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Medical Devices 101

Medical Devices 101. September 29, 2013. Healthcare Landscape. Regulatory. Uncertainty. Industry. Industry Snapshot. Highly complex, heavily regulated industry Customers include physicians and hospitals Large, often untapped markets Innovation achieved in relatively frequent increments

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Medical Devices 101

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  1. Medical Devices 101 September 29, 2013

  2. Healthcare Landscape Regulatory Uncertainty Industry

  3. Industry Snapshot • Highly complex, heavily regulated industry • Customers include physicians and hospitals • Large, often untapped markets • Innovation achieved in relatively frequent increments • 2013 excise tax to have significant affect, e.g., lay-offs and restructuring • Global opportunity is growing

  4. Medical Device Sector Growth • Outperforms S&P 500 • Nearly 40% of revenue comes from outside US markets Source: Frost & Sullivan

  5. Two Regulatory Pathways for Device Approval • R&D can vary from 6% to 15% of sales • Clinical trials can last 6 months to 3 years • Patient enrollment ranges from 100s to 1000s • Clinical trials conducted by independent physicians • Trials can be used post launch to increase number of patients with indications

  6. Stakeholders • Patients • Quality of care • Less trauma / Shorter recovery • Access to care • Peace of mind • Quality of life • Providers (Customers) • Clinical efficacy • Rigorously proven technologies • Treatment options / Compliance • Ease of care • Practice management / Productivity • Regulators • Patient safety • Supervision of manufacturers • Product mandates • Recalls and warnings • Assist and execute legislation • Payers • Economic feasibility / Lower costs • Macro-level care / Treatment options • Social responsibility • Public (CMS) or private (Insurance) • Influence public policy

  7. Countries That Make Up Core Device Market Share U.S. is the core market of the medical device industry, >50% in nearly every case. OUS is dominated by Europe, Japan, Canada and Australia/New Zealand. China and India are rapidly emerging; payment economics and infrastructure will dictate growth.

  8. Medical Devices vs. Pharma/Biotech Differences Similarities • Incremental technologies mean a faster development cycle: 1-3 years vs. 7-10 years • Many segments are volatile – technology “leapfrogging” • Engineering not chemistry/ biology (changing) • Sales model: More partner, less sales (CRM exception); device reps more often have healthcare background, higher compensated/more power • Reimbursement: Many cases by procedure and not by item • Lower market penetration • Marketing: Less DTC (Ortho, CRM, IC); Device companies have looser restrictions in US, but likely to change • Margins: devices (generally) less • Heavily regulated • Risk of litigation • High margins • Large R&D spend: High barriers to entry (money and experience) • Large sales force • High budget deficits could impact spending: Significant exposure to government trends • Global applicability • Need to demonstrate clinical efficacy • Customers • Reimbursement: bundling an increasing trend

  9. Therapeutic Areas

  10. Breakdown of Devices by Therapeutic Area

  11. Spinal/Orthopedics • Spinal, joint and bone and soft tissue applications • Degenerative or trauma related • Alloys, ceramics, biomaterials – can be manipulated • Load bearing, resisting corrosion and abrasion

  12. Cardiovascular • Cardiac Rhythm Management • “Electrical” – sudden cardiac death • The most complex implanted devices • Interventional Cardiology • “Plumbing” – the pipes are clogged with plaque • Stents inserted in coronary arteries to open blockage/ensure blood flow • Peripheral Cardiology • Open arteries and veins away from the heart (carotid) • Stop clots from reaching vital organs (stroke or infarction)

  13. Infusion Systems • Designed for delivery of fluid into the body • Address pain management, chemotherapy, nutrition • Stationary or ambulatory

  14. Additional Segments • Electrical impulses to alter the nervous system (brain, spine or peripherally) Oncology Neuromodulation Urology Heart Valves • Enable release, restore function • Replace calcified valves, improving heart’s ability to seal, restoring pumping capability • Include implantable ports for administering chemotherapy treatment and tools for specimen testing

  15. Medical Device Market Growth, 2013-2030

  16. Medical Devices 101 Industry Trends

  17. Top Five Growth Sectors

  18. Top Five Technology Trends

  19. Trends in Technology Convergence

  20. Looking Ahead

  21. MBA Opportunities

  22. Medical Device Recruiting at Ross

  23. Appendix

  24. 2013 Medical Device Excise Tax (1 of 2) What is the medical device excise tax? Section 4191 of the Internal Revenue Code imposes an excise tax on the sale of certain medical devices by the manufacturer or importer of the device. When does the tax go into effect? The tax applies to sales of taxable medical devices after Dec. 31, 2012. How much is the tax? The tax is 2.3 percent of the sale price of the taxable medical device.  Who is responsible for reporting and paying the medical device excise tax? Generally, the manufacturer or importer of a taxable medical device is responsible for filing Form 720, Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return, and paying the tax to the IRS. Will individual consumers be subject to any reporting or recordkeeping requirements? Generally, no action is required by individual consumers. Because the tax is imposed upon the sale of a taxable medical device by the manufacturer or importer, the manufacturer or importer is responsible for reporting and paying the tax. Who is the manufacturer for purposes of the medical device excise tax? Generally, with regard to the medical device excise tax, the manufacturer is the person who produces a taxable medical device from scrap, salvage or junk material, or from new or raw material, by processing, manipulating or changing the form of a device or by combining or assembling two or more devices. 

  25. 2013 Medical Device Excise Tax (2 of 2) Who is the importer for purposes of the medical device excise tax? Generally, with regard to the medical device excise tax, the importer of a taxable medical device is the person who brings the device into the United States from a source outside the United States, or withdraws the device from a customs-bonded warehouse for sale or use in the United States. What is a taxable medical device? In general, a taxable medical device is a device that is listed as a device with the Food and Drug Administration under section 510(j) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and 21 CFR part 807, unless the device falls within an exemption from the tax, such as the retail exemption.  Are there any exemptions to the medical device excise tax? Yes. There are specific statutory exemptions for eyeglasses, contact lenses, and hearing aids. There is also an exemption for other devices that are of a type that are generally purchased by the general public at retail for individual use (the retail exemption). How does a manufacturer determine if a particular type of device qualifies for the retail exemption? The regulations provide a facts and circumstances approach to determine whether a type of device meets the retail exemption. The regulations enumerate several factors that are relevant, but there may be relevant factors in addition to those enumerated in the regulations. The determination is based on the overall balance of factors relevant to a particular type of device. No one factor is determinative. See § 48.4191-2(b)(2) of the regulations for more information about the retail exemption. The regulations also provide a safe harbor for certain devices that will be considered to be of a type that falls within the retail exemption. See Q&A 18.

  26. Top Companies to Watch

  27. CEO’s Perspective

  28. Treatment Spectrum

  29. Opportunity Spectrum

  30. Opportunity Map

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