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Wilbur H. Chen, MD, MS

Frank M. Calia, MD Endowed Professor

Academic Title:

Professor

Primary Appointment:

Medicine

Administrative Title:

Chief of Geographic Medicine

Additional Title:

Frank M. Calia, M.D. Endowed Professor

Location:

HSF1, 480

Phone (Primary):

(410) 706-5328

Fax:

(410) 706-6205

Education and Training

Boston University, B.A., Biology, 1992

Howard University College of Medicine, M.D., 1999

Residency, Johns Hopkins University Bayview Medical Center, Internal Medicine, 1999-2002

Fellowship, University of Maryland Medical Center, Infectious Diseases, 2002-2004

Fellowship, University of Maryland Center for Vaccine Development, National Research Service Award in Vaccinology, 2004-2006

University of Maryland, M.S., Clinical Research, 2008

Biosketch

Dr. Chen is an adult infectious disease physician-scientist with a specific interest in developing vaccines. He is Chief of the Adult Clinical Studies section within the Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health and Director of the UMB Travel Medicine Practice. His research is concentrated on two broad areas of global health. First, he is devoted to developing vaccines for enteric pathogens, infectious diseases chiefly of resource poor and economically disadvantaged countries and populations. Second, he is interested in improved vaccines for the elderly, a rapidly growing segment of the global population which is susceptible to many infections and a special population that generally responds poorly to vaccination.

Dr. Chen is active investigator within the NIAID-supported Vaccine and Treatment Evaluation Unit (VTEU), composed of 10 academic centers throughout the U.S., and was the principal investigator of the NIAID-supported Food and Waterborne Diseases Integrated Research Network Clinical Research Unit (FWD IRN CRU). He has been a PI on vaccine trials for: influenza viruses (Seasonal, Pandemic 2009 H1N1, Avian H5N1, and Avian H7N9 influenza), agents of bioterror (Tularemia, Smallpox, and Staphylococcal enterotoxin B), and enteric pathogens (typhoid, cholera and enterotoxigenic E. coli). He also develops and conducts human experimental challenge studies, closely monitored infections with well-characterized pathogens, to gain new insights into pathogenesis, the immune response, or early efficacy of candidate vaccines or therapeutics.  He holds FDA INDs for wild-type V. cholerae and enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) challenges. With funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Dr. Chen is working with a Shigella challenge model and he worked on the development of a challenge model for Cryptosporidium hominis; with funding from PATH (an international nonprofit organization, Program for Appropriate Technology in Health) he worked on a challenge model for heat-stable enterotoxin (ST)-only expressing ETEC.

Dr. Chen serves on a number advisory capacities, including as voting member of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and core member of NIAID's Data and Safety Monitoring Board. 

Research/Clinical Keywords

Infectious diseases, vaccinology, clinical trials, enteric pathogens, ETEC, influenza, meningitis, shigella, bioterrorism, human challenge model, and VTEU.

Highlighted Publications

Hoft DF, Lottenbach K, Goll JB, Hill H, Winokur PL, Patel SM, Brady RC, Chen WH, Edwards K, Creech CB, Frey SE, Blevins TP, Salomon R, Belshe RB. Priming vaccination with H5 hemagglutinin antigen significantly increases T cell responses induced by a heterologous H5 booster vaccination. J Infect Dis. 2016; 2h14(7):1020-1029.

Feldstein LR, Matrajt L, Halloran ME, Keitel WA, Longini IM; member of H5N1 Vaccine Working Group. Extrapolating theoretical efficacy of inactivated influenza A/H5N1 virus vaccine from human immunogenicity studies. Vaccine 2016; 34:3796-802.

Tapia MD, Sow SO, Tamoura B, Teguete I, Pasetti MF, Kodio M, Onwuchekwa U, Tennant SM, Blackwelder WC, Coulibaly F, Traore A, Keita AM, Haidara FC, Diallo F, Doumbia M, Sanogo D, EdMatt E, Schluterman NH, Buchwalkd A, Kotloff KL, Chen WH, Orenstein EW, Orenstein LAV, Villanueva J, Bresee J, Treanor J, Levine MM. Maternal immunisation with trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine for prevention of influenza in infants in Mali: A prospective, active-controlled, observer-blind, randomised phase 4 trial. Lancet Infect Dis. 2016; 16(9):1026-1035.

Chen WH, Cohen MB, Kirkpatrick, BD, Brady RC, Galloway D, Gurwith M, Hall RH, Kessler RA, Lock M, Haney D, Lyon CE, Simon JK, Szabo F, Levine MM. Single-dose live oral cholera vaccine CVD 103-HgR protects against human experimental infection with vibrio cholerae O1 El Tor. Clin Infect Dis 2016; 62:1329-35.

Mbawuike I, Atmar RL, Patel SM, Corry D, Winokur PL, Brady RC, Chen WH, Edwards KM, Creech CB, Walter EB, Frey SE, Belshe RB, Goll JB, Hill H, Keitel WA. Cell mediated immune responses following revaccination with an Influenza A/H5N1 vaccine . Vaccine 2016; 34:547-554.

Additional Publication Citations

Clinical Specialty Details

Awards and Affiliations

Grants and Contracts

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