Take a deep dive to the forefront of scientific breakthroughs, entrepreneurial happenings, and disruptive medical technologies with Dr. Armando Cuesta and Alex Wise. The LSR podcast brings you experts in biotechnology, company management, and venture capital to shed light on the medical revolutions shaping our lives. Special thanks to Jank Setup for providing their song, "In Motion," for the intro and outro to the podcast!The Life Sciences Revolution Podcast is sponsored by Korion Life Sciences
Armando Cuesta, MD & Alex Wise
In this episode, Alex chats with Dr. Noshir Pesika, a specialist in biomimicry.Noshir is a Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering professor at Tulane University, where he focuses his research on creating novel products based on the natural world. His research is centered around the concept of biomimicry - the idea that nature has spent millennia designing, testing, and iterating products for highly specialized functions. By analyzing the micro and nano-level structure and design of these products, we can better understand how they work and how we may be able to recreate them for human use. We discuss:What is biomimicry, and how to design useful devices with these ideasConcepts behind reverse engineering natural products Noshir's workflow for identifying systems for potential applicationTangible examples of biomimicry in life sciences and the world around usCartilage-inspired low friction systems and their applications in medical devicesGecko-inspired adhesives and their applicationsFuture advancements in the field of biomimicry and research to be on the lookout forNoshir's path - moving from Mauritius and career advice for those listening
In this episode, Alex chats with Dr. Esteban Plata, an expert in pharmaceutical development. Esteban is the former vice president of Western Europe and Canada for AbbVie, one of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies. He's spent nearly two decades working on the company's commercial development side where he's held VP and general manager roles across a wide range of geographies such as Turkey, Japan, Spain, and the Asia-Pacific region. He holds a Ph.D. in Biotechnology from the National research council in Spain and is an expert in everything pharma and drug commercial development. We discuss:Esteban's background and AbbVie's historyIntroduction to drug development and the clinical approval pathwayClinical trials and the role of pharmaceutical companies in providing new medicines for societyHoning in on a company's indication of choiceThe evolution of surrogate markers for an early-stage understanding of a therapy's potentialPharmaceutical geographic span and local fitLearning to live anywhere in the world and how to learn to fit in with a new culture as a business professionalPharmaceutical patent cliffs and internal vs external innovationBig pharma-small biotech M&A ratesAdaptive regulatory pathways, clinical trial efficiency, and dealing with different global regulatory bodies
In this episode, Alex chats with Dr. Robert Montgomery, one of the world's foremost organ transplantation and research experts. Dr. Montgomery is the Chairman and Professor of Surgery at NYU Langone Health and is the Director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute, one of the US' top transplant centers. Dr. Montgomery has been at the forefront of organ transplantation for decades as both a surgeon and a patient. He was the first surgeon to receive an implantable defibrillator after a genetic heart condition caused multiple cardiac arrests. Later, he received a heart transplant as a patient in the first clinical trials with hepatitis C-positive hearts. He was part of the teams that developed the laparoscopic procedure for live kidney donation, conceived the idea of domino-paired donations, created the Hopkins protocol for desensitization, and, more recently, completed the first successful investigational kidney and heart xenotransplantations. We discuss:The life & death & life & death & life of Robert Montgomery: the story of his heartThe state of the organ transplantation field: problems with quantity, quality, and consistency How does the US organ transplant waitlist work?Different organ sources: live donors, deceased donors, altruistic donors, domino transplants, hepatitis-C positive donorsThe opioid epidemic in the context of organ transplantation: a harrowing source of organsCutting-edge research: how xenotransplantations and bioartificial organs can solve the organ transplantation crisisAdvanced surgical methods: robotics and AI in organ transplantsHow to style your mustache with the world's foremost expert in organ transplantation
In this episode, Alex chats with Martin Varsavsky, a serial entrepreneur in the realm of fertility and the founder of Prelude Fertility, the largest fertility clinic network in North America. Before working in the fertility space, Martin was the founder of various companies in the renewables and telecommunications space, many of which have reached unicorn valuations well past the billion-dollar mark. We discuss:What does it mean to be infertile and what is IVF (in vitro fertilization)? Why is infertility on the rise and what are the options to work around it?What is Prelude Fertility, what services are provided, and who are the typical patients who come to Prelude?Is it advisable for all young people prophylactically freeze gametes?What made you switch to working in the fertility space from your other ventures? What is it like being on the patient side of your own venture?Martin's other fertility ventures: Overture Life/overhauling the fertility clinic benchtop and GametoDifferent types of fertilization: natural vs ICSI The ethics of working in the fertility realm: CRISPR babies, discarding embryos, genetic testing embryos, abortions, and access to fertility servicesAdvice for entrepreneurs and blazing your own path
In this episode, Dr. Cuesta chats with Dr. Gustavo Stolovitzky, a thought leader in the realm of computational biology and a pioneer in the realm of precision medicine. Gustavo was the director of IBM's translational systems biology and nanobiotechnology program, an adjunct professor at both the Icahn School of Medicine and Columbia University, and is currently the Chief Scientific Officer at Sema4, a data-driven precision medicine company. We discuss:What is precision medicine: the historical and conceptual origins as well as the direction the field is moving todayHow the synergy of artificial intelligence and advancements in synthetic biology are enabling precision medicineObstacles in artificial intelligence and how they are impeding the growth of precision medicineUsing deep learning in medicine: supervised learning, explainable AI, and overfitting algorithms The DREAM challenges and how crowdsourcing solutions in computational biology can help solve issues in precision medicineHow will AI fit into the clinical landscapeSema4 and how data is translated from concept to clinical practiceIntellectual property and how to protect your algorithms in precision medicineWhat is the best path to break into precision medicine
In this episode, Alex chats with Dr. Alexander Kushnir, a cardiac electrophysiologist, about different types of heart diseases. We focus on Dr. Kushnir's specialty of electrical disorders of the heart, better known as arrhythmias, and how electrophysiologists fix these conditions.
In this episode, Alex talks with Dr. Philip Scheltens, a neurologist, professor of cognitive neurology, and one of the world's foremost thought leaders on the topic of dementia and neurodegenerative diseases as a whole. He has authored over 1000 publications in peer-reviewed journals and is one of the most-cited scientists in the world.
Welcome to the life sciences revolution podcast, where we take a deep dive to the forefront of scientific breakthroughs, entrepreneurial happenings, and disruptive medical technology. We are living through the beginnings of an exponential revolution. The past few decades have shown incredible advancements across the realms of biology, computation, and biotechnology. This growth has primed the field of life sciences to explode with new technologies, all of which will have a direct impact on your life from both a medical and financial perspective. Covid mRNA vaccines, CAR-t cancer treatments, and ground-breaking gene therapies are just the tip of the íceberg. In the near future, modern medicine will encapsulate even your wildest medical dreams. The fine line between science fiction and science fact has already begun to disintegrate, and eventually, the distinction will no longer be díscernable. The life sciences revolution podcast is all about the intersections of medicine, fínance, and investing in the real-world applications of novel scientific technologies. We bring you an exciting line-up of the best scientists, financiers, and world-leading experts to shed light on the ecosystems they participate in. The realm of life sciences is on the cusp of a revolution: so join us as we seek out these innovative breakthroughs all across the fields of biotechnology, precision medicine, and life sciences as a whole.
In this episode, Alex chats with Eduardo Bravo about this experience as the CEO of various biotechnology companies, as a chairman/board member of others, and as the sponsor of the first biotech-related SPAC in Europe.