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Medical
Devices vs Pharma
An
investing strategy
Pharma
is the powerful subsector, and medical devices/technology
its smaller sibling within the huge healthcare industry.
They are different enough that the two subsectors often
move in opposing directions, enabling investors to stay
diversified within the booming healthcare by shifting in
and out of the two subsectors at appropriate times.
In
a number of treatment areas, one sector can take away market
share from the other. Take the huge heart disease market.
While surgical interventions have become increasingly minimally
invasive, pharmacological interventions, including thrombolytics,
fibrinolytics, beta blockers, statins and anti-platelet
treatments are covering a wider spectrum of acute coronary
syndromes, sometimes eliminating the need for surgery.
In evaluating the potential
of the two sectors, it must be said that there is nothing
quite like getting in early on a blockbuster drug and riding
it to new highs. In the meantime, smart pharma investors
stay on the lookout for news about clinical trials that
result in new indications for a drug, or that show a reduction
in mortality, side effects, etc. Modifications in a drug
that expand target populations are also good. Often these
kinds of developments show up on TV commercials. Currently,
through a spate of commercials you can witness the battle
unfold over new indications for insomnia treatments, as
drug companies address the huge and growing problem of sleeplessness
in America.
But on the whole, right now
pharma is in a bit of a funk, hoping for new blockbusters,
while medical devices/technology is more exciting, especially
minimally invasive technologies. Substantial acceleration
in FDA approval timelines since the passage of the 1997
Modernization Act, has helped the medical device industry.
As the competition among broad-based
medical technical companies, like Medtech, Boston Scientific
J&J and others has grown more intense, they are increasingly
looking to acquire small companies with promising technologies.
This has spurred a great deal of entrepreneurial growth.
Is there such a thing as a blockbuster medical device? Except
for drug-eluting stents, probably not, when you compare
devices to top pharmaceutical winners. But medical technology
is addressing some huge markets, with big profit potential.
Take back pain. It's the scourge
of millions with a market of over $60 billion annually.
Artificial disc technology is rapidly coming up with advances
to treat chronic back cases. Carotid stenting, which was
approved last year, is less invasive than surgery and sales
of carotid stents are anticipated to grow to $1 billion
within the decade-from less than $100 million today. And
the annual growth rate of computer aided surgery rate is
expected to increase from 10% in 2005 to more than 20% in
2009.
Aging
baby boomers will aid the medical device boom. Age-related
ailments combined with medicare eligibility will expand
the use of pacemakers, defibrillators, stents, orthopedic
implants and cochlear implants.
Medical devices/technology
and pharmaceuticals provide a good way to diversify within
healthcare, though you must stay current on developments
in both fields. Of course, if you're really looking for
growth you might turn to an even smaller healthcare/biotech
sibling- diagnostics. With approval power over payments,
healthcare providers, in essence, control the money, and
thus wield enormous influence over which treatments grow
share. Increasingly, healthcare providers are looking at
preventative measures to stave off the huge expense of treating
full-blown diseases. And how do you prevent diseases? Early
diagnosis. But more on that in another article.
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