Top 10 Orthopedic Device Firms

The 2019 Top 10 Global Orthopedic Device Firms

The 2019 Top 10 Global Orthopedic Device Firms

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Though 2018 featured no megamergers, the orthopedic industry wasn’t quiet. After investing heavily in Israeli robotic spine surgery firm Mazor Robotics, Medtronic bought the firm for $1.7 billion. Stryker nabbed complex spine company K2M for $1.4 billion to bolster its struggling spine business and continued its tried and true tuck-in strategy by grabbing six other companies throughout the year. Wright also purchased Synthetic Cartilage Implant maker Cartiva for $435 million while Smith & Nephew added the NovoStitch Pro complex meniscal tear repair device to its arsenal last December with its $105 buy of Ceterix Orthopaedics.

Robotic and computer-assisted surgical solutions continued to thrive. Thanks to Mazor, Medtronic can attempt to build a fully-integrated procedural solution for spine surgery planning, execution, and confirmation. DePuy Synthes underscored its commitment to robotics by acquiring Orthotaxy, whose small, portable robotic system notably doesn’t require CT scans or special technicians. Globus fortified its ExcelsiusGPS computer-assisted surgery system by purchasing the Surgimap software platform, which helps plan and simulate outcomes while treating complex spinal deformities through a cloud-based infrastructure with predictive algorithms and visual guides. In a similar vein, NuVasive gained an FDA nod for its Pulse automation platform for spine surgery, which combines 2D and 3D navigation and smart imaging, neuromonitoring, surgical planning, radiation reduction, and patient-specific rod bending technologies.

Some of the Top 10 experienced the FDA’s wrath last year. The agency slapped Zimmer Biomet with a warning letter last August over quality control issues in the company’s Warsaw facility. Globus subsidiary Human Biologics of Texas, which makes the firm’s ViaCell allograft, also came under fire last Halloween for failures to document and investigate production deviations.

We hope you enjoy reading this year’s Top 10 report.

Editors’ note: As you read our report, please take note that while the companies are ranked according to sales reported for their most recent fiscal year, some may include non-device sales within a division, such as combination products, drug delivery, software, or device-related services. Not all companies explicitly break out the device portion of total revenues. We consulted numerous public documents and contacted company officials as needed to arrive at the best estimates. 

TOP ORTHOPEDIC DEVICE FIRMS
1. Stryker $13.60B
2. DePuy Synthes $8.88B
3. Zimmer Biomet $7.93B
4. Smith & Nephew $4.90B
5. Medtronic Spine $2.65B
6. NuVasive $1.10B
7. Wright Medical $836M
8. Globus Medical $713M
9. Össur $613M
10. Integra LifeSciences $509M

Top 10 Orthopedic Device Firms

RANK COMPANY LOCATION SALES
1
Stryker
Portage, Michigan $13.6 Billion
2
Johnson & Johnson MedTech
1302 Wrights Lane East West Chester, PA 19380 $8.9 Billion
3
Zimmer Biomet
345 East Main Street P.O. Box 708 Warsaw, Indiana 46580 US $7.9 Billion
4
Smith+Nephew
5 Hatters Lane Watford, Hertfordshire WD18 8YE GB $4.9 Billion
5
Medtronic
Principal executive suite Building 2 Parkmore Business Park West Galway, Ireland $2.7 Billion
6
NuVasive
7475 Lusk Blvd San Diego, CA 92121 US $1.1 Billion
7
Wright Medical
1023 Cherry Rd Memphis, TN 38117 US $836 Million
8
Globus Medical
Valley Forge Business Center 2560 General Armistead Ave. Audubon, PA 19403 US $713 Million
9
Embla Medical
Grjothals 5 Reykjavik, Iceland 110 IS $613 Million
10
Integra LifeSciences
1100 Campus Road Princeton, New Jersey 08540 US $509 Million