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Medical
Devices Promising Despite Challenges
Favorable
market conditions and an increasing U.S. aged population
have led to considerable
growth
in the medical device industry, even as other high tech
sectors have continued to struggle. However,
competition
in the global marketplace and the influence of managed
care may create obstacles to the industry's future growth.
The
changing demographics of the U.S. will play a major
role in the growth of the medical devices industry.
As the vast baby-boomer generation ages, the country's
senior population (65 and over) will continue to increase.
Seniors now account for almost half of the nation's
total healthcare expenditures. The U.S. Census Bureau
estimates that by 2020 the population of seniors, currently
13% of the total U.S. population, will grow to 17%*.
This severe demographic shift, the "graying of
America", will increase the demand for healthcare
products. However, as the senior population grows and
the number of Medicare recipients increases, there will
be proportionately fewer working Americans to pay for
healthcare programs funded by tax payers. Budgetary
constraints may have an affect on the medical devices
industry if seniors are unable to afford healthcare
services and government funding falls short.
The
relatively small size of the medical devices market
has also contributed to the steady growth of the industry.
The cost of research and development for medical device
products, which averages almost twice that of other
types of research and development, as well as the long
FDA approval process, has created significant barriers
to entry that have severely limited competition in the
medical device marketplace. This limited competition
has proven beneficial for existing companies and attractive
to potential investors, especially as most research
and development efforts have enjoyed a strong rate of
commercial success. Companies are preparing to introduce
new products in cardiology, orthopedics, oncology, and
specialized surgical markets.
The
increase in managed care will have a significant impact
on the industry. HMOs, PPOs, large hospital consortiums,
and government agencies oversee over 60% of all medical
device purchases, and the rate is expected to climb
to 80-90% by 2005*. Managed care can reduce the industry's
income and profits through increased bulk purchasing,
therapeutic substitution for treatment (using treatment
methods in which devices are not used), and strict screening
of incoming patients, which often results in services
that do not require the use of devices. However, managed
care plans usually cover senior adults for most inpatient
and outpatient services, while conventional Medicare
plans may have limited coverage.
Cardio
market poised for growth
Manufacturers of heart devices have reported particularly
favorable earnings. Heart disease remains the leading
cause of fatality in the US The demographic increase
in older Americans will likely expand the number of
potential users of heart devices. The demand for cutting-edge
products, such as implantable cardiac defibrillators
(ICDs), coronary stents, vascular sealing, external
defibrillators and pacemakers is predicted to escalate.
Sales of cardiology products rose by 9% in 2002, and
are forecasted to grow another 17% by 2003*, partly
because of Johnson and Johnson's 2003 launch of the
Cypher drug-coated coronary stent. Stents are tiny wire
mesh tubes inserted into an artery to prop it open after
angioplasty. Drug-coated stents are expected to drastically
cut down on the number of repeat procedures, and eventually
replace metal stents in the market. Such innovative
products are predicted to fill the huge untapped market
for heart treatments and stimulate significant sales
growth. Another sector that has been performing favorably,
mostly due to the increase in the aged population, is
orthopedic products such as hip, knee, and shoulder
replacements. This market is estimated to grow 7%-9%
in the next few years.
May
1: Economic Research Briefing: Medical Device
Industry
This briefing will present an overview of the medical
device industry, and cover ways the US has positioned
itself as the dominant global producer. Topics include:
current regulations and reimbursements, Department
of Commerce (DOC) export programs, and how the US
government is working with industry to improve the
global regulatory and reimbursement environment.
Led by Jeffrey L. Gren, Director of the Office of
Microelectronics, Medical Equipment and Instrumentation
(OMMI) within the International Trade Administration.
more
information > |
International
trade - the next frontier
Despite
the fact that the United States is the world's leading
producer of medical device products, the majority of
sales last year were domestic. According to Jeffrey
Gren, Director of the Office of Microelectronics, Medical
Equipment and Instrumentation (OMMI) in the International
Trade Administration, the rate of overseas activity
could be greatly increased. Gren works with the OMMI
to help the mostly small and medium-sized U.S. medical
device companies increase their export activity.
"Because we have the most advanced medical products,
and a tremendous international cooperative spirit between
industry and regulators, we view the U.S. as being in
a very strong position to increase export activity to
enable major growth," says Gren. "Currently,
the higher growth rates are occurring in the overseas
markets. The mature markets, like the U.S., Europe,
Japan, and Canada, have annual growth rates in the 5-6%
rate, whereas many Latin American and Asian economies
have growth rates in double digits, 12-18%. So over
time, unless U.S. companies focus on export opportunities,
they're going to lose market share. A lot of the exporting
being done currently is by the larger companies, and
smaller and medium-sized companies are not as actively
involved as they could be. Much of that is because they're
not aware of opportunities and exporting procedures."
Gren states that some countries have far more friendly
regulatory policies than the U.S., and that there are
challenging bureaucratic procedures in the United States
that discourage companies from entering foreign markets.
The OMMI works to address this disparity by informing
companies whether or not its products are a good match
for the foreign marketplace, what the expected competition
will be like, and what the regulatory conditions are
in each country.
"The
major regulatory systems in the world do provide adequate
safeguard protection for medical devices, but there
are two risks that a regulatory system has," Gren
says. "One is the risk of having review procedures
that are so rigorous that medical technologies that
will save lives or improve the quality of lives are
not allowed in the marketplace. The other risk is having
a system that is too lax, where unsafe products are
allowed in the marketplace. The role of a regulator
is then a balancing act, because lives are lost and
saved, and quality of life is impacted either way, by
having unsafe products in the market or by denying access
to safe products in the marketplace."
Coming
May 1st, Larta's Economic
Research
Briefing and white paper on the medical device industry.
by
Wendy
Hall, Larta Staff Writer
Return
to this week's issue of VOX >
*Source:
Standard & Poor
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