Spark Partners with BioTwin for Its First Series Event: AI and the Future of Medicine
Spark teams up with BioTwin CTO Pierrick Hauguel, an evening exploring human digital twins, AI-driven healthcare, and the future of medicine in the age of AI.
Spark

Spark is launching its event series with a partnership that sets the bar high. For the first edition, the community is teaming up with BioTwin and its founder and CTO Pierrick Hauguel for an evening dedicated to one of the most transformative frontiers in technology: artificial intelligence and medicine.
BioTwin is building human digital twins, AI-powered models designed to simulate and predict human health. The company sits at the intersection of biology, medicine, and artificial intelligence, developing systems that can model how the human body works, improve prediction capabilities, and unlock new possibilities in personalized medicine. It is the kind of company pushing the boundaries of what AI can do when applied to real, high-stakes problems.
The partnership brings Hauguel directly to the Spark community for a deep, structured evening that goes well beyond a standard talk. The event opens with networking, followed by a sit-down conversation between Logan Robitaille and Pierrick Hauguel covering the origins of BioTwin, the decision to build in healthcare, the early challenges, and what it actually takes to launch a startup at the frontier of AI and medicine.
From there, Hauguel will take attendees inside the technology itself: what a human digital twin actually is, how AI can model human health, the data challenges involved, the technical architecture, scientific validation, and the current limits and future possibilities of the approach.
The second half of the evening shifts to a forward-looking discussion on the future of AI in medicine. Topics include AI-assisted diagnostics, drug discovery and development, personalized and preventive healthcare, emerging breakthroughs, career opportunities for those looking to enter the field, and what the healthcare landscape could look like in five to ten years.
The evening closes with an open Q&A session covering everything from AI research and entrepreneurship to technical challenges and career paths, followed by a final networking session where attendees can connect with Hauguel and each other.
The event is open to students, researchers, healthcare professionals, AI developers, software engineers, startup founders, investors, and anyone interested in the future of healthcare and artificial intelligence.
This first edition, built around a real partnership with a company working at the cutting edge of AI and health, sets the tone for what the series aims to be: a space where deep science meets real entrepreneurial experience, and where the people building the future of AI meet those ready to carry it forward.