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Five years ago, Medtronic executives set out to change the company culture and prioritize financial performance alongside innovation.
The medtech giant centralized operations to lower costs, brought in new leaders and added performance incentives to hasten the culture shift. Capital and human resources were allocated to areas of medtech with the highest growth potential.
On Monday, CEO Geoff Martha told investors the company’s product pipeline is now well-positioned to drive improved earnings.
Medtronic's biggest businesses, which include cardiac rhythm management, spine and transcatheter heart valves, are “growing well,” the CEO said, “and then we're stacking growth drivers on top of growth drivers” in fast-developing medtech markets.
Speaking at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco, Medtronic executives outlined four categories where the company expects the highest growth from new products in the near term: cardiac ablation, renal denervation, neuromodulation and automated insulin delivery systems for diabetes management.
Scaling up PFA
Medtronic is racing against Boston Scientific to expand in one of medtech’s hottest markets, pulsed field ablation (PFA). The new technology treats atrial fibrillation, an abnormal heartbeat that can lead to blood clots and stroke.
Medtronic is adding manufacturing capacity in Galway, Ireland, to meet demand, said Sean Salmon, president of cardiovascular.
The company’s PulseSelect PFA catheter is scaling up, while the recently launched Affera dual-energy PFA and radiofrequency system with mapping technology has met with “huge enthusiasm” from physicians as the company targets high-volume electrophysiology centers, Salmon said.
Martha pegged the cardiac ablation market at $9 billion and predicted “strong double-digit growth” for Medtronic’s business in the company’s fiscal third quarter.
Johnson & Johnson, the third PFA competitor to reach the U.S. market, last week temporarily halted patient cases in the U.S. to investigate a safety concern. Touting the clinical data for both PulseSelect and Affera, Martha said, “As we've seen over the last week, safety here really matters.”
RDN gets coverage analysis
Martha called the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ decision to open a national Medicare coverage analysis for renal denervation a “pivotal development” in expanding access to the new treatment for high blood pressure.