newly established National Office of Health Research within the Ministry of Health Viet Nam and the Department of Health HCMC. These offices serve as the coordinating centre for all health related research in Viet Nam including the administrative support for the independent National Health Ethics Committee. All our main collaborative sites across the region have dedicated clinical research units, laboratories and office space now established at the various hospitals and institutes where we work. A prime example is in Mahosot Hospital in Laos, where we have worked closely with the Hospital authorities to complete a new building which houses the Hospital’s Infectious Diseases Ward on the ground floor and the research unit’s offices and laboratories (including a BSL3 laboratory) on the floor above. In Kathmandu the clinical research unit is a department of the newly established medical school Patan Academy of Health Sciences dedicated to the training of clinicians, nurses and midwives who will work in rural Nepal. Future Over the next 5 years we aim to continue to develop and strengthen the research units and facilities which make up the Network, and the institutions which host them. Our vision is to construct an Asia wide international Network dedicated to clinical and public health research, embedded within national institutions but with sufficient scale to enable the network to conduct the large scale intervention studies needed to provide the evidence in which to change policy and practice. • We will continue to strengthen ties with the Faculty of Tropical Medicine Mahidol University and the wider University. We aim to integrate completely the Thailand components of the Programme, with our Thai staff employed as University staff. In conjunction with the Faculty we will set up a ‘Dean’s Research Fund’, via funding from Oxford University. This fund will support enhanced career opportunities for Thai staff, through structured fellowships and research project funding. • Our partnership with HTD in HCMC will continue to be the bedrock of the Viet Nam MOP, supported by the Department of Health Ho Chi Minh City and the Vietnamese government. The partnerships with Children’s Hospital Number One, Number Two, Pham Ngoc Thach TB Hospital in HCMC, Dong Thap Hospital and at the National Hospital for Paediatrics, National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, and the National Institute for Tropical and Infectious Diseases in Hanoi will be the basis for a wider plan to greatly expand the institutional research capacity of Viet Nam through the Ministry of Health in the coming years. We hope to expand the Clinical Science Institute (addition of an extra floor) in HCMC to gain additional space for academic meetings (now open to all hospitals, institutions and Universities in HCMC), and training courses and workshops. The later includes open days for schools, universities and the general public to allow them to see research in practice. • We shall develop and support the clinical services provided by SMRU to the Burmese migrant and refugee communities on the Thai-Burmese border, by raising service-related external grants. This is imperative from a humanitarian viewpoint, but also constitutes an essential underpinning of SMRU’s research activities. In support of the research we hope to build a BSLIII laboratory at SMRU, to expand our clinical and diagnostics services beyond the focus on malaria. The research activity in turn informs the best-possible health care for these populations, and provides an important evidence base for the treatment of similar diseases in other poorly resourced rural communities. These activities on the border are appreciated and endorsed by the Thai Ministry of Public Health. • We will continue to work closely with Lao colleagues at Mahosot Hospital in Vientiane, to build research capacity and to support the infection-related clinical and laboratory services. We will support the refurbishment of the hospital microbiology department to upgrade the facilities to international standards. We will facilitate the development of future Lao leaders in infectious disease research through formal training and participation in the Network. • We will support the development of clinical and laboratory research capacity across the Network and specifically in Bangladesh (Chittagong), Nepal, Cambodia (Siem Reap and CNM in Pnomh Penh) and Indonesia. We will do this by training of individuals in laboratory techniques and formulation of research ideas and projects. Also we hope to support a Category III laboratory in Chittagong. • We will build on the excellent safety culture cultivated and strengthened throughout the Programme, and optimise robust biosafety and biosecurity systems for managing Category 3 organisms and ‘select agents’. • We plan to improve the level of intensive care medicine in developing countries in Asia by developing a structural training programme in intensive care medicine for developing countries in Asia, including Bangladesh, India and Nepal. We will implement essential but low cost clinical management techniques and introduce tools for measuring performance. How To achieve this we will work closely with all our partners in the region, and with our stakeholders in the UK. We will: • Foster the strong institutional backing, excellent administrative support, and increasing recognition of tropical medicine in Oxford University. • Continue the process of strengthening the financial, grants administration and research governance across the Network, integrating the policies and administrative processes of its geographically disparate constituent parts. • Increase the size of the Finance Departments and recruit staff members to act as liaisons between hubs and different research sites across the Network. Also, we aim to introduce new finance systems to improve our capacity for financial management and reporting. • Work with Oxford University, the Wellcome Trust and other funders to seek and develop funding opportunities and strategies to help build research institutions across Asia. • Leverage the power of international research networks, working with new and existing networks to achieve our research and institutional capacitybuilding aims. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 37 Strategic Aim 4: Public Engagement and Outreach “To engage with the communities who host us and hence inspire and involve current and future generations in medical research”. Now Over the next five years and beyond the WT Asia MOP Network is committed to developing and expanding our Programme of Public Engagement with Science. We recognise the importance of this initiative, and the challenges associated with engaging populations in the developing world. Across Asia countries vary greatly in the baseline level of education and exposure to scientific ideas, due to a combination of cultural and political factors as well as the overall level of economic development. Our Programme of Public Engagement with Science (PES) is most developed in the Viet Nam MOP, where it is run by a full time Public Engagement Officer. The PES programme is initially focused in three areas: media, science cafes and in schools. We plan to expand the PES Programme to Thailand, where for cultural reasons the opportunities and challenges will be quite different to those in Viet Nam. There is at present relatively little public engagement of medical research in Laos, with relatively low access to newspapers and TV. Much of the population is very isolated and very poor, making PES a significant challenge. Of more direct interactive relevance to the clinical research we carry out is the concept of community engagement in research through outreach to the communities with which we work. The Network conducts a lot of research in vulnerable populations, including poor disadvantaged communities, ethnic minority refugee and border/migrant populations. We are aware that this complex environment presents unique challenges including ethical, practical and scientific challenges. We have long been engaging the community through 38 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network informal consultation with community leaders, key workers, local hospital staff and regulatory authorities but have not formalised these initiatives until recently. SMRU has been involved in providing healthcare and conducting research in the Thai-Burmese border population (consisting of Karen and Burmese refugees and migrants) have recently facilitated the formation of the Tak Province Border Community Ethics Advisory Board (T-CAB) with support from the Ethox Centre in Oxford. The aim of the T-CAB is two fold - to safeguard the rights, safety and wellbeing of research participants; and to enable stakeholders from the border population to have an opportunity to learn about, understand the need for, and participate in medical research undertaken in their community. • Encouraging the Wellcome Trust Museum to undertake a “Road Trip” to Asia in the next few years. • Working through Universities and Science institutes to learn about their research and encourage dissemination with the public. • Establishing a nationwide, annual competition for science reporters based on the best science story of the year. • Writing science news and stories which prioritize local science activities. • Organize a club for science reporters and writers which would meet monthly. The purpose of the club would be to provide an opportunity to meet and exchange experiences on science writing, study English and discuss with scientists about issues in science. • Establishing a Science Cafe as a meeting place where people can come together and talk about science. The objective is to provide an easy way for individuals and groups to become more engaged with the subject. This is turn could have an influence on the educational route they decide to follow, and the career they choose to pursue. • Choosing a suitable school to build a small centre like the Unizul Science Centre in South Africa with a variety of science activities (science shows, science theatre – hot topic such as HIV/AIDS, avian influenza - and competition between the schools). • Launching a science research programme for school students. The above plans will be adapted and implemented in other parts of the Network as appropriate. In Laos for example we plan to write Lao language newspaper articles and information sheets in Lao for patients on the major infectious diseases of Laos, to help with the naming, in Lao, of recently described diseases in Laos, and continue to help with the setting up of the ‘Lao Medical Journal’ which is the first medical journal in Laos since the 1930s. For our Community Outreach Programme we envisage that through the experience of facilitating the set up of the T-CAB in SMRU, similar community advisory boards will be formed in other communities the Network work in and with. Future plans We will expand and develop the Public Engagement with Science Programme across the Network. We plan to apply for further funding from the Wellcome Trust Engaging Science grants programme to provide resources for this expansion. The PES Programme has initially focused in three areas: media, science cafes and in schools. Plans already initiated or planned include: • Plays focused on health research and conducted in schools (see attached) • Information access to the major newspapers have dedicated science pages. • A training course for science reporters to equip them with science writing skills that can engage the public (our first dedicated science journalist will complete his Masters Degree in Bristol in 2010 and return to the Network). Strategic Plan 2010-2015 39 Strategic Aim 5: Dissemination “We aim to provide and propagate research evidence of the highest quality and clinical relevance, upon which policy, both locally and globally, can be based”. T o follow our mission and achieve our principal objective of “improving the health and reducing the human disease burden in the developing world”, we need our research findings to make an impact on health policy and ultimately clinical practice. We aim to achieve this through a number of related mechanisms: • Timely publication of our research results in high impact journals. Over the past 5 years we have published over 900 original articles and reviews. We aim for full compliance with the Wellcome Trust’s Open Access policy, to ensure that the papers are feely accessible by all. • Presentations of salient research findings at national and international conferences. • Membership of WHO Committees and other national and international bodies advising on treatment guidelines and health policy issues. • Giving interviews to the press, both scientific and general, on recent research advances and their public health implications. • Through up-to-date, informative, attractive and easily navigable websites describing the latest research news and providing access and links to results and guidelines. Where appropriate we will distribute this content in alternative user-friendly 40 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network formats such as the Mahosot Microbiology Review, a Lao and English language newsletter distributed to all hospitals across the country. • Making datasets and research materials rapidly and freely available on-line when possible for other researchers to work on. • We aim to be the first organisation to make all study protocols, CRFs, SOPs, and all study documents available online through a Wiki mechanism at the start of studies. This aims to ensure that the concept of sharing of data is extended to the initial phase of research (ie study design, protocols, CRFs, consent sheets, study manual of operations etc) and one which is increasingly becoming such a handicap to researchers in the developing world. When appropriate these will be translated into other languages such as with recent work with pandemic influenza (www.seaicrn.org) and malaria (www. wwarn.org). • All data is produced and shared in adherence to the principles of the Wellcome Trust Data Management and Sharing Policy, the University of Oxford Clinical Trials & Research Governance data management policy and section 5.5 of the International Conference for Harmonisation Good Clinical Practice guidelines. Skin biopsy of an eschar lesion from a patient with scrub typhus. Specific staining was performed with a double-immunofluorescence technique, demonstrating the superficial dermal vascular plexus in red (targeting CD31 receptors) and the bacteria causing disease Orientia tsutsugamushi in green. This picture shows an Orientia-infected cell transmigrating through the endothelial monolayer of a blood vessel in the skin. Large picture, magnification x400, insert Laser Scanning Microscope image, magnification x1000. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 41 Strategic Aim 6: Strengthening Governance, Management and Financial Planning “To build operational excellence through integrated business units, enabling us to continue realising the extraordinary research opportunities of our Network”. T he Network has grown organically over the last 30 years, and will continue to evolve over the coming 5 years. We will continue to develop our management and governance structures to help us achieve our five-year strategic aims efficiently, cost effectively, and with minimum institutional risk. Independent Scientific Advisory Boards (ISABs) Governance: external oversight and challenge Management: internal oversight and challenge We will ensure an appropriate governance structure is always in place to support and guide the Network, enabling us to achieve our strategic aims with maximum efficiency and impact while minimising institutional risk. We recognise the need for high level oversight of the Network and for the Directors and other senior researchers to be challenged on the strategic direction of the mission. Our governance structure, which includes external oversight (in blue in the organigram) consists of three major components: Our internal management structure (in red in the organigram) is designed to be efficient and flexible and the key aim is to facilitate and encourage the identification and rapid response to the public health crises and extraordinary research opportunities which regularly present themselves in the field of tropical medicine research. The Network has been able to respond quickly to past public health emergencies in Asia; this is our core capability, and one which we intend to protect and build on in the next five years. WT Asia MOP Network Governing Board (to be constituted) The WT Asia MOP Network Executive Committee The new over-arching Governing Board will provide the top level of governance for the Network. It will have representatives from the two MOPs, the University of Oxford and the Wellcome Trust, as well as several independent and lay members. This Board will provide external oversight and challenge for all of the Network’s activities. MOP Governing Committees These two committees meet annually and govern the activities of the MOPs in their principal host countries, and provide legitimacy for their local role. The Thailand/Laos MOP Governing Committee has representation from Mahidol University, the Wellcome Trust and Oxford University. The OUCRU Governing Committee has legal status in Viet Nam as the governing body presiding over OUCRU in its status as an NGO under Vietnamese law. 42 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Each MOP has an ISAB which meets roughly every 18 months. Their remit is to provide independent scientific advice to the Programme regarding research activities. They report to the Senior Investigators, to Oxford University and to the Wellcome Trust. Made up of the Network’s lead researchers this committee binds the Network together at the level of executive direction, strategic planning and operational activities. It is in constant session by email and teleconference addressing problems, exploiting synergies and planning the Network’s response to new research opportunities as they arise. The Committee will meet in person at least once a year, with the chairmanship of this committee rotating on an annual basis between the Network’s Research Directors. The MOP Management Committee structure Each MOP has a small number of committees devoted to the running of the Programme and its associated research network. As well as overseeing operational and financial management, they will also review research plans on a regular basis and ensure that funding follows excellence in research. Within the Thailand/Laos MOP the Finance Committee addresses and monitors budgetary and fundraising issues, financial control and financial related risk, the Science Committee decides on MOP scientific priorities and allocates science funding, and Management Committee oversees general operational issues. In the Viet Nam MOP The Strategic Committee decides on scientific priorities and makes high level budgetary decisions, while the Finance and Operations Committee and Department Heads Committee cover financial and general operational issues Research ‘Theme leaders’ For each Theme a senior investigator will ensure that the Network’s plans in that research area are as integrated as possible, exploiting the many synergies between the sites in terms of human capacity, research facilities, and access to affected populations for clinical studies. Financial planning We aim to avoid any shortfalls in funding that may impede the efficient functioning of the Network and impair the realisation of our research aims. We will achieve this through analysis of our funding gaps and the development of a fundraising strategy. A pre-requisite for good financial planning is the accurate collection (preferably automated) and analysis of detailed financial information from each business unit. Our existing IT arrangements with functional accounting systems, but without embedded management information systems (MIS), mean that data collection and analysis is modest and reasonably manual. Over the period of this strategic plan each MOP will have a financial planning group tasked to upgrade its accounting and MIS system capabilities with a view to enabling efficient and accurate collection of data to make feasible analysis and production of detailed projections of future use, as well as reports on how efficiently funds have been spent in the past. The Resource Mobilisation Officer (or fundraiser) will produce a fundraising strategy with a horizon of 5 years or more in the future. This financial planning and fundraising capability will be fully integrated into the risk management strategy of the Network; any shortfalls in funding will be predicted in ample time for corrective action to be taken. WT Asia MOP Network Governing Board Thailand/Laos MOP Governing Committee Thailand/ Laos ISAB OUCRU Governing Committee external oversight Viet Nam ISAB Local partners Local partners Thailand/Laos MOP Management Committee WT Asia MOP Network Executive Committee internal oversight Finance Committee Science Committee Viet Nam MOP Strategic Committee Finance & operations Committee Department Heads Committee WT Asia MOP Network Research Units, Departments and Research Sites Figure. Governance and management committee structure for the WT Asia MOP Network. Strategic Plan 2010-2015 43 Monitoring Progress Strategic Committee – OUCRU Viet Nam Over the course of the period covered by this Strategic Plan we will use a robust approach to measuring progress against our aims, and this will help us inform future strategy. Consideration will be given to measuring progress at the Network, MOP and also country levels. Evaluation will ensure accountability and responsibility for funding decisions and ensure that money continues to follow good science. Initially we will use high level indicators of progress, as outlined below, although we recognise that these may change over the course of the five year period. Aims Research Developing People Developing Institutions Public Engagement, Outreach Dissemination Management and Governance Indicators of Progress • Key contributions to the evidence base for improved prevention, treatment and diagnosis of infectious diseases • Continued grant funding in support of our mission • Frequent publications in internationally recognised and high impact journals • Development of a cadre of internationally recognised, local scientists and clinicians • Provision of an internationally competitive career path for local scientists and clinicians • Development of well equipped - world class - research laboratories and study sites • Development of strong and long-lasting links between local institutions and hospitals • Uptake of research into policy and practice • Continued extension of research activities to health service provision • Continued support from local stakeholders • Implementation of best practice in financial and management systems, both internally and locally Current Membership of Key Committees As at 1st August 2010 Professor Nick Day Director of Thailand/Laos Programme Dr Arjen Dondorp Deputy Director of Thailand/Laos Programme Professor Jeremy Farrar Director of Viet Nam Programme (OUCRU VN) Professor Tran Tinh Hien Vice Director of OUCRU-VN and Director of Clinical Research 44 The Wellcome Trust Asia MOP Network Professor Tran Tinh Hien Vice Director of OUCRU-VN and Director of Clinical Research Dr Peter Horby Vice Director of OUCRU- VN and Director of OUCRU-Ha Noi Dr Niklas Lindegardh Head of Pharmacology Dr Daniel Paris (Acting) Head of Microbiology Ms Kanchana Pongsaswat (Phung) Office Manager Dr Laura Merson Head of Clinical Trials Unit Professor Sasithon Pukrittayakamee (Yon) Deputy Dean for International Relations and Networking Dr Cameron Simmons Vice Director of OUCRU-VN Mrs Mondira Sarapak (Ting) Chief Financial Officer Dr Bridget Wills Vice Director of OUCRU-VN Associate Professor Pratap Singhasivanon Dean of the Faculty of Tropical Medicine Sarah Barton Head of Operations Dr Lisa White Head of Modelling Management Committee – Thailand/Laos Programme Professor Nick Day Director of Thailand/Laos Programme Professor Nick White Principle Research Fellow Mrs Vanaporn Wuthiekanun (Lek) Laboratory Representative Dr Ruth Branston Senior Research Administrator WT MOP Network Executive Committee Dr Kevin Baird Director of OUCRU-Indonesia Professor Jeremy Farrar Director of Viet Nam Programme (OUCRU-VN) Professor François Nosten Director of SMRU Dr Peter Horby Vice Director of OUCRU-VN and Director of OUCRU-Ha Noi Dr Paul Newton Director of LOMWRU Professor François Nosten Director of SMRU Professor Nick White Chairman of WT Asia MOP Network Chief Operating Officers - Thailand and Viet Nam Dr Phaik Yeong Cheah Head of Clinical Trials Support Group Dr Kesinee Chotivanich (Nok) Head of Laboratory Malaria Dr Arjen Dondorp Deputy Director of Thailand/Laos Programme Mr David Gandy Fundraiser Mrs Sawanya Ismael (Aeh) PA to Programme Director Dr Paul Newton Director of LOMWRU Strategic Plan 2010-2015 45 Wellcome Trust Asian Asian Wellcome Trust Southeast MOP MOPNetwork Network Design: Joss Dimock