Professor Charles Sande
Contact information
Podcast interview
Paediatric infection and immunity
Charles investigates why some children in sub‑Saharan Africa survive infections while others do not. Using proteomics, transcriptomics, metagenomics and clinical data, his work identified immune differences linked to mortality. A recent multi-country study highlighted IL10 as a key marker of high-risk children, supporting more targeted care and personalised interventions.
Research groups
Charles Sande
Associate Professor
My research focusses on pneumonia and other serious respiratory infections that affect infants and young children. Pneumonia remains a major killer, particularly in the developing world, where the healthcare infrastructure necessary for managing the most serious manifestations of the disease are inadequate. Our group is particularly interested in understanding the mechanisms of disease caused by respiratory infections such as respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and Streptococcus pneumoniae. To gain a complete understanding of the mechanisms of disease pathology, we use a coordinated systems biology approach to examine in fine detail the interactions between the immune systems of sick children and the pathogens that cause pneumonia. We use a broad array of tools including mass spectrometry-based proteomics, protein microarrays, bacterial metagenomics and RNA-seq transcriptomics to understand host-pathogen interactions in the respiratory tract. Using these techniques we are gaining new insights into the breadth of the infant response to infection and how these responses may be leveraged in the development of effective interventions against pneumonia in the future.
Recent publications
Nasopharyngeal Microbiome Composition and its Clinical Correlates in Children Hospitalized with Severe Pneumonia in East Africa.
Journal article
Makori TO. et al, (2026), J Infect Dis
Longitudinal Epidemiology and Variant Dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 in Coastal Kenya (2020–2025): Clinical Features and Wave Patterns
Journal article
Lambisia AW. et al, (2026), Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Inflammation impairs post-hospital discharge growth among children hospitalised with acute illness in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia.
Journal article
Njunge JM. et al, (2025), Nature communications, 16
The respiratory syncytial virus vaccine and monoclonal antibody landscape: the road to global access.
Journal article
Terstappen J. et al, (2024), The Lancet. Infectious diseases, 24, e747 - e761