2025 ASCEPT & Hypertension Australia Joint Scientific Meeting

Thank you for attending

On behalf of the Organising Committee, we thank you for attending the ASCEPT and Hypertension Australia Joint Scientific Meeting, which was held from 9 to 12 December 2025 at the Adelaide Convention Centre in South Australia.

We hope you found the meeting both professionally and personally rewarding.

Picture of A/Prof Bridin Murnion

A/Prof Bridin Murnion

President, ASCEPT

Picture of Prof Markus Schlaich

Prof Markus Schlaich

President, Hypertension Australia

Keynote speakers

Opening Keynote

Prof Arduino Mangoni

Flinders University

Arduino Mangoni is a Strategic Professor of Clinical Pharmacology at Flinders University, Senior Consultant in Clinical Pharmacology and General Medicine, and Head of the Department of Clinical Pharmacology at Flinders Medical Centre.

Professor Mangoni has contributed to the development and updates of the ‘Australian Hypertension Guidelines,’ the ‘Australian Guidelines on the Use of Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring for the Management of Hypertension,’ and the SIGN guidelines on the ‘Management of Chronic Pain.’

He has received approximately $15 million in research funding and published 454 articles and 24 book chapters in the fields of cardiovascular pathophysiology and pharmacology, geriatric pharmacology, biomarker discovery, and drug discovery/repurposing. He co-edited the books “Prescribing for Elderly Patients” and “Optimizing Pharmacotherapy in Older Adults – An Interdisciplinary Approach.” He is the Editor-in-Chief of “Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety” and Senior/Executive Editor of “Age & Ageing” and “British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology.”

Professor Mangoni was named a Fellow of the British Pharmacological Society in 2012 and a Fellow of the International Society of Hypertension in 2020 for his exceptional work in hypertension research and patient care. In 2019, he received an Honorary Professorship in Clinical Pharmacology from Technische Universität Dresden.

BPS Lecturer

RD Wright Lecturer

University of Nottingham, England
RD Wright Lecturer

Assoc Prof Jens Titze

DukeNUS Medical School
Paul Korner Awardee Lecturer

Prof Michael Stowasser

The University of Queensland, Princess Alexandra Hospital
Austin Doyle Lecturer

Prof Seth Masters

Hudson Institute of Medical Research
Colin I Johnston Lecturer

Prof Francine Marques

Monash University

Professor Francine Marques is a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Emerging Leader, Viertel Charitable Foundation, and National Heart Foundation Fellow. She completed a PhD in genomics at the University of Sydney in 2012, followed by postdoctoral training supported with NHMRC and Heart Foundation fellowships. Since 2018, Prof Marques leads the Hypertension Research Laboratory at Monash University, currently based at the Victorian Heart Institute, where she serves as Deputy Director (Discovery). Her team aims to build exceptional scientists that help improve cardiovascular health, using translational approaches to lower blood pressure via the gut microbiome. Her research program has attracted over $12 million in competitive funding and resulted in over 140 peer-reviewed papers and 34 awards, including the 2019 American Heart Association Hypertension Council Goldblatt Award, the 2020 High Blood Pressure Research Council of Australia and 2021 International Society of Hypertension Mid-Career Awards, the 2021 Australian Academy of Science Gottschalk Medal, and the 2024 Australian Society of Medical Research Peter Doherty Leading Light Award.

BIHS Lecturer

Dr Jamie Kitt

Oxford & Thames Valley, England

Dr Jamie Kitt is a dual accredited Cardiology & General Internal Medicine (GIM) Consultant trained in Oxford & Thames Valley, United Kingdom. He has sub-specialty training in Echo, Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), Cardiac CT, and Hypertension, the latter of which complements his research expertise within hypertensive pregnancy. He now works as an imaging cardiologist in London for the NHS and continues his post-doctoral research in Oxford in Hypertensive Pregnancy.

He completed a PhD studying the cardiac complications of hypertensive pregnancy between 2018-2022. Under the supervision of Prof Paul Leeson, he was awarded a British Heart Foundation fellowship during which they performed a randomized trial on post-partum self-management of hypertensive pregnancy (POP-HT). This resulted in several high-impact publications in the field of hypertensive pregnancy, with the key POP-HT trial papers published in JAMA, Hypertension and Circulation to coincide with the trial’s presentation at American Heart Association’s late breaking Science in November 2023. He was awarded the early career research award of the British and Irish Hypertension Society in Autumn 2024 and the University of Oxford Graduate Prize Award in March 2025 for this body of work. The vascular paper is pending publication in Hypertension and the brain and renal outcomes from are under peer review. Prof Leeson and Dr Kitt are now collaborating in a multi-center PCORI funded trial of postpartum BP self-management in the USA, the multi-center validation of POP-HT in the UK (SNAP2), and help run dedicated postpartum hypertension clinics in Oxford and London. Dr Kitt looks forward to sharing this body of work at the Australian Hypertension society in late 2025 and working with Prof Larry Chamley to adapt the principles developed in POP-HT to the New Zealand model of postpartum care during a visiting lectureship in December 2025.

ASCEPT Rand Medalist

Prof Grant Drummond

La Trobe University

Professor Grant Drummond is a pharmacologist and vascular biologist with over 30 years of experience in research and tertiary education. He holds senior leadership positions at La Trobe University including Co-Director of the Centre for Cardiovascular Biology and Disease Research and Associate Dean (Research Partnerships) for the School of Agriculture Biomedicine and Environment. Grant Drummond’s research is focussed on understanding the roles of oxidative stress and the immune system in hypertension and its downstream complications including kidney disease, heart failure and atherosclerosis. His work has shown that hypertension is associated with activation of T cells, B cells and macrophages. These immune cells then accumulate in key blood pressure-regulating organs such as the blood vessels, kidneys, heart and brain, where they promote inflammation and tissue damage via the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g. interleukin 18, interferon-g) and autoantibodies. The long term goals of Grant Drummond’s research are to develop novel therapies that alleviate hypertension and end organ damage by dampening inflammation. Grant Drummond has over 180 publications and his work has received more than 17,500 citations. His work has been continuously supported by the NHMRC and Heart Foundation of Australia for >20 years. He is a Fellow of the American Heart Association, and Associate Editor for the British Journal of Pharmacology, Cardiovascular Research and Pharmacology and Therapeutics.

Closing Keynote Address

Assoc Prof Christophe Stove

Ghent University, Belgium

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