Top 10 medtech deals of 2024
The Johnson & Johnson logo is displayed at company offices on October 17, 2023 in Irvine, California. The company updated its IT leadership, tapping a tech chief for corporate business technology. · MedTech Dive · Mario Tama / Staff via Getty Images

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Medtech dealmaking picked up in 2024 after a post-pandemic slump, with deals ranging from multibillion-dollar takeovers to smaller tuck-in acquisitions and the shedding of business groups.

In a recent investor note, BTIG analysts wrote that 38 acquisitions had closed by Dec. 12, compared to 22 across all of 2023. The number of takeovers was still below the 48 completed in 2021, but 2024 was the second busiest year for deals since 2011, according to the analysts.

Multibillion-dollar buyouts returned last year, led by Johnson & Johnson’s $13.1 billion acquisition of Shockwave Medical, and companies continued to expand their portfolios. Artificial intelligence was a focus of some smaller deals, such as Stryker’s takeover of Care.ai and GE Healthcare’s acquisition of Intelligent Ultrasound Group’s clinical AI software business.

Here, MedTech Dive looks at the top 10 medical technology acquisitions of 2024:

1. Johnson & Johnson buys Shockwave Medical

Amount: $13.1 billion

Date closed: May 31

Buying Shockwave gave J&J devices for treating coronary and peripheral artery disease. The deal made J&J a leader in another segment of the cardiovascular market, adding growth drivers to a business that the company previously bolstered by buying Abiomed for $16.6 billion in 2022. 

J&J reported $229 million in revenue associated with the acquisition of Shockwave in the third quarter, moving the total generated by the acquired assets above $300 million. Tim Schmid, J&J’s worldwide chairman of medtech, said on the company’s earnings call in October that Shockwave “continues to perform to expectations.”

2. BD buys Edwards’ critical care group

Amount: $4.2 billion

Date closed: Sept. 3

Edwards Lifesciences’ decision to offload its critical care group enabled BD to buy the business for $4.2 billion. BD has predicted the acquired assets, which form its new advanced patient monitoring (APM) business, can grow 6% to 7% a year.

The APM business added $74 million to BD’s medical revenue in the fourth quarter of the company’s 2024 financial year, which ended in September. CEO Tom Polen said on an earnings call in November that “integration is going as expected, and the commercial teams are fully engaged in maximizing the benefits of APM for our customers.”

3. Patient Square Capital to buy Patterson Companies

Amount: $4.1 billion