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Role Group Leader / Principal Research Fellow
Professor David Burgner is a practising paediatric infectious diseases physician, leads the Inflammatory Origins Group and co-leads the LifeCourse longitudinal observational cohorts initiative at Murdoch Children’s Research Institute. He holds major national and international clinical / research positions including leadership roles in ASID, ESPID, WSPID and is an AAHMS fellow.

Professor Burgner is an international authority on understanding the susceptibility and consequences to childhood infection and inflammation, particularly in relation to the development of cardiometabolic disease risk. He is an internationally recognised clinical and scientific leader in Kawasaki disease and has made major scientific, clinical and policy contributions to the Australian response to the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly the hyperinflammatory post-infectious syndrome (known as PIMS-TS or MIS-C) in children.
Professor David Burgner is a practising paediatric infectious diseases physician, leads the Inflammatory Origins Group and co-leads the LifeCourse longitudinal observational cohorts initiative at Murdoch Children’s Research Institute. He holds major...
Professor David Burgner is a practising paediatric infectious diseases physician, leads the Inflammatory Origins Group and co-leads the LifeCourse longitudinal observational cohorts initiative at Murdoch Children’s Research Institute. He holds major national and international clinical / research positions including leadership roles in ASID, ESPID, WSPID and is an AAHMS fellow.

Professor Burgner is an international authority on understanding the susceptibility and consequences to childhood infection and inflammation, particularly in relation to the development of cardiometabolic disease risk. He is an internationally recognised clinical and scientific leader in Kawasaki disease and has made major scientific, clinical and policy contributions to the Australian response to the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly the hyperinflammatory post-infectious syndrome (known as PIMS-TS or MIS-C) in children.

Top Publications

  • Royle, J, Burgner, D, Curtis, N. The diagnosis and management of Kawasaki disease.. J Paediatr Child Health 41(3) : 87 -93 2005
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  • Burgner, D, Schölvinck, E, Coren, M, Walters, S. Chalk and cheese: symptomatic hypocalcaemia during paediatric anti-tuberculous therapy.. J Infect 49(2) : 169 -171 2004
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  • Burgner, D, D'Amato, M, Kwiatkowski, DP, Loakes, D. Improved allelic differentiation using sequence-specific oligonucleotide hybridization incorporating an additional base-analogue mismatch.. Nucleosides Nucleotides Nucleic Acids 23(5) : 755 -765 2004
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  • Yee, LJ, Knapp, S, Burgner, D, Hennig, BJW, Frodsham, AJ, Wright, M, Thomas, HC, Hill, AVS, Thursz, MR. Inducible nitric oxide synthase gene (NOS2A) haplotypes and the outcome of hepatitis C virus infection.. Genes Immun 5(3) : 183 -187 2004
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  • Blyth, C, Waring, J, Burgner, D. Inconspicuous consumption: disseminated tuberculosis following untreated latent infection.. J Paediatr Child Health 40(4) : 227 -229 2004
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