Computer-Aided Detection: Bad Year, Bright Future
This article was originally published in Start Up
Executive Summary
For the manufacturers of computer-aided detection products, 2009 was not a good year. For the industry as a whole, revenues dropped 10%, according to "US Markets for Computer-Aided Diagnostic Imaging Products," a report recently issued by the Medtech Insight division of Elsevier Business Intelligence. This was largely due to the economic recession, cost pressures faced by hospitals, and a subsequent squeeze on capital equipment-related products. But for the foreseeable future, the industry is expected to grow at a compound annual rate of 11.1% to reach an estimated $185.3 million by the years 2013.
You may also be interested in...
News We’re Watching: AI Safety Partnership; Boston Scientific Recalls; New Cancer, STI Tests; VR
This week, the US and UK announced a partnership to promote AI safety. Boston Scientific recalls embolic agent. LumiCell received FDA approval for its imaging agent to detect residual cancer. Scout receives an award to develop an STI test; and Osso VR leverages the Apple Vision Pro for VR medical training.
Finance Watch: Canaan, Regeneron Reveal New Funds For Start-Ups
Private Company Edition: Regeneron launched a $500m venture fund and Canaan added $100m, bringing the venture firm’s recent total to $1bn-plus. Also, incubators plan to grow over the next decade and in recent financings Avenzo raised $150m and Nvelop launched with $100m.
Pink Sheet Podcast: Leqembi Spending, Woodcock’s Next Act, Pneumococcal Vaccine Development
Pink Sheet editors discuss Medicare spending projections for the Alzheimer’s treatment Leqembi, Janet Woodcock’s new post-FDA role, and ongoing preparations for new pneumococcal vaccines that will reach the market soon.