search

Dr Ulf Nehrbass, founder, CEO and Scientific Director of Ksilink in Strasbourg, a French-German Translational Research Centre, has taken over the general management of LIH as of 1st October 2017.

Dr Nehrbass replaces Dr Catherine Larue who has guided LIH as CEO ad interim since January 2016 and who returns to her former position of CEO of the Integrated BioBank of Luxembourg (IBBL).

After his biochemistry studies in Tübingen, Germany, and Cambridge, United Kingdom, Dr Nehrbass completed his PhD at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, in 1992. Dr Nehrbass was then offered the opportunity to work in the laboratory of the future Nobel Laureate, Prof Günter Blobel, at the Rockefeller University in New York, United States.

In 1998, he joined the Institut Pasteur in Paris as Research Director to set up his own laboratory. Six years later, he became the Founder, CEO and Scientific Director of the brand new Institut Pasteur in Korea, specialised in infectious diseases and cancer research and aiming at translating research excellence towards therapies that impact on patients. The institute namely worked on a compound against tuberculosis named Q203, the only new compound worldwide against totally drug-resistant tuberculosis bacteria.

Based on the success of the Institut Pasteur Korea, Dr Nehrbass was invited back to Europe to build a Franco-German institute with the same ethos. In 2013, he became the Founder, CEO and Scientific Director of Ksilink in Strasbourg, a French-German Translational Research Centre created by seven academic and public funding partners. Aiming for innovative therapeutic approaches, Ksilink is specialised in patient-based disease models and personalised medicine. Ksilink aims at linking scientific and clinical excellence with biotech and pharma industry. The centre is well on its way to success.

At the forefront of technology development, Dr Nehrbass has witnessed first-hand the transformative potential it can have on healthcare. Luxembourg, through its intense investment over the last decade, is leading in key aspects of this technology trend. The next step will now be to translate scientific breakthroughs into actual improvement for patients.  LIH will take a coherent and integrative translational approach, addressing unmet patients’ needs in a bed-to-bench-to-bed cycle. Luxembourgish researchers and clinicians are already working in this direction and Luxembourg is ideally positioned to lead the way.

Dr Ulf Nehrbass, new CEO of LIH: “I am convinced that LIH, in close collaboration with the other Luxembourgish partners, will play an important role in building effective translational programmes, which will impact on patients. With the openness, the flexibility and the ingenuity of Luxembourg, and its track record when it comes to opening and defining new fields of activity, there is no better place in the world to spearhead next generation healthcare at a nationwide level. In five years from now, LIH and Luxembourg institutions should be well on their way to lead patient-driven translational medicine and next generation healthcare at a European level .”

Read more

56 days until the 2024 European Digital HealthTech Conference

19-03-2024

Register for a unique conference exploring the challenges of bringing health technologies to the market and their solutions from 14 to 15 May 2024 in Luxembourg. A call for speakers is also open until 16 April.
Read more

Science-VC partnership spurs Luxembourg healthtech innovation

28-02-2024

The Luxembourg Institute of Health and Catalpa Ventures will support digital health innovation by bridging scientific research and venture capital.
Read more

Breaking data barriers: Dynaccurate’s healthtech innovation journey in Luxembourg

28-01-2024

Dynaccurate’s technology harmonises data using artificial intelligence. Applications for the technology are vast, especially in health and life sciences. All sectors where precise meaning is necessary can benefit, and this can include defence, law and engineering to name a few. CEO Dermot Doyle talks about how the company innovates in Luxembourg, which provides many possibilities for research partnerships.
Read more

Digital twins in healthcare: MDSIM’s innovative approach

23-01-2024

Luxembourg healthtech start-up MDSIM is revolutionising the way surgeries are planned and executed. Benefitting from the country’s support for innovative R&D, data infrastructure and partnerships within the local ecosystem, it does this by harnessing the power of computer modelling and simulation, data sciences and artificial intelligence to unlock new horizons in patient care.
Read more

From innovation to healthcare: Bridging the gap

22-01-2024

Digital innovations are taking medical interventions to new levels of precision and personalisation, but all new ideas do not provide real added value. We spoke to Luxembourg-born, internationally renowned orthopaedic surgeon and scientist Romain Seil about his work to develop and implement new digital tools in clinical practice while ensuring that patient needs remain at the very centre.
Read more

Resources all news

Fermer