Disruptive Technologies in surgical robotics to shake up the market competitive landscape
TransEnterix, Inc., a medical device company that is pioneering in the design of surgical robots, announced last month that it has received an update from the US FDA on the status of its 510(k) filing for the SurgiBot™ System. FDA communicated to the company that it has not yet decided on the status of the 510(k) submission and the company now expects a favorable decision by end of April. The U.S. based device manufacturer was expecting a decision from the federal regulator in the Q1 of this year. Getting a nod from the regulator would make SurgiBot the second such device approved to perform general surgery on patients across U.S. The communications with FDA have been approval and as market analysts contend the innovative device will be approved with minor variations. The U.S. startup is one among many companies–the products and technology of whose–are destined to shake-up robot-assisted surgery in healthcare industry. The company is the only robotics developer that have two robotic designs being ready for surgical applications.
For around two decades, Intuitive Surgical has asserted its domination in the surgical robotics market with the launch of da Vinci system in 1999; many disruptive surgical robotics technologies have recently come to the market that will challenge this hegemony. The single-port Surgibot system is superior to “da Vinci system” in many ways: it allows surgeons to be in the sterile field rather than just able to monitor the patient sitting behind a console, along with an array of a unique combination of reusable and disposable instruments.
However, the startup is faced with a major constraining factor–limited resources. Soon it will need another large cash infusion to fund its operations; the Company lost about $47 million last year and had about $47 million in cash as declared in February. The surgical robot was designed and developed in Italy, and acquired by the device maker in 2015 for about $100 million; it is already available for commercial sale across Europe.
Other similar robotics projects by the company have kept speculation rife that TransEnterix will be acquired by some large company that wants to make foray into surgical robots market. Its stock has soared nearly 75 % over several days after Johnson & Johnson revealed its intention to this end. The American multinational medical devices manufacturer, last year, has announced that it would form a collaboration with Verily to create Verb Surgical, a California-based technology firm that wants create the future of surgery with the power of machine learning, advanced imaging and robotic-assisted surgery. In fact, last month, Google and the pharmaceutical company has recently announced a partnership between Google’s life sciences division and Ethicon that is actively involved in making surgical robots. However, the details of the announcements are yet to be made public; these developments will help to design disruptive technologies in surgical robots.
Surgical robots are gaining traction across healthcare industry in U.S. and Europe; these systems help in conducting minimal invasive surgery and are expected to significantly boost overall surgical outcomes. The startup is at the forefront of developing numerous procedures in the next few years with its high-end surgical robotic systems. Insights into disruptive technologies that will shape up the competitive landscape and current and emerging trends are extensively covered in a recent report added by Big Market Research titled “World Surgical Robotics Market – Opportunities and Forecast, 2014 – 2020”. As per the report, the market is estimated to garner $6.4 billion by 2020, globally, registering a CAGR of 10.2% along the forecast period.
Source: http://www.bigmarketresearch.com/surgical-robotics-market