Logo

Improving HFpEF Modeling: Toward More Predictive Human In Vitro Systems

Data

martedì, 16 giugno 2026

Orario

15:00 Europe/Paris

Converti nel mio fuso orario
Title
  • Campo obbligatorio.
Campo obbligatorio.
Campo obbligatorio.
Campo obbligatorio.
Campo obbligatorio.
Campo obbligatorio.
Campi obbligatori
Se sei già registrato e non puoi localizzare la tua email di conferma registrazione, clicca qui!
Indirizzo email é invalido o non é stato fornito durante il processo di registrazione. Fornisci l'indirizzo email valido.

A confirmation email with logging details has been sent to the provided email.

Test di configurazione del sistema. Clicca qui!

Programma

The incidence of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is rising sharply due to the increased prevalence of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. In the coming years, the prevalence of HFpEF is increasing and is expected to exceed that of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. The pharmaceutical industry therefore needs robust preclinical models to develop effective and newly targeted therapies. 

A wide range of in vivo HFpEF models already exists and are based on single hit or multi-hits approaches thus placing them more or less in line with the multifactorial pathophysiology of this syndrome. Despite being highly informative during late stages of preclinical drug development, these in vivo models do not but do not allow high-throughput screening for the efficacy of new drugs, remain very costly and are subject to the challenge of inter-species differences. 

In this context, PhysioStim aimed to develop a robust and reproducible in vitro HFpEF model based on the monitoring of structural and functional parameters of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs), exposed to a cocktail of molecular agents known to be involved in the pathophysiology of HFpEF.


Lukas Roubenne

PhD, Chief of R&D

Lukas joined PhysioStim in June 2023 as Chief of Vascular R&D, with a clear mandate to develop and structure the company’s vascular pharmacology platform.

He obtained his PhD in cardiovascular pathophysiology from the University of Bordeaux in 2023, where his research focused on evaluating the therapeutic potential of a drug candidate targeting both vascular and cardiac dysfunction in pulmonary hypertension. His work contributed to a deeper understanding of the interplay between vascular remodeling and cardiac impairment in this complex disease setting.

At PhysioStim, Lukas leads the design, development, and execution of vascular and cardiac studies, spanning both ex vivo and in vivo models. He plays a key role in expanding the company’s scientific capabilities, ensuring the robustness of experimental approaches, and supporting clients in the evaluation of cardiovascular drug candidates from early discovery to preclinical stages.

Combining strong scientific expertise with a translational mindset, Lukas actively contributes to strengthening PhysioStim’s positioning as a partner of choice in cardiovascular pharmacology.

Bruno Le Grand

PhD, CSO

With 30 years of experience in biopharma, health care, and industrial biotechnology, Bruno Le Grand has extensive cardiovascular pharmacology and international drug development expertise.

He is skilled in the management of pre-clinical and clinical projects (scientific strategy, project leader, regulatory document, IMPD, BI, IND meeting, etc.) as well as international research collaborations, industrial companies, and the ability to deal with health authorities (FDA, EMEA, etc.). He was the Head of Cardiovascular Research at Pierre Fabre (2004-2016) where he was in charge of the R&D cardiovascular program from drug discovery to clinical proof of concept. He also developed several projects such CVasThera company, a biotech dedicated to chronic inflammatory diseases, and is scientifically implicated in several biotech companies.

He has published more than 80 research articles. He holds 24 patents in the Cardiovascular and abdominal inflammation area

Bruno Le Grand joined the PhysiosTEAM at the end of 2020.