J&J’s Aldo Denti on digital technology in orthopedics

Johnson & Johnson’s orthopedics unit is undergoing several changes as it looks to enter high-growth markets. Last year, J&J announced the unit would exit less profitable markets and product lines. The company is also looking to expand its surgical robot, Velys, which received FDA clearance in 2021 for total knee procedures and a CE mark in 2023. 

Last year, the orthopedics unit reported sales of $8.94 billion, roughly a 5% increase year over year.

Aldo Denti, chairman of DePuy Synthes, spoke with MedTech Dive about the company’s strategic priorities, and the role of technology as more procedures move to ambulatory surgery centers. 

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. 

MEDTECH DIVE: How are you thinking about orthopedics over the next five years? 

ALDO DENTI: I’ve watched the progression of this industry over the last 30 years, and I’ve been the beneficiary of seeing all of the different trends develop. There’s not a time before this, that I can remember, that has been as exciting as the time that we’re in now. 

That’s for a number of different reasons related to just the technological evolution that we face as a company and as an industry. You think of things like digital enablement. We think of the site of care shifts that we’re observing in the United States and elsewhere. We think about the advent of being able to better utilize materials and biomaterials to help patients. We truly are at a real fork in the road with regard to innovation, where we see a deviation from being core implant companies and migrating ourselves all to being what I’d like to call medtech companies.

What’s driving the shift in procedures to outpatient settings? 

In our orthopedics business, we are increasingly seeing lots of different procedures migrating to what we call an ASC or ambulatory surgical setting. That’s a trend that we see accelerating.

We fully expect that in the next five years, upwards of 50% of all total joint reconstruction cases could be done in an ASC. That would be hips, knees and shoulders, to be specific.

There’s been recent news that shoulders now can migrate towards that setting as well. And that’s an exciting prospect for us.

It’s not just a U.S. phenomenon. We’re starting to see other countries pay attention to this, like Canada, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and Australia. And the reason this is important is because the volume trend is related to this.

In the United States, the [COVID-19 pandemic procedure] backlog, it’s certainly still there, but the difference between the U.S. and outside the United States is that we have an efficiency play in the channel setting, which means that you’re starting to see those volumes go through a more efficient channel.

Outside the United States, the backlog is still there because the setting is rather inefficient. As those countries evolve their setting, we will see a more efficient play and we should see those backlogs come down. 

What types of procedures are moving to ASCs? 

I think the trend in the United States started with ophthalmics. Related to orthopedics, what we’re seeing is sports went there first. A very large proportion of sports procedures, ACLs in particular, migrated towards the ASC setting first. And then we started to see other things follow, like elective foot and ankle, lapidus procedures [or bunion procedures], hammertoes. More recently, we’ve seen more complicated cases, hips and knees and now shoulders also going there. 

Those are the predominant areas that we see right now. That’s not to say that in the not too distant future, we couldn’t see simple fractures, like fractures in the fingers and hands go there as well. But that’s a little different because you have to go to an emergency center first. It’s more the elective cases that are going there, and the ones that are less complicated where we have a proven track record that patients can benefit from the site of care. 

How are you thinking about robotics in the context of orthopedics? 

When you think about the opportunity that lies in front of us, we fully expect that robotically-enhanced knees will be the way business is done in the future. Not everywhere, but in the United States, we certainly see it having migrated towards that.