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401.www.zhkplus.de4460
402.www.virginiamason.org4390
403.www.anoiksis.nl4360
404.www.snfge.asso.fr4300
405.www.zonamedica.com.ar4300
406.www.cdbx.org4290
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408.www.swissheart.ch4280
409.www.unimo.it4270
410.www.saintluc.be4230
411.www.augen.de4210
412.www.kinderradiologie-online.de4210
413.www.mc.duke.edu4110
414.www.medito.com4110
415.www.lapelle.it4020
416.www.armymedicine.army.mil4020
417.www.med.unipi.it4010
418.www.paidopsiquiatria.com4010
419.www.mpimf-heidelberg.mpg.de3980
420.www.anatomie.net3930
421.www.chu-brugmann.be3920
422.www.simg.it3860
423.www.srlf.org3800
424.www.stethonet.org3790
425.www.nki.nl3740
426.www.yestheyrefake.net3670
427.www.tutorat-medecine-lille.com3670
428.www.anmco.it3670
429.www.hautstadt.de3660
430.www.azm.nl3650
431.www.jim.fr3640
432.www.klinik.uni-frankfurt.de3630
433.www.pneumotox.com3620
434.www.best-med-link.de3550
435.www.anapath.necker.fr3540
436.www.dgkj.de3490
437.www.mydrg.de3480
438.www.zahnheilkunde.de3480
439.www.ior.it3480
440.www.ibmt.fraunhofer.de3430
441.www.psychowijzer.nl3430
442.www.dermatonet.com3410
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444.www.ser.es3410
445.www.dgzmk.de3370
446.www.uhhs.com3330
447.www.doctoroogle.com3300
448.www.cirugest.com3270
449.www.intermedicina.com3250
450.www.lzk-bw.de3230
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423. www.srlf.org

Rating: 3800 points*
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www.srlf.org

Le site de la SRLF - La Société de Réanimation de Langue Française

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Biotech VCs Go Back to Doing What They're Supposed To
The Burrill Report submits: By Marie DaghlianVenture capitalists funded more U.S. companies in earlier stage rounds during the first quarter 2010 compared with the same period last year. Nevertheless, total dollars invested during the first quarter dropped 15.5 percent with $1.5 billion invested in 148 companies, compared to $1.7 billion invested in 114 companies during first quarter 2009. The good news is that venture capitalists have gone back to doing what they are supposed to do—funding innovation. It also shows that the capital markets have opened up to finance later-stage companies. The number of early stage—seed and series A and B—rounds increased 43 percent over the same quarter last year when many VCs were busy helping their portfolio companies ride the financial downturn with later-stage financings. The number of series C and later rounds dropped to 27 percent of all disclosed life sciences deals in the first quarter of 2010, from 37 percent in the same period a year ago. Investment in therapeutic and diagnostic companies fell 29 percent to $743.6 million, but 85 companies attracted funding, up from 69 companies during the first quarter of 2009. In order to attract significant capital, companies need to stand out from the pack with either first in class or best in class technologies and therapies. For instance, Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Eleven Biotherapeutics emerged from stealth mode in February after raising $35 million in its series A round with the goal of using a variety of protein engineering technologies to assemble a portfolio of novel best-in-class drugs to treat autoimmune diseases. The total amounts being raised today are not always what they seem. In an effort to reduce risk, VCs are increasingly turning to tranched financings based on their portfolio companies meeting specific development milestones. For instance, South San Francisco based NGM Biopharmaceuticals scored the first tranche of a $51 million series B round to advance its drug discovery platform and established portfolio of novel targets and factors that restore glucose balance in preclinical models of type 2 diabetes. The specific size of the tranche was not disclosed. The greater Boston area received the lion’s share of venture financing during the first quarter of 2010 with 37 deals bringing in $482 million of new capital, a 36 percent increase over the $354 million raised in the first quarter of 2009. Companies in the San Francisco Bay Area raised $306 million in 312 deals, nearly a 50 percent drop in the total amount raised in the first quarter a year ago. Greater San Diego companies raised $267 million in 23 deals, a modest increase from a year ago. U.S. Life Sciences Venture Capital Financings (USD M) By Region Q1 2009 Q1 2010 Change Greater Boston 354.1 482 36.10% New England (includes Greater Boston) 415.1 520 25.30% San Francisco Bay Area 600.6 305.6 -49.10% Greater San Diego 253.5 267.2 5.40% All of California (Includes San Diego and San Francisco) 899.1 592.8 -34.10% Southwest (AZ, CO, TX, UT) 83.3 151.5 81.90% Mid-Atlantic (NY, NJ, PA, DE, MD, VA) 196.2 143.6 -26.80% Carolinas 4 67.1 1577.50% Central States (OH, IN, IL, KS, MI, MN, MO, WI, SD) 63.4 61.5 -3.00% South (FL, GA, KY, LA, TN) 8 25.3 216.30% Greater Seattle 59.5 22 -63.00% US Life Sciences Venture Capital Financings Total 1728.6 1461.2 -15.50% Number of Deals 114 148 29.80% Average Deal Value 15.2 9.9 -34.90% Biotech only deals (Therapeutics, Dx, Tools/Technology) 1050.1 743.6 -29.20% Number of Deals 69 85 23.20% Average Deal Value 15.2 8.75 -42.40% Disclosed deals in Biotech Q1 2009 Q1 2010 Seed, A-B rounds 28 40 42.90% C and later rounds 12 10 -16.70% Disclosed deals in Life Sciences Seed, A-B rounds 44 51 15.90% C and later rounds 26 19 -26.90%Complete Story »
seekingalpha.com
Pfizer to Withdraw a Cancer Drug
The FDA said Pfizer is withdrawing its cancer drug Mylotarg from the U.S. market after a clinical study showed the drug wasn't effective and had more safety problems.
online.wsj.com
WHO Aims to Shield Babies From AIDS
The World Health Organization issued new guidelines aimed at strengthening efforts to prevent pregnant women from transmitting the AIDS virus to their babies and improving care for infants who are born with the infection.
online.wsj.com
Big Pharma Looks to Biotech for Innovation
The Burrill Report submits: By Marie DaghlianEarly stage deals between pharma and biotech underscore pharma companies’ increasing reliance on biotech as a source of innovation. Both Roche (RHHBY.PK) and Lilly (LLY) have been stung by setbacks in their drug development programs in recent weeks, and both of them announced new alliances to develop novel therapeutics.Complete Story »
seekingalpha.com
3M to Change Workers' Health Plans
3M informed retirees and workers it will stop offering a group health insurance plan to retirees not old enough for Medicare by 2015, citing the federal health overhaul as a factor.
online.wsj.com