
Bayer to Pay $1.3 Billion for Kumquat Cancer Drug in Pharma Push
Bayer will help fund the development of an early stage medicine from closely held Kumquat for several types of cancer in which a gene called KRAS has mutated, the German company said in a statement Tuesday.
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Forbes
22 minutes ago
- Forbes
A Real Betis Gemstone: Nelson Deossa's Path From The Mines To La Liga
Nelson Deossa's jump from Mexican club Monterrey to Spanish team Real Betis isn't quite the window's blockbuster signing. It does make a case for being the most interesting, though. Yesterday, Betis unveiled the Colombian midfielder, who officially joined on August 4. While some reports have the price slightly lower, ESPN says the transfer sum (Spanish) was approximately €14.5 million ($17 million), making him the third-largest sale ever from Liga MX. He's also among the top ten most expensive acquisitions made by Betis, which broke the transfer world record to sign Denilson back in 1998. Deossa's contract runs until 2030. On their own, these are extraneous details when you consider that, just six years ago, Deossa had long odds of becoming a professional soccer player in the first place, let alone playing at a strong team in one of Europe's elite leagues. Los Verdiblancos' arrival was working alongside his father in the mines near his small hometown of Marmato. Stepping out from the underground darkness, the game was an outlet rather than an obvious career pathway. 'I was studying and working,' he once told the television channel at Pachuca, where he used to play, adding. 'I saw myself frustrated a lot of the time, but I didn't quit the dream (soccer) and made the most of the opportunities I had.' If the mines didn't bring gold, soccer would in the end, and his first opportunity to star competitively in Spain could come on Monday, when Betis takes on promoted Elche. Deossa Brings Rawness But Vigor To La Liga Depending on how you look at it, Deossa arrived with a handicap, first at Atlético Huila before moving to Pachuca and Monterrey via loans, including Estudiantes in Argentina. In a fiercely competitive business, he missed out on a formal soccer education, further disrupted by the pandemic. And he's now settling into a country where the soccer education yields such fine players. However, it's made Deossa a unique talent. 'With little schooling. With a lot of heart, intuition, and fortitude,' is how a recent El Mundo article puts it (Spanish). Indeed, watching Deossa at his last club, Monterrey, he's direct, running back and forth, and with a rocket of a shot. Club World Cup viewers may remember the South American receiving the ball, skipping past an opponent, and thwacking in a long-range goal against Urawa Reds in June. He scored seven in 29 matches for Rayados. It will be fascinating to see how Deossa adapts to, or changes the rhythm, at coach Manuel Pellegrini's Betis, which is looking to build on a promising 2024/25 season, despite losing the Conference League final to Chelsea. Elsewhere in midfield, Betis has lost a valuable cog in USMNT player Johnny Cardoso to Atlético Madrid, is without Isco due to a serious injury, and knows holding onto Manchester United loanee Antony will be tough. Rodrigo Riquelme has come in from Atleti. Coincidentally, regarding Deossa, the origins of soccer in Spain go back to the mines. In and around Huelva, part of the Andalusia region, like Sevilla-based Betis, the first informal kickarounds took place roughly 150 years ago. Drawn to Los Verdiblanos after speaking with colleagues Sergio Canales and Cucho Hernández, both familiar with the team, his first kicks are just around the corner. Bringing a different background and all-action style to the team, Deossa is a La Liga addition worth following.


Bloomberg
24 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
AI Eroded Doctors' Ability to Spot Cancer Within Months in Study
Artificial intelligence, touted for its potential to transform medicine, led to some doctors losing skills after just a few months in a new study. AI helped health professionals to better detect pre-cancerous growths in the colon, but when the assistance was removed, their ability to find tumors dropped by about 20% compared with rates before the tool was ever introduced, according to findings published Wednesday.

Wall Street Journal
an hour ago
- Wall Street Journal
Europe's Free-Trade Fumble
Given how aghast our European friends are at President Trump's tariffs, you'd think they'd be flexing their diplomatic muscles to expand free trade wherever else in the world they can. You've never met a French President. While the European Union was frantically negotiating a trade deal with Mr. Trump last month, the bloc more or less killed a free-trade agreement with a clutch of South American countries. The EU-Mercosur agreement, in the works for years, would expand trade between the bloc and Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Mercosur countries exported to the EU goods worth €56 billion in 2024, while EU exports to Mercosur totalled €55.2 billion, according to the European Commission.