Join us as we bring together leading experts, researchers, and industry pioneers from around the world for the 8th ISIRV-AVG Meeting & 3rd IMRP 2025. This year’s distinguished lineup features some of the most influential voices in the field of respiratory virus research, antiviral strategies, and pandemic preparedness.
The below speakers will be partaking in the 3rd IMRP Meeting.
Tristan Clark is a Professor and Honorary Consultant in Infectious Diseases at the University of Southampton and University Hospitals Southampton NHS trust. His research involves the assessment of diagnostic accuracy, usability, and clinical impact of novel rapid diagnostic tests for infections. He has been awarded grant funding from NIHR, Research Councils, EU, and Industry and has published results of his trials in The New England Journal of Medicine and Lancet series journals. During the COVID-19 pandemic he has acted as an advisor to the UK Department of Health and Social Care. The aim of his research is to improve patient care and experience through the evidence-based use of rapid diagnostic tests for infection.
Prof Cowling is currently a Professor in the WHO Collaborating Centre for Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Control at the School of Public Health at the University of Hong Kong, and a member of the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics at Harvard School of Public Health. He is a consultant for the World Health Organisation and serves on the editorial boards of Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses, PLoS ONE and PLoS Currents: Outbreaks. In 2015 he was awarded a Croucher Senior Research Fellowship for his work on influenza virus epidemiology. Prof Cowling conducts research into the epidemiology of influenza and other respiratory viruses. His research team has characterized how easily seasonal and pandemic influenza viruses can spread in households, and the measures which can reduce transmission such as face masks and improved hand hygiene. His recent research has focused on the effectiveness of influenza vaccines and the complex transmission dynamics of respiratory viruses. He has authored more than 270 peer-reviewed publications.
Dr. Stephanie Goya is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Washington, where she leads genomic studies on respiratory viruses including RSV, metapneumovirus, rhinoviruses, and seasonal coronaviruses. With a Ph.D. in Biological Sciences from the University of Buenos Aires, her expertise spans viral genomics, molecular diagnostics, and public health surveillance. Dr. Goya has contributed to global efforts in genomic data standardization as a Data Scientist for GISAID and served as an external expert for the WHO on RSV surveillance. She also leads the International RSV Genotyping Consortium and is actively involved in teaching and mentoring in the fields of bioinformatics and molecular virology.
Paul Heath is a Professor in Paediatric Infectious Diseases at City St George's, University of London, where he is the Director of the Vaccine Institute. His training in paediatrics and infectious diseases was at the Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, Australia; the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford; and St George’s Hospital, London. His research interests are in the epidemiology of vaccine preventable diseases, in clinical vaccine trials, particularly in at-risk groups and in perinatal infections. He coordinates a European neonatal infection surveillance network (neonIN) and the UK Paediatric Vaccine Group (UKPVG), is a member of the JCVI, chairs the NIHR Vaccine Innovation Pathway: Vaccine Research in Pregnant Participants Working Group, is co-Chair of the UK Infectious Diseases Vaccine Research Forum and is a member of the WHO GBS Working Group.
Prof Shamez Ladhani PhD MRCPCH(UK) MSc(distinction) MBBS(hons) BSc(hons) is a paediatric infectious diseases consultant at St. George's Hospital, professor of paediatric infectious diseases and vaccinology at St. George's University of London and consultant epidemiologist at UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), where he is the clinical lead for a number of national vaccine preventable infections, including Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis, which are all major causes of childhood bacterial meningitis. He completed his medical training at Guy's and St. Thomas's Hospitals, London, and then worked in a children's hospital in rural Kenya. Upon returning to London, he obtained his PhD in genetic epidemiology and vaccine failure in children and completed his specialist paediatric infectious diseases training at St. George's and Great Ormond Street Hospitals, London. In the current pandemic, he is the clinical lead for of SARS-CoV-2 in Children at UKHSA. His work has focused on national surveillance of SARS-CoV-2, PIMS-TS and long COVID, immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 in children compared to adults as well as infection, transmission and outbreaks in educational settings and COVID-19 vaccines for children. He has published extensively in the field of paediatric infectious diseases and vaccine-preventable infections.
Prof Vernon Lee, a preventive medicine physician, has a distinguished record in globalhealth, focusing on pandemic preparedness, infectious disease epidemiology, andhealth policy. His pivotal role in Singapore's COVID-19 strategy and his response to theSARS, influenza, and Zika outbreaks highlight his contributions.Prof Lee's previous positions as Advisor to the WHO's Assistant Director-General,Medical Epidemiologist in WHO Country OƯice in Indonesia, and Head of the SingaporeArmed Forces' Biodefence Centre, demonstrate his global health security expertise. Hecontinues to serve on expert committees at the international level.A proponent of evidence-based health policy, Prof Lee has authored around 200scientific papers featured in NEJM, JAMA, and Lancet. He maintains an adjunctprofessorship at the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health in Singapore.His academic achievements include an MBBS from the National University ofSingapore, a PhD in epidemiology from the Australian National University, and MPH andMBA degrees from Johns Hopkins University.
Professor Wei Shen Lim is consultant respiratory physician at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and Honorary Professor of Medicine, University of Nottingham. He is chair of the Acute Respiratory Infections national research strategy group, NIHR Respiratory Translational Research Collaboration. He developed the CURB65 severity scoring tool for community acquired pneumonia and co-led the evaluation of Dexamethasone for COVID-19 in the RECOVERY Trial. He is chair of COVID-19 Immunisation, Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI). In 2023, he led the set-up of a national Hospital-based Acute Respiratory Infection Surveillance System (HARISS) in England.
Javier is a Principal Scientist at MHRA South Mimms where he leads the Polio Laboratory Group. He completed his Ph.D. studies at the Universidad Autonoma, Madrid, Spain, successfully developing a novel technique to generate genetically modified synthetic influenza viruses used to develop prospective synthetic vaccines. Javier then spent four years as a postdoctoral scientist at the National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill, London UK, where he continued his work on influenza virus. He moved to the NIBSC, now MHRA, in 1998 where he is the Head of the WHO Polio Global Specialized Laboratory supporting the WHO Global Polio Eradication Initiative both on disease surveillance and vaccine control, standardization and development.
Sebastian Maurer-Stroh studied theoretical biochemistry at the University of Vienna and wrote his master and PhD thesis at the Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP). After FEBS and Marie Curie fellowships at the VIB-SWITCH lab in Brussels, he has been leading the sequence analytics portfolio in the A*STAR Bioinformatics Institute (BII) since 2007 and Infectious Disease Programme since 2010. He is the Executive Director of BII since January 2021. His computational team is well known for successes at the public-private interface in Singapore from Precision Medicine to Consumer Product and Food Safety and of course for his critical contributions to national and global viral pathogen surveillance through the GISAID data science initiative that has become the single most important source for virus outbreak data sharing and analysis in this pandemic powering public health responses globally. He was awarded the 2017 A*STAR STAR Award, 2017 PS(Health) Award – Excellence (Team), 2018 Ministry of Health collaborator long-service award, 2022 Public Administration Medal (Silver) under the National Awards (COVID-19) and 2024 Public Sector Transformation Award – Exemplary Leader Award.
Peter Openshaw is Professor of Experimental Medicine at Imperial College London, UK. A respiratory physician and mucosal immunologist, his research focuses on how the immune response both protects against viral infection but also causes disease.
He has published widely on vaccinology, the immunopathogenesis of pulmonary viral diseases and lung inflammation, especially in respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), influenza and COVID-19 infection. He works on human challenge in volunteers (Google Scholar and https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7220-2555).
He is a Board Member of the Science Media Centre and Director of the HIC-Vac consortium (https://www.hic-vac.org/). He was the first clinical President of the British Society for Immunology (2013-18) and received prizes for his lifetime contribution to RSV research (Chanock Award, 2012), the European Federation of Immunological Societies Award (2014) and the Per Brandtzaeg Distinguished Scientific Achievement Award in mucosal immunology (2024).
He advised the UK government on pandemics (SAGE, 2009-12; Chair/Vice-Chair of NERVTAG, 2015-2022). He was made a Commander of the British Empire for services to Medicine and Immunology in the 2022 UK New Year’s Honours and received the 2024 Imperial College Medal for his work as a Consul, reforming the university’s Ethos, Values and Behaviours.
Dr. Wong obtained her PhD in molecular virology, working on dengue virus, from the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Melbourne, Australia. She subsequently completed her postdoctoral training at the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, TN, which was also the World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Center on the study of the ecology of influenza in lower animals. Prior to joining HKU, Dr. Wong was a PI at Guangzhou Medical University, China, where she was involved in some of the early outbreak response during early 2020. In the space of pandemic preparedness, she has been involved in risk assessments of avian influenza viruses, including H7N9 and studying the immunological correlates of protection against them. Her current laboratory’s research interest is focused on understanding the immunological and virological determinants of robust antibody responses at a population as well as at the individual level. This includes a focus on population immunity to avian influenza viruses, which will help in quantifying infection risks as well as in identifying strategies that can help mitigate the impact of avian influenza virus infections.
Dr Mo Yin is the Deputy director of ADVANCE-ID clinical trial network, and an Infectious Diseases physician at the National University Hospital in Singapore. She is the lead investigator for the REGARD-VAP trial (Reducing Antibiotic Treatment Duration for Ventilator Associated Pneumonia) and the ACORN-HAI study (A Clinically-Oriented Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network for Healthcare Associated Infections). She has designed and conducted large multinational clinical trials which focus on pragmatic solutions for antibiotic resistant bacterial infections. She is driven by the ideal of using quality clinical research to improve patient outcomes and propel global policies. She has received numerous awards for her achievements in clinical care, research and teaching. Dr Mo Yin obtained her MBBS from the National University of Singapore and DPhil from University of Oxford.
With 40 years of experience as a medically qualified influenza virologist, of which three decades have been at the UK public health agency, UKHSA, and its predecessor organisations, she has played a crucial role in the surveillance and response to seasonal influenza as well as new and emerging respiratory viruses over this time.
ISIRV
8TH ISIRV-AVG MEETING & 3RD IMRP 2025