biotech
VCs vying for Chinese assets are now courting scientists
When it comes to leveraging innovation out of China, U.S. venture capital firms are no longer just competing to find commercial or clinical-stage drug candidates; they're moving more upstream, looking at labs and academia to find scientific discoveries before the research is even published.
It's a sign of the growing global interest in Chinese innovation. In the first two months of this year, 41 deals were struck, and the average upfront payment has doubled to $77.7 million, according to data compiled by the South China Morning Post.
Chinese "universities, funded by the government, have less commercial focus and more incentives to do basic research, which can produce [more] novel technologies than privately funded institutions in the U.S.," one VC said.
Read more from STAT contributor Brian Yang.
drug pricing
Doctors Without Borders slams Gilead on rollout of HIV prevention drug
Doctors Without Borders said Gilead has refused to sell its HIV prevention drug lenacapivir directly to humanitarian groups in an "unconscionable" move.
Gilead's drug has been seen as a potential game-changer for global health, after studies showed a single set of injections every six months can offer virtually complete protection from infection.
But the drugmaker has faced repeated criticism over the way it's rolled out the medicine to low- and middle-income countries. The company says it's "committed to ensuring broad, sustainable access to lenacapavir for HIV prevention in high-incidence, resource-limited countries" and "working closely with partners."
Read more from STAT's Ed Silverman.
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