February 2003
| InSight to purchase centers from Cardinals
CMI |
| InSight Health Services Corp. (Lake Forest, Calif.) in
January set in motion its plan to expand its medical imaging services in southern
California with the acquisition of Comprehensive Medical Imaging (CMI of Woodland Hills,
Calif.) from Cardinal Health Inc. (Dublin, Ohio). Cardinal purchased the CMI facilities
as part of its acquisition of Syncor International Corp. (Woodland Hills). The
Cardinal-Syncor transaction closed on Jan. 1. (See page 10.)
Terms of the agreement to purchase 13 CMI medical imaging centers were not disclosed.
InSight and Cardinal expect to complete their transaction in a series of closings from
late January through early May.
Steven T. Plochocki, InSight president and CEO, said the 13 CMI facilities in the
greater Los Angeles and southern California area will increase InSights medical
imaging centers to 25.
One of our goals is to keep building regional strength where we exist
already, Plochocki said. Now that we have a 25-center presence in this area,
we can service the geographic reach required by [managed care] groups.
InSights pending acquisitions look to be the start of more expansion activity
this year by the fixed-site and mobile medical imaging services provider.
Speaking with Medical Imaging at Decembers annual meeting of the Radiological
Society of North America (RSNA of Oak Brook, Ill.), Plochocki said that InSights new
owners have established the financial foundation on which to build.
After J.W. Childs Associates L.P. (Boston) and The Halifax Group L.L.C. (Washington,
D.C.) bought InSight in October 2001, the company raised a significant amount of money for
acquisitions.
We have a $75 million acquisition line [of credit] and were going for
another $50 million, Plochocki said. We want to use the next 12- to 18-month
period to acquire, assimilate and then, hopefully by this time next year, get a better
feel for whats going to happen with the economy.
InSights services are available in 30 states, including California and Texas, as
well as regions of the Southwest, Midwest, Northeast and Southeast United States.
We want to keep rounding out existing regions, but if we can buy a company of
significant enough size to create a new region, we would do that, too, Plochocki
added. Most of the acquisitions we are looking at today even the larger ones
would be rounding out existing regions.
InSights medical imaging services portfolio still relies heavily on MRI, which
accounts for approximately 80 percent of the companys business. CT contributes 10 to
12 percent, while positron emission tomography (PET) is the third business unit.
The percentage of MR business will probably continue to go up, Plochocki
said, as InSight looks for acquisitions that are predominantly in MR and CT.
With 103 mobile medical imaging trailers and 70 fixes sites, Plochocki estimated that
the two business segments contribute equally to company revenues.
We are into double-digit growth on a same-store basis and our mobile [business]
is growing at a more significant double-digit rate than our fixed [site business],
he added.
While many industry analysts expect PET to help provide the next boom in the medical
imaging market, InSight has taken a more conservative approach in investing in the
modality.
We have enough contacts with our 260 hospital contracts, so that when PET catches
on, we will be able to expand it rapidly within our system, Plochocki said.
The company currently operates eight mobile PET trailers and two fixed PET sites. |
| Jomed restates two years of financial results |
| A review of accounting policies resulted in Jomed N.V.
(Beringen, Switzerland) last month restating its financial results for 2001 and 2002 and
adjusting its projections for 2003. One accounting issue appears to be certain
transactions the company said were recorded on the books. The transactions were reported
as revenue in the second quarter and third quarter of 2002, but, Jomed added in a prepared
statement, were not subsequently executed.
Also on Jan. 13, Tor Peters, CEO and head of the management board of the intravascular
ultrasound (IVUS) company, resigned. Jörgen Peterson, former COO, has been named chairman
of the management board and acting CEO. Peterson joined Jomed in 2001 after serving as
sales and marketing manager at SKF Sverige A.B. (Göteborg, Sweden).
Jomed has begun a search for a new CEO.
Jomed also replaced acting CFO Willem Jansen with Vice President of Finance Lars-Johan
Cederbrant. Cederbrant has served at Jomed since July 2001, beginning in the position of
strategic project manager.
Jomeds accounting review found several sale-and-lease-agreements listed as
revenue in 2001 and 2002. One transaction for 60 IVUS systems in the United States in
December 2001 was disclosed. The internal probe also noted that Jomed processed similar
transactions for another 72 IVUS systems in 2001 in Europe.
In addition, the company said that it appears that certain transactions were
recorded that were not subsequently executed, which led to a reported revenue in Q2 and Q3
2002 that was higher than actual.
Jomed estimates that revenues will be corrected from approximately $165 million to
approximately $150 million or less. Revenues for the first three quarters of 2002 are
expected to be reduced by approximately $20 million from the original total of $140
million.
Jomed added that the restatements could result in a loss of 2002.
The companys supervisory board also hired an outside auditing firm to expand the
investigation of the accounting irregularities. The board planned to have a final report
on the auditing firms findings by the end of January. |
| Cardinal completes Syncor buy |
| The dust finally settled on Jan. 1, as Cardinal Health
Inc. (Dublin, Ohio) completed its proposed acquisition of nuclear pharmacy services
provider Syncor International Corp. (Woodland Hills, Calif.) for approximately $830
million. The path for Cardinal and Syncor took many an unexpected turn over the six
months since the deals announcement in June 2002. Most notable was Cardinals
discovery during its due diligence of allegedly illegal payments made by top Syncor
executives to foreign customers.
That revelation eventually led to the companies amending the terms of their original
acquisition proposal. The final agreement reduced the conversion rate of each outstanding
share of Syncor common stock from 0.52 to 0.47 of a Cardinal common share, with cash paid
in lieu of fractional Cardinal Health common shares.
Syncors domestic operations will be integrated with Cardinals Central
Pharmacy Services (CPSI), which will become the Nuclear Pharmacy Services business. The
unit will compound and dispense radiopharmaceuticals to approximately 8,000 customers
through an integrated network of more than 170 domestic nuclear pharmacies.
The payment probe focused on the business dealings of Syncor Chairman Monty Fu and his
brother, Moses Fu, director of the Asia region for Syncor Overseas Ltd.
In December, Syncor reached agreements with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding payments made to state-owned and
private healthcare facilities in several foreign countries.
Under its DOJ settlement, Syncor subsidiary Syncor Taiwan Inc. agreed to guilty to one
count under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and pay a $2 million fine related to
improper payments to employees of state-owned health care facilities in Taiwan.
The SEC required Syncor without admitting or denying any findings to
agree to a cease-and-desist order prohibiting further violations of the FCPA and pay a
civil penalty of $500,000 relating to certain activities of Syncors foreign
subsidiaries. |
| Kodaks Health Imaging forms new Services |
| Eastman Kodak Co.s (Rochester, N.Y.) Health
Imaging Group has created a global organization that the company says will
unify its customer service and support operations across its medical imaging
product lines. The business unit will be known simply as Services and will be based in
Genoa, Italy. The division is led by Marco Bucci, who most recently served as the general
manager of Health Imagings service organization for Europe, the Middle East, Africa
and Russia.
The Services organization will, among its duties, provide equipment service for Kodak
products, including computed radiography (CR) and digital radiography (DR) systems,
picture archiving and communications systems (PACS) and laser imagers. Services also will
provide technical support for Kodak software products and systems, including remote and
on-site support, software program updates and/or upgrades and remote application support.
Services also will feature:
- Application consulting, project management, integration services and networking services
for the seamless integration of Kodak products and systems, as well as those of other
companies;
- Asset management and financial services; and
- Training and education services, offering on-site and/or off-site courses about Kodak
systems applications and information technology, digital science and diagnostic imaging
fundamentals.
Our new Services structure enables us to leverage service capabilities and
expertise on a global basis and, concurrently, enables us to keep service teams in our
regions close to our customers, said Dan Kerpelman, president of the Health Imaging
Group and Kodak senior vice president, in a prepared statement.
As general manager of the Service organization, Bucci will have 1,700 field engineers
worldwide under his charge.
Kodaks Services organization will include John Farrell as worldwide general
manager of Growth Services and Worldwide Services Operation director. |
| Cash flow, Medicare, technology on CFOs
minds |
| Whats on the minds of top healthcare industry
executives these days? Managing cash flow pressures and changes in Medicare and Medicaid
reimbursement formulas, a need to increase capital and operating budgets, and a drive to
reduce costs.
Those issues are the top three challenges cited in a poll of 500 healthcare CFOs in the
United States, sponsored by General Electric Co. (GE of Fairfield, Conn.) and its
healthcare financial services group.
The survey findings reflect what weve seen in the marketplace, said
Rick Wolfert, president and CEO of GE Healthcare Financial Services (Stamford, Conn.), in
a prepared statement. Healthcare organizations understand the importance of managing
cash flow and capital needs in facilitating growth and remaining competitive.
Even with those issues nipping at the nations healthcare system, the survey found
that 77 percent of the polled CFOs rate the financial state of their companies as good,
very good or excellent. Twenty-eight percent report what the survey described as
significant improvements in their financial health over the past few years.
Forty-one percent of the CFOs polled cited managing changes in Medicaid and Medicare
reimbursement formulas as their greatest challenge, while 36 percent noted cash flow was
their priority. Cash flow was the most common challenge cited by 97 percent
while reimbursement formulas were a concern of 87 percent of respondents.
The degree to which these issues are affecting healthcare organizations varies by
sector, according to the report. Forty-seven percent of hospitals cited managing
reimbursement formulas as their greatest challenge, compared with 31 percent in the rest
of the healthcare sector. Conversely, only 30 percent of hospitals rated cash flow as
their most pressing issue, compared with 46 percent for the rest of the industry.
While healthcare providers have been keeping close watch on their pennies for much of
the last decade, CFOs expect budgets to expand. Over the next three years, 53 percent of
CFOs anticipate that their capital budgets for infrastructure will increase, while 84
percent expect to have more money available for operating budgets. Anticipated annual
increases are 12 percent and 8 percent, respectively.
The primary reason for fattened budgets is advancing technology and a healthcare
facilitys need to keep pace. CFOs cite necessary upgrades in new technology and
medical equipment (39 percent) and building expansion and renovation (25 percent) for
expanded budgets.
In other survey findings, capital resources continue to feel pressure from staffing
shortages. Ninety-eight percent of the organizations surveyed indicated that staffing was
an issue, while 36 percent expect rising labor costs to be the single largest contributor
to expanding operating budgets. Increases in salaries (81 percent) and advertising (80
percent) were listed as the most common solutions to the problem. |
| Philips Medical Systems comes together as one in
2003 |
| After more than a year of integrating and assimilating
its three most-recent major acquisitions, Philips Medical Systems International B.V.
(Best, Netherlands) is set to move forward in 2003. Now at the helm of Philips Medical
Systems as president and CEO is Jouko Karvinen. He joined the medical business last June,
but did not take the company reins from former president and CEO Hans Barella until this
past Oct. 1. On that day, Barella retired after serving as president and CEO for five
years.
Under Barellas watch, Philips embarked on a three-year acquisition and growth
program that transformed the Medical Systems division into $4.4 billion company.
Key acquisitions included ATL Ultrasound (Bothell, Wash.) in October 1998, ADAC
Laboratories Inc. (Milpitas, Calif.) in January 2001, Agilent Technologies Inc.s
Healthcare Solutions Group (HSG of Andover, Mass.) in August 2001 and Marconi Medical
Systems Inc. (Highland Heights, Ohio) in October 2001.
With three large acquisitions in less than 12 months, Philips spent much of its time in
2002 bringing ADAC, HSG and Marconi all under one company banner.
If you look at our strengths of all of the acquired companies, we bought
best-of-breed, Karvinen told Medical Imaging. We made a very complementary set
of acquisitions with very little overlap.
With the assimilation essentially completed, Philips in 2003 focuses on structural
integration in areas, such as its worldwide sales force, and maximizing its newly acquired
assets.
From a financial point of view, we are seeing savings now, but we have spent a
lot of money [in 2002] also, Karvinen added. [In 2003], we will start building
a future for us. We will focus on the outside.
Karvinen comes to Philips Medical Systems after serving as an executive vice president
at ABB Group (Zurich), where he headed the companys Automation Technology Products
(Zurich) division.
For eight years, Karvinen led several global businesses in ABBs automation
sector. During that time, he, among other responsibilities, helped orchestrate the
consolidation of businesses and integrate acquisitions into ABB Group.
Karvinen comes from an industry that he described as being on a very fast track,
less consolidated than the healthcare industry.
He spent the first four months of his tenure at Philips Medical Systems visiting more
than 40 hospital customers and meeting with a few thousand Philips employees. He likes to
use the term accelerating success when he speaks of his priorities.
Karvinen sees the greatest market potential in information management
particularly in clinical settings and in molecular imaging and diagnostics. Growth,
he added, will depend, in part, on companies and healthcare providers working together
more closely.
You cannot say anymore that we are going to create a solution that fits
everybody, Karvinen added. I think partnering will become more important. I
see us partnering long term with customers for their systems investments. If we try to get
too smart, people will say Thats a great solution, but that wasnt my
problem.
Although Philips Medical Systems has grown substantially in the last three years,
Karvinen said growth by acquisition remains an option.
Acquisition is one method [of growth], but I think there are a lot of
opportunities in partnering, he added. Information technology is high on my
agenda when I talk to the financial community. We will do it in a way where we can combine
partners and solve customer problems better than anyone else.
Philips Medical Systems now accounts for approximately 25 percent of Royal Philips
Electronics (Amsterdam) worldwide revenues and contributes approximately 50 percent
of Royal Philips revenues in the United States.
With its strategic plan in place and evolving, Philips Medical Systems could add to
those percentages and become an even larger force in the global medical imaging market. |
| Siemens installs prototype digital mammo system
at UCLA |
| Siemens Medical Solutions USA Inc. (Malvern, Pa.) has
installed and commenced a clinical study using the first prototype of its new flat
detector-based full-field digital mammography system at the Iris Cantor Center for Breast
Imaging at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA). The new system which
Siemens calls the Mammomat NovationDR in Europe and other countries is based on the
companys Mammomat 3000 Nova. The prototype incorporates a flat detector based on
amorphous selenium (aSe) detector technology, which enables a direct conversion of x-ray
to digital information.
The UCLA clinical study with the Mammomat NovationDR will compare the diagnostic
content and image quality of analog images and digital images taken at the same level of
radiation exposure. The detector size of 25-by-29 centimeters is designed to image most
breast sizes.
The start of the first clinical study with our new Mammomat NovationDR is an
extremely important milestone in our efforts to complete our product portfolio in digital
mammography, said Holger Schmidt, president of Siemens Special Systems
division, in a prepared statement.
Siemens anticipates the release of its Mammomat NovationDR outside of the United States
by the end of this year. The system awaits FDA clearance. |
| SourceOne completes DI-HCP merger, divides into
two segments |
| SourceOne Healthcare Technologies (Mayfield Village,
Ohio) in January completed its merger of its medical imaging distributors Diagnostic
Imaging (DI of Jacksonville, Fla.) and Health Care Products (HCP of Mayfield Village). SourceOne
also reorganized its sales force into two segments. One unit will handle capital
equipment, while the other segment will be responsible for consumable products.
SourceOne named Ron Cronin the vice president of sales for the Consumable Products unit
and Dennis Runyan as the vice president of sales for Imaging Equipment business. Cronin
most recently served as vice president of sales for DI. Runyan comes to SourceOne after
serving as vice president of sales for HCP.
SourceOne also added Alex Donofrio to the company as vice president of strategic
accounts. Donofrio most recently served as HCPs national accounts manager.
SourceOne is owned by global acquisition firm Platinum Equity LLC (Los Angeles).
Platinum purchased DI from PSS World Medical Inc. (Jacksonville) and HCP from Royal
Philips Electronics (Amsterdam) this past November. |
| Quinton buys Spacelabs Burdick for $24 million |
| Quinton Cardiology Systems Inc. (Bothell, Wash.) on
Jan. 2 completed its acquisition of Spacelabs Burdick Inc. (Deerfield, Wis.) from
Instrumentarium Oy (Helsinki) for $24 million in cash. Burdick operated as a cardiology
business subsidiary of Instrumentariums Spacelabs Medical division.
Burdick specializes in ECG cardiographs, Holter monitors and cardiology information
systems for physicians offices. Burdick has approximately 150 employees and had net
sales of approximately $38.8 million in 2001.
Quintons product portfolio includes cardiac stress testing and cardiac
rehabilitation monitoring, primarily serving the hospital market. Quinton notched sales of
$42.9 million in 2001. The company has approximately 220 employees.
Quinton and Spacelabs Medical also entered into a cooperative sales and marketing
agreement for other products.
Quinton funded the purchase with approximately $20 million in cash remaining from its
May 2002 initial public offering, plus a partial draw down on a newly created $12 million
bank credit facility.
The company added that it expects that the acquisition initially will add approximately
$32 million to $34 million to its consolidated annual revenues. Quinton also expects that
the acquisition will enhance earnings within the first year. |
| Precyse Solutions offers $14.3 million for
QuadraMeds HIM unit |
| Precyse Solutions (King of Prussia, Pa.) in December
announced an agreement to acquire the Health Information Management (HIM) Services
division (Englewood, Colo.) of QuadraMed Corp. (San Rafael, Calif.) for $14.3 million. Precyse
and QuadraMed expect to complete the transaction by the end of January.
QuadraMeds HIM Services division specializes in coding compliance and education
services, HIM consulting and interim management, compliance and regulatory services, and
HIM departmental outsourcing.
The division has contracts with more than 240 healthcare organizations, primarily in
the western part of the United States. Precyse has a market presence in 45 states,
primarily in the eastern half of the U.S. Precyse services include medical transcription,
coding, oncology data management, HIM consulting, interim management and departmental
outsourcing special projects, such as backlog processing and clerical staffing.
With the addition of the HIM Services unit, Precyse will expand to approximately 585
employees, making Precyse one of the largest outsourced HIM providers in the country. The
workforce will include more than 130 credentialed medical coders and 50 HIM professionals. |
| Executives on the move |
Alliance Imaging Inc.
(Anaheim, Calif.) has named Paul Viviano (left) as its new president and COO. Viviano most
recently served as CEO of the University of Southern California (USC) University Hospital
and the USC Norris Cancer Hospital (Los Angeles). Prior to USC, he spent 13 years with the
St. Joseph Health System (Orange, Calif.), reaching the positions of executive vice
president and COO. Viviano fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Jamie Hopping
in June 2002. Varian Medical Systems Inc.s (Palo Alto, Calif.) board of directors
has elected President and CEO Richard M. Levy to be its next chairman, effective on Feb.
14. Levy will replace Richard W. Vieser, who will retire in February. Levy will continue
as the companys president and CEO. He has served as CEO of Varian Medical Systems
since 1999.
Sonus Pharmaceuticals Inc. (Bothell, Wash.) named Michael B. Stewart, M.D., senior vice
president of clinical and regulatory affairs and chief medical officer. Stewart most
recently served for 10 years in senior management positions at Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.
(New York City), where he participated in the development, registration and post-approval
clinical programs for the cancer drug Taxol. Prior to Bristol-Myers Squibb, Stewart was a
senior investigator at the National Cancer Institute (Bethesda, Md.) and an assistant
professor of medicine and oncology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine
(Baltimore).
Image Technology Laboratories Inc. (Kingston, N.Y.) has named Don Tetrault as its
director of marketing and sales. Tetrault most recently served at Siemens Medical
Solutions (Malvern, Pa.) in the companys integrated RIS/PACS product area. Prior to
Siemens, he served as an account executive in the New England region for Per-Se
Technologies Inc. (Atlanta).
Del Global Technologies Inc. (Valhalla, N.Y.) has named Annamaria Oliva as managing
director of its Villa Sistemi Medicali S.p.A. (Milan, Italy) subsidiary and Del Medical
Systems business director for Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Oliva will lead the
development and implementation of strategies to increase sales and business performance in
Europe, Africa and the Middle East, and the development of engineering and design
strategies for the business group on a worldwide basis. Prior to joining Del, Oliva served
in a number of positions at ASIRobicon (Genoa, Italy).
Eastman Kodak Co. (Rochester, N.Y.) has promoted Michael L. Marsh to the position of
general manager of digital output in the companys Health Imaging Division. March
succeeds John Farrell, who will become worldwide general manager for growth services, a
new role in Health Imagings global services organization. Marsh will be responsible
for the development and manufacturing of Kodaks DryView laser imagers. He assumed
the new position in January. Marsh previously served as general manager of the capture
business within Kodaks Commercial Imaging Group.
Epix Medical Inc. (Cambridge, Mass.) has named Peyton Marshall, Ph.D., as senior vice
president of finance and administration and CFO. Most recently, Marshall served as CFO of
biopharmaceutical company The Medicines Co. (Parsippany, N.J.). Marshall replaces Pamela
Carey, who now will work directly with Epixs internal project teams and partners in
managing the financial activities of the companys operations.
The Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR of Fairfax, Va.) named Peter B. Lauer its
new executive director, effective Jan. 1, 2003. Lauer previously served in several
positions at the American Medical Association (AMA of Chicago), including vice
presidencies of the House of Delegates, professional relations, and memberships and
federation relations. |
| GEMS expands molecular imaging presence with two
acquisitions |
| GE Medical Systems (GEMS of Waukesha, Wis.) in December
bolstered its molecular imaging holdings with the acquisition of MicroCT imaging
technology firm Enhanced Vision Systems Ltd. (EVS of London, Ontario, Canada). EVS,
founded in 1997, specializes in MicroCT imaging systems for in vivo and in vitro studies
as a non-invasive way to evaluate the short-term and long-term impact of a new drug or
therapy. EVS estimates that MicroCT is involved in more than 200 pharmaceutical and
research studies in osteoporosis, arthritis, cancer and stroke.
GEMS said the acquisition of EVS adds state-of-the-art MicroCT imaging for pre-clinical
research applications, such as pharmaceutical drug development, to GEMS clinical
imaging technologies of MRI and positron emission tomography (PET).
Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
The EVS transaction follows GEMS announcement in December of its strategic
alliance with ART Advanced Research Technologies Inc. (ART) to develop new optical
molecular imaging applications and help market, manufacture and distribute ARTs
SoftScan breast imaging system. GEMS also will make an undisclosed minority equity
investment in ART.
The SoftScan system is designed to produce a functional image through optical imaging
technology to depict blood volumes and blood oxygenation simultaneously. ART said that
with this technology, healthcare providers could identify anomalies in a breast that could
go undetected. SoftScan also would help determine whether a tumor is malignant or benign.
ART is involved in the research, design, development and marketing of optical
technologies used in the detection of disease. |
| R2 Technology to provide CAD systems for European
study |
| The European Commission has chosen R2 Technology Inc.
(Sunnyvale, Calif.) as the exclusive computer-aided detection (CAD) technology supplier in
a seven-country study on breast cancer. The so-called SCREEN Trial (Soft-Copy REading
ENvironment) is designed to develop a soft-copy reading environment that can replace
film-based reading in screening mammography programs. Seven university hospitals in
France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Norway and Sweden will participate in the project.
R2 Technologys Image Checker CAD system will be the
exclusive device for the SCREEN trial.
Nico Karssemeijer, Ph.D., in the department of radiology at the University Medical
Center (Nijmegen, Netherlands) and principal investigator and co-director of the SCREEN
Trial, said the lack of an adequate soft-copy review environment is a major technological
obstacle hindering the transition from film-based to digital mammography screening
programs.
R2 developed and markets the ImageChecker CAD system, which assists radiologists in the
detection of breast cancer in the review of mammograms. R2 will provide the ability for
sites to digitize prior mammograms and convert them to DICOM images.
Suspicious areas of an imaged breast will be captured and archived to a test version of
the softcopy reading software system from MeVis BreastCare GmbH&Co. KG (Bremen,
Germany) an affiliate of Siemens AG (Munich) through a DICOM standard.
The trial is designed to demonstrate the medical, technical and economic feasibility of
soft-copy reading with digital mammograms during screening. The seven facilities will
provide technological and scientific guidance to other facilities to help in the
transition process from film-based mammography to digital mammography with soft-copy
reading.
Participating sites include the University of Northern Norway (Tromso, Norway),
Preventicon (Utrecht, Netherlands) and Bremen Breast Cancer Screening Program (Bremen,
Germany).
Several full-field digital mammography and computed radiography (CR) systems will be
used in the trail. The digital systems will come from Siemens Medical Solutions (Erlangen,
Germany), Hologic Inc. (Bedford, Mass.), Fujifilm Medical Systems Inc. (Tokyo) and GE
Medical Systems (Waukesha, Wis.). |
| NewBridge Capital buys assets of BodyScan Imaging
and affiliates |
| NewBridge Capital Inc. (Newport Beach, Calif.) has
taken another step in its proposed acquisition of BodyScan Imaging LLC (Irvine, Calif.),
Cardiac Imaging LLC (Irvine) and the diagnostic management of BodyScans affiliate
business, Imaging Center Management LLC (Irvine). BodyScan companies own, operate and
are developing medical imaging centers using electron beam tomography (EBT) scanners from
GE Medical Systems (GEMS of Waukesha, Wis.).
BodyScan has imaging centers located in Kansas City, Mo.; Scottsdale, Ariz.; Las Vegas,
Nev.; Tampa, Fla.; San Antonio, Texas; and Philadelphia.
The companies plan to have one or more BodyScan Imaging Centers in at least 40 major
metropolitan areas by the first quarter of 2004 and are pursuing other acquisitions of
imaging centers and imaging technology. |
| Analogics Camtronics buys software firm VMI
Medical |
| In the month of November, Analogic Corp. (Peabody,
Mass.) expanded through its Camtronics Medical Systems Ltd. (Hartland, Wis.) subsidiary. Camtronics
acquired VMI Medical Inc. (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada), a medical information software
company specializing in clinical database, workflow automation and business improvement
products for childrens heart centers. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
Camtronics which develops and markets cardiovascular image and information
management technology plans to integrate VMIs technology with its Vericis for
Cardiology Image and Information Management system.
Camtronics will market the combined product to both pediatric and adult cardiology
departments.
VMI Medical was founded in 1996 to develop products for the detection, evaluation,
treatment and ongoing assessment of congenital and acquired heart disease in fetal,
neonatal, pediatric and adolescent care settings.
VMI Medical will remain at its Ottawa headquarters. |
| MedAssets HSCA expands GPO business into Florida |
| MedAssets HSCA (Cape Girardeau, Mo.) is bolstering its
group purchasing organization (GPO) business with its acquisition of Radiology Partners
Inc. (RPI of Tampa, Fla.). RPI will become a division of MedAssets HSCAs GPO
segment. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
MedAssets HSCA sees the RPI acquisition as a way to strengthen its presence in the
imaging and radiology care segment by adding RPIs non-acute care membership and
bolster MedAssets HSCAs medical imaging and radiology portfolio.
RPI has more than 1,800 members and specializes entirely in radiology and non-acute
care imaging centers. Among the products available from RPI are medical imaging film from
Eastman Kodak Co. (Rochester, N.Y.) and contrast imaging agents from Bracco Diagnostics
Inc. (Princeton, N.J.) and Bristol-Myers Squibb Medical Imaging Inc. (North Billerica,
Mass.). Also on the supply list are x-ray tubes, MRI surface coils, as well as products
from GE Medical Systems (Waukesha, Wis.) and Hologic Inc. (Bedford, Mass.).
Tonia Kraus, formerly RPI vice president, has been appointed as director and general
manager of RPI.
MedAssets HSCA serves more than 16,000 healthcare providers nationwide. |
| Financial Pulse |
The boom in positron emission
tomography (PET) imaging procedures is expected to have a positive effect on Alliance
Imaging Inc. (Anaheim, Calif.) this year.The medical imaging services providers
revenues from PET scans increased from $1.2 million in 2000 to $10.5 million in 2001. The
company expects to announce PET revenues of approximately $30 million for 2002 in its
year-end financial report.
Obviously, our outlook on PET continues to be very bullish, Chairman and
CEO Richard Zehner told analysts in December. We anticipate PET revenues to exceed
$50 million in 2003.
Alliance Imaging had approximately 30 PET systems in operation at the end of 2002,
about a half dozen more units than the company projected in late 2001. Alliance Imaging
plans to purchase an additional 10 to 15 PET units in 2003. While PET remains less than 10
percent of Alliance Imagings total revenues, the medical imaging modality has
surpassed CT in terms of the companys business.
Zehner said the company expects PET reimbursement and pricing in general to stay
steady for the next 12 months or so.
In its update to analysts, Alliance Imaging anticipated revenues between $412 million
and $413 million for 2002. The company also projected revenues between $440 million and
$450 million this year. Approximately 80 percent of Alliance Imagings business comes
from its mobile operations, with the remainder derived from fixed sites.
Compiled and analyzed by Health Care Markets Inc. (Hilton Head, S.C.), the stock
indices above plot the performance of two market segments: Imaging Devices and Imaging
Services. The indices are part of WDIs healthcare database of more than 1,000
companies. For comparison we also plot the progress of the S&P 500. The indices began
in January 1991 with a base of 100. |
| Financial Watch |
| Planar Systems Inc.s (Beaverton, Ore.) FY03 is
off to a fine start with gains in sales and earnings in the first fiscal quarter, ending
Dec. 27, 2002. Sales increased 39 percent to $56.7 million, compared with $40.8 million in
the first quarter of FY02. Net income rose to $2.7 million, up from $2.4 million in the
year-ago quarter. In the companys medical segment, first-quarter revenues climbed to
$23.2 million, up more than 63 percent over the year-ago quarter, but down 7 percent from
the fourth quarter of FY02. Planar credited its acquisition last year of Dome Imaging Inc.
for the year-to-year growth in its medical monitor business. Planar also projected sales
of approximately $230 million in FY03, compared with $205.9 million in FY02. E-Z-Em Inc.
(Lake Success, N.Y.) credits increased sales of its radiology imaging products for the CT
market for growth and a profit in the companys second fiscal quarter of FY03, ending
Nov. 30, 2002. Net sales climbed to $32.9 million, compared with $30.6 million in the
second quarter of FY02. E-Z-Em also posted net income of $988,000, compared with a net
loss of $1.2 million in the year-ago quarter. For the six-month period, net sales rose to
$63.2 million, up from $58.3 million in the same period of FY02. Net income totaled
$247,000, compared with a net loss of $1.3 million in the year-ago period. The net loss in
FY02 was due primarily to a restructuring charge of $1.5 million from the December 2001
closure of E-Z-Ems liquid contrast manufacturing facility in Japan.
Reductions in its marketing and development activities helped Magna-Lab Inc. (Syosset,
N.Y.) decrease its net loss in the companys third fiscal quarter, ending Nov. 30,
2002. The net loss declined to $803,000, compared with a net loss of $1.4 million in the
year-ago quarter. The third-quarter FY03 net loss includes a one-time non-cash charge of
approximately $228,000 in connection with the closing of the companys Lynnfield,
Mass. executive offices. For the nine-month period, Magna-Labs net loss totaled $3
million, compared with a net loss of $3.1 million in the same period of FY02. The company
reported no revenues. Magna-Lab is developing the Illuminator Probe, a transesophageal
receiving coil designed to operate with an MRI system to produce high-resolution MR images
of the aortic arch, descending aorta and coronary vessels of the heart.
RIS and PACS provider Image Technology Laboratories Inc. (ITL of Kingston, N.Y.) posted
revenues of $143,000 in the quarter ending Sept. 30, 2002. In addition, ITL recorded net
deferred revenue of $128,000 for fiscal year 2002. ITL also noted that it has contracts
for three installations in various stages of negotiations. The company said
that it expects at least one installation will occur in the first quarter of 2003.
General Electric Co. (Stamford, Conn.) on Jan. 14 commenced its tender offer for shares
of Instrumentarium Corp. (Helsinki) for approximately $2 billion, or approximately $41 per
share. The tender offer initially will expire on April 11. In the United States,
Instrumentarium trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol INMRY. The companies expect
to complete the transaction after shareholder and regulatory approvals and other customary
conditions are met. Instrumentarium which specializes in anesthesiology, critical
care, monitors and mammography products would become part of GE Medical Systems
(GEMS of Waukesha, Wis.).
Intermagnetics General Corp. (Latham, N.Y.) is crediting cost controls for a 15 percent
gain in net operating profit performance in the companys second fiscal quarter of
FY03, ending Nov. 24, 2002. In the quarter, net sales slipped to $36.7 million, compared
with $39 million in the second quarter of FY02. Year-ago quarterly revenues included
approximately $4 million in sales from businesses that were divested in FY02.
Second-quarter net income decreased to $2.7 million, compared with $10.4 million in the
year-ago quarter. For the six-month period, net sales declined to $71.8 million, compared
with $79.1 million in the same period of FY02. Year-ago revenues include approximately $9
million in sales from businesses that were divested in FY02. Net income totaled $6.3
million, compared with $14 million in the year-ago period. Second-quarter net income was
hampered by a one-time, non-cash charge in connection with the sale of the companys
remaining common stock in Ultralife Batteries Inc. (Newark, N.Y.), offset by a gain from
the favorable settlement of litigation, for a net charge of approximately $1 million. MRI
segment sales increased in the second quarter to $31.3 million, compared with $29.7
million in the year-ago quarter for ongoing operations.
Relying on its core electrocardiogram (ECG) business, CompuMed Inc. (Los Angeles)
reported slightly higher revenues in its FY02, ending Sept. 30. Revenues increased to
$1.96 million, compared with $1.93 million in FY01. The companys net loss improved
to $494,000, compared with a net loss of $897,000 in the previous fiscal year. The bulk of
CompuMeds revenues came from its electrocardiogram (ECG) core products, supplies and
services, which totaled $1.7 million in FY02. |
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