Helen McShane
Colleges
Helen McShane
FRCP PhD FMedSci
Professor of Vaccinology
- Director, Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre
- Deputy Head (Translation and Personnel), Medical Sciences Division
- Honorary Consultant Physician
Helen McShane is currently Director of the Oxford NIHR Biomedical Research Centre; Professor of Vaccinology at Oxford University; Deputy Head (Translation and Personnel), Medical Sciences Division; and an Honorary Consultant Physician in Infectious Diseases.
Helen obtained an intercalated BSc in 1988, followed by a degree in medicine in 1991 (both University of London). In 1997 She was awarded an MRC Clinical Training Fellowship to undertake a PhD with Adrian Hill in Oxford, and was later awarded a PhD in 2001 (University of London). In 2001 she was awarded a Wellcome Clinician Scientist Fellowship, allowing her to complete her clinical training and subsequently awarded a CCST in HIV and GU Medicine in 2003. In 2005 and 2010, she was awarded a Wellcome Senior Clinical Research Fellowship. She currently holds a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award. Helen was elected to be a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences in 2019.
Since 2001, Helen has lead a TB vaccine research group at the University of Oxford. She led the development of MVA85A, the first new TB vaccine candidate to enter efficacy testing. Current areas of focus include the development of controlled human mycobacterial challenge models, aerosol delivery of vaccines and immunomonitoring in clinical trials. She collaborates with several research groups across Africa in TB vaccine clinical trials.
Most recently, Helen has been leading the coordination of COVID-19 drug trials within Oxford and nationally and is now leading a programme to establish a controlled human infection model with SARS CoV2 which will allow the evaluation of protective immunity.
Recent publications
-
Randomized, double-blind, controlled phase 1 trial of the candidate tuberculosis vaccine ChAdOx1-85A delivered by aerosol versus intramuscular route.
Journal article
Audran R. et al, (2024), J Infect
-
Evaluation of immune profiles associated with control of mycobacterial growth in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients.
Journal article
Ongarj J. et al, (2024), Tuberculosis (Edinb), 148
-
Safety, tolerability, viral kinetics, and immune correlates of protection in healthy, seropositive UK adults inoculated with SARS-CoV-2: a single-centre, open-label, phase 1 controlled human infection study.
Journal article
Jackson S. et al, (2024), Lancet Microbe
-
Safety of a controlled human infection model of tuberculosis with aerosolised, live-attenuated Mycobacterium bovis BCG versus intradermal BCG in BCG-naive adults in the UK: a dose-escalation, randomised, controlled, phase 1 trial
Journal article
Satti I. et al, (2024), The Lancet Infectious Diseases
-
Deficiency of factor-inhibiting HIF creates a tumor-promoting immune microenvironment.
Journal article
Ma J. et al, (2024), Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 121