meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Finding Genius Podcast

Heart of the Problem – Kevin Costa, CSO, Scientific Co-Founder, Novoheart – Stem Cells, Tissue Engineering, and the Challenge to Defeat Human Heart Conditions and Diseases

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 15 August 2018

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kevin Costa, CSO and scientific co-founder at Novoheart (novoheart.com), a stem cell and biotechnology tissue engineering company, delivers a wealth of information on the study of heart problems and diseases via tissue experimentation. Costa is director of cardiovascular cell and tissue engineering at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City. Costa received his training at the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. Additionally, he was a faculty member and associate professor of biomedical engineering at Columbia University. Through extensive work in biomedical engineering, with advanced study in cell and tissue biomechanics and cardiac tissue engineering, Costa developed one of the earliest engineered cardiac tissue systems. His work is funded through many prestigious grants from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Whitaker Foundation, and more.


Novoheart's primary goal is to innovate and impact drug discovery and the evolution of heart therapeutics with their proprietary bioengineered human heart constructs, to advance them further, into transplantable grafts for cell-based regenerative heart therapies with significantly improved safety as well as efficacy. By growing pieces of tissues that can emulate certain aspects of the human heart, Novoheart can perform laboratory testing to better understand how drugs and therapeutics might interact with a human heart. Costa explains how 90% of drugs ultimately fail and never make it to clinics to help patients, even after a decade of work with several billion dollars spent on research. He discusses how animal testing is perhaps the primary reason for drug failures in development, for animal testing is not exceptionally predictive of how a particular drug will work in a human body. And for fear of potentially extreme cardiac side effects, human testing is rarely if ever done; thus, Novoheart's testing on their laboratory-produced human tissues allows for more reliable testing that will be indicative of the actual human use of a drug.


The cell and tissue engineering expert discusses many of the areas Novoheart is innovating. One such area is Novoheart's trademarked MyHeart platform, which involves multiple assays that vary in complexity. He explains that heart disease and cardiac toxicity can arise in the electrical and contractile properties of the heart, thus Novoheart has designed engineered tissues to directly address problems and issues that pertain to both of the heart's major properties.


Novoheart has developed a proprietary method for differentiating human stem cells into the ventricular myocytes of the heart muscle cells that work with the large pumping ventricles of the heart. Their focus is on these types of cells as the ventricle area is where arrhythmias, cardiomyopathies, and contractile defects occur in human patients. Costa discusses the specifics of various branches of their work. He details how their methods allow them to gather detailed real information on contractility due to sensors that are integrated into their tissues, thus allowing them to measure twitch force and other variables that would be significant factors in assessing a real human heart's function and force, etc. And in regard to pump function, they devised a way to grow tissue around a silicone balloon to measure pressure and volume. 


The biomedical engineering expert discusses the value of laboratory-based trials for testing drug effectiveness, as the lab environment allows for optimization and experimentation to hone a more ideal solution, whereas, in human drug trials, any failures will generally end the trial immediately. Costa gives an overview of some areas of testing that he is particularly excited about, such as methods they have developed to study assays created from diseased patient cells. Their process will allow them to study the efficacy of compounds on their tissues that show symptoms of the disease in order to find methods or treatments to end those symptoms, and then utilize that information to treat real patients. The work is complex, but Costa's team strives to develop and innovate various methods to study diseases that impact heart function and performance, and as their work advances he hopes to continue to discover new means to improve heart health.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Almost Here, Around the Corner of Future Technology Podcasts with Richard Jacobs.

0:07.0

Future Technologies is to transform our lives for better or worse or the focus of this podcast.

0:13.0

Almost here means these technologies are now here and starting to be used.

0:17.0

Or just around the corner, for Bitcoin to artificial intelligence,

0:21.0

3D printing, blockchain, virtual reality, and more.

0:25.0

Hello this is Richard Jacobs with the Future Check podcast.

0:30.0

My guess today is Kevin Kosa, the chief science officer at novo heart. The website is

0:36.4

novo heart.com, novo spelled novo v.o. So Kevin how you doing today?

0:41.3

All right right thank you for having me.

0:44.0

Yeah, tell me about Novohart.

0:48.0

What do you guys do there?

0:49.0

So Novohard is a stem cell and biotechnology company, tissue engineering company, whose mission is to revolutionize the drug discovery and development of heart therapeutics and we have various

1:05.0

proprietary bioengineered human heart constructs and we further want to develop

1:10.9

these into traspectable grafts for cell-based therapies for the heart.

1:15.1

So you growing pieces of hearts or whole hearts or what are you doing to test drugs without

1:22.2

testing the initial person's heart first?

1:25.0

Yeah, so we grow, I guess you'd call it sort of substitute tissues.

1:32.0

It's pieces of tissue or tissues that emulate important aspects of the

1:39.0

net board. And these are designed specifically for testing in the laboratory to understand how drugs and different therapeutics interact with human heart muscle. These are typically three-dimensional

1:56.5

constructs, three-dimensional pieces of tissue that that reproduce important aspects of heart physiology and for that reason they allow us to predict and model how the natural human heart behaves under a different set of the treatments.

2:20.3

And so, for example, in the drug discovery process the process takes about a decade or more

2:28.8

cost a couple of billion US dollars and in the end more than 90% of the time the drugs that enter the process fail and don't make it into the clinic to help patients and part of the reason for that that very high failure rate is because

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Richard Jacobs, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Richard Jacobs and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.