Bio


Thibault Vervenne is a PhD researcher in Soft Tissue Biomechanics, guided by Nele Famaey at KU Leuven (Belgium).
Thibault is currently visiting the Living Matter Lab of Ellen Kuhl, as part of Stanford Bio-X.
His research passion lies in the middle of the scientific triangle connecting engineering, medicine and material science. Thibault combines (I) computer models and simulations in biomechanical engineering, with (II) clinical applications in cardiac surgery, and (III) polymeric medical textiles for cardiovascular applications.
Specifically, Thibault's academical journey is focused on the design and development of a mechanocompatible external support for the Ross procedure. At Stanford, Thibault is therefore working on the automated biomechanical model discovery of cardiovascular tissues and devices through neural networks.

Honors & Awards


  • Audience & jury 1st prize winner, Falling Walls Lab competition (2024)
  • PhD fellowship strategic basic research, Research Foundation Flanders - FWO (2022)

Professional Education


  • Master of Science (MSc), KU Leuven, Biomedical Engineering (2021)
  • Bachelor of Science (BSc), KU Leuven, Mechanical Engineering (2019)

Lab Affiliations


All Publications


  • Cell signaling and tissue remodeling in the pulmonary autograft after the Ross procedure: A computational study. Journal of biomechanics Maes, L., Vervenne, T., Hendrickx, A., Estrada, A. C., Van Hoof, L., Verbrugghe, P., Rega, F., Jones, E. A., Humphrey, J. D., Famaey, N. 2024; 171: 112180

    Abstract

    In the Ross procedure, a patient's pulmonary valve is transplanted in the aortic position. Despite advantages of this surgery, reoperation is still needed in many cases due to excessive dilatation of the pulmonary autograft. To further understand the failure mechanisms, we propose a multiscale model predicting adaptive processes in the autograft at the cell and tissue scale. The cell-scale model consists of a network model, that includes important signaling pathways and relations between relevant transcription factors and their target genes. The resulting gene activity leads to changes in the mechanical properties of the tissue, modeled as a constrained mixture of collagen, elastin and smooth muscle. The multiscale model is calibrated with findings from experiments in which seven sheep underwent the Ross procedure. The model is then validated against a different set of sheep experiments, for which a qualitative agreement between model and experiment is found. Model outcomes at the cell scale, including the activity of genes and transcription factors, also match experimentally obtained transcriptomics data.

    View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2024.112180

    View details for PubMedID 38906711

  • Drivers of vascular growth and remodeling: A computational framework to promote benign adaptation in the Ross procedure. Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials Vervenne, T., Maes, L., Van Hoof, L., Rega, F., Famaey, N. 2023; 148: 106170

    Abstract

    In the sixties, Dr Donald Ross designed a surgical solution for young patients with aortic valve disease by using the patients' own pulmonary valve. The Ross procedure is the only aortic valve replacement technique that can restore long-term survival and preserve quality of life. The main failure mode of the Ross procedure is wall dilatation, potentially leading to valve regurgitation and leakage. Dilatation occurs due to the inability of the pulmonary autograft to adapt to the sudden increase in loading when exposing to aortic pressures. Previous experimental data has shown that a permanent external support wrapped around the artery can prevent the acute dilatation of the arterial wall. However, the textile support leads to stress-shielding phenomena due to the loss of mechanical wall compliance. We present a pragmatic and modular computational framework of arterial growth and remodeling predicting the long-term outcomes of cardiovascular tissue adaptation, with and without textile wrapping. The model integrates mean, systolic and diastolic pressures and assumes the resulting wall stresses to drive the biological remodeling rules. Rather than a single mean pressure or stress deviation from the homeostatic state, we demonstrate that only pulsatile stresses can predict available experimental results. Therefore, we suggest that a biodegradable external support could induce benign remodeling in the Ross procedure. Indeed, a biodegradable textile wrapped around the autograft fulfills the trade-off between prevention of acute dilatation on the one hand and recovery of arterial wall compliance on the other hand. After further validation, the computational framework can set the basis for the development of an actual biodegradable external support for the Ross procedure with optimized polymer mechanical properties and degradation behavior.

    View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2023.106170

    View details for PubMedID 37852088

  • Computational modeling reveals inflammation-driven dilatation of the pulmonary autograft in aortic position. Biomechanics and modeling in mechanobiology Maes, L., Vervenne, T., Van Hoof, L., Jones, E. A., Rega, F., Famaey, N. 2023; 22 (5): 1555-1568

    Abstract

    The pulmonary autograft in the Ross procedure, where the aortic valve is replaced by the patient's own pulmonary valve, is prone to failure due to dilatation. This is likely caused by tissue degradation and maladaptation, triggered by the higher experienced mechanical loads in aortic position. In order to further grasp the causes of dilatation, this study presents a model for tissue growth and remodeling of the pulmonary autograft, using the homogenized constrained mixture theory and equations for immuno- and mechano-mediated mass turnover. The model outcomes, compared to experimental data from an animal model of the pulmonary autograft in aortic position, show that inflammation likely plays an important role in the mass turnover of the tissue constituents and therefore in the autograft dilatation over time. We show a better match and prediction of long-term outcomes assuming immuno-mediated mass turnover, and show that there is no linear correlation between the stress-state of the material and mass production. Therefore, not only mechanobiological homeostatic adaption should be taken into account in the development of growth and remodeling models for arterial tissue in similar applications, but also inflammatory processes.

    View details for DOI 10.1007/s10237-023-01694-6

    View details for PubMedID 36764979