Haemonetics Corp. appears ready to make a bit of a retro investment, as it entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Advanced Cooling Therapy Inc. (dba Attune Medical) for $160 million at closing plus undisclosed additional contingent payments. Attune manufactures the U.S. FDA-cleared Ensoetm device, which cools the esophagus during radiofrequency cardiac ablation procedures, a treatment for atrial fibrillation whose days appeared numbered.
Haemonetics Corp. returned to the M&A trail with an agreement to buy Opsens Inc., a cardiology-focused medical device company, for CA$2.90 (US$2.13) per share for a total of CA$345 million (US$253 million). The all-cash transaction, its third significant purchase in five years, is expected to close by late January 2024, pending the approval of regulators and 66.66% of voting shareholders. Haemonetics expects the deal to be immediately accretive to adjusted earnings per share (EPS).
Vivasure Medical Ltd. received a €30 million (US$32 million) strategic investment from Haemonetics Corp. to help develop its Perqseal closure device system which manages bleeding complications associated with large-bore arterial vessel closure. Haemonetics has an option to buy Vivasure upon the completion of the company achieving certain milestones.
Ra Medical Systems Inc. launched a simple device that holds sutures more securely in place for closure of percutaneous wound sites during cardiac electrophysiology, structural heart and vascular surgical procedures.
Hemosonics LLC said it was recently awarded U.S. FDA clearance for a new hemostasis test cartridge assay it said significantly expands the indications for clinical use of its existing Quantra system to now also include trauma and liver transplantation procedures. The expanded Quantra hemostasis system with its QStat cartridge will add to capabilities of the system’s QPlus cartridge assay already established in the point-of-care and lab-based, whole blood hemostasis testing market.
The FDA has cleared a plasma collection device developed by Terumo Blood and Cell Technologies (Terumo BCT) and plasma collection network CSL Plasma. The companies, which are subsidiaries of Terumo Corp. and CSL Ltd., signed a collaboration deal in 2021 to develop the new Rika device for CSL Plasma collection centers. The automated technology is designed to reduce plasma collection time to 35 minutes or less. According to the Red Cross, plasma donations currently take on average about 1 hour and 15 minutes.
Haemonetics Corp. said Wednesday that it will acquire Cardiva Medical Inc., a privately held manufacturer of blood closure systems, for up to $510 million. The all-cash deal expands Haemonetics’ hospital portfolio with two catheter-based devices used to shut off access sites following minimally invasive cardiology and electrophysiology (EP) procedures.
Haemonetics Corp. reported sales of $209.5 million for the second quarter of fiscal year 2021, down 17.1% from the same period the prior year. Plasma sales declined 32.4% year over year to $78.4 million in the face of continuing COVID-19 impacts on blood donor activity. As Jeffries analyst Anthony Petrone observed, “Trough is rear view but plasma headwinds still elevated” through the period ended Sept. 26, “though declines were lower than expected (actual -30%; JEF -28% cc).”