Med-tech powerhouse Johnson & Johnson made a bold bid to bolster its interventional cardiology holdings with the news on April 5 that it is acquiring Shockwave Medical Inc. for approximately $13.1 billion including cash acquired. The $335 per share cash price represents a more than 5% premium to Shockwave’s (Nasdaq: SWAV) April 4 closing price.
In August 2023, med-tech firms raised a total of $1.88 billion through 27 transactions, an increase of 94.12% from the $971 million raised in July. Value is down 42.83%, however, from the $3.3 billion raised in August 2022. The volume of med-tech financings is tracking at an average of 41 per month in 2023, down from an average of 43 per month in 2022, 59 per month through 2021 and 60 per month in 2020.
Shockwave Medical Inc. enrolled the first patient in its EMPOWER CAD study, the first prospective, all-female study of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). The study seeks to confirm the benefits of coronary intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) in female patients with calcified lesions. Women have historically been underrepresented in cardiovascular trials and have had less favorable outcomes in response to therapies.
Shockwave Medical Inc. will acquire Neovasc Inc. for just under $108 million, if all terms of the deal are met. Shockwave will pay $27.25 in cash for each of Neovasc’s 2.71 million outstanding shares or approximately $73.78 million at close. Shockwave said the offer corresponds to an enterprise value of $100 million. Neovasc could receive an additional payment of up to $47 million, if the company’s Reducer system for refractory angina obtains U.S. FDA marketing approval within a specified time frame.
The 2022 Vascular Interventional Advances (VIVA) medical meeting, which concluded on Nov. 3 in Las Vegas, focused on advances in interventional cardiology and devices to improve vascular health with the expected studies comparing drug-eluting balloons, new stents and less invasive procedures. One Boston Scientific Corp. presentation put the rest into context, however, with one of the most critical advances in cardiology, enrollment in the Drug-Eluting Registry: Real World Treatment of Lesions in the Peripheral Vasculature (ELEGANCE) registry.
DUBLIN – Sofinnova Partners closed out its flagship Capital X fund at €472 million (US$550 million), providing further evidence that private equity investing in European biotechnology and medical technology remains in rude health. It represents, managing partner Graziano Seghezzi told BioWorld, one of the most successful fundraising campaigns in its 30-year history. “We went out and raised this fund in six months.”
Medicare coverage does not necessarily mean appropriate reimbursement levels, a point pressed by Inspire Medical Systems Inc. at the Aug. 23 Medicare outpatient advisory panel hearing. The panel agreed that the company’s hypoglossal nerve stimulation (HNS) device for sleep apnea was subject to an inappropriate device offset figure, which could lead to a Medicare rate increase of more than $7,000 and a significant boost of sales of the company’s flagship Inspire HNS device.
The annual scramble for elevated payment rates under the U.S. Medicare inpatient rule has concluded, and at least one artificial intelligence product came up short in its bid for a new technology add-on (NTAP) payment. However, Medtronic plc, Boston Scientific Corp. and Cook Medical Inc. all secured or sustained NTAP payments for products that are critical for patients with a variety of life-threatening conditions, such as severe pulmonary valve regurgitation in pediatric patients.
The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) had previously waded into a sea of opposition from device makers and medical societies alike in its proposal to eliminate the inpatient-only (IPO) list. The new administration at CMS has proposed to reverse that move and sustain the IPO, which should alleviate concerns that outpatient procedures will ding the reputations of these devices.
Shockwave Medical Inc. said Tuesday that its intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) therapy has won U.S. FDA approval for the treatment of severe coronary artery disease (CAD). The technology, which was granted breakthrough device designation in 2019, is a novel application of lithotripsy, which has long been used to safely shatter kidney stones.