PE Practice Purchases Tick Up

Private equity acquisitions of radiology practices ticked up in 2024 after two years of declines. A new paper in JACR sheds light on PE purchases in radiology, which have raised concerns about the corporatization of medical imaging in the U.S.

Private-sector radiology historically consisted of independent imaging practices run largely by radiologist-owners who contracted with hospitals to read imaging exams.

  • That model has begun to break down as radiology attracts investment from private equity investors eager to roll up what they see as a fragmented industry into larger companies that can leverage market power.

But what’s good for PE investors may not be good for radiologists – or for healthcare. 

  • Private equity investment in healthcare providers has raised concerns that investors may be putting profits before patients.

The new study documents the rate of private equity investment in radiology from 2013 to 2024, based on queries of the Pitchbook and CB Insights databases, finding …

  • There were 113 PE-led radiology acquisitions over the full study period (out of a total of 4.3k radiology practices in the U.S. in 2023). 
  • PE radiology acquisitions peaked at 18 in 2021, fell for the next two years, and ticked back up to 10 in 2024.
  • Most of the radiology practices being acquired employed 50-99 radiologists.
  • PE-led acquisitions were most common in the South.

So what’s to make of the numbers? A total of 113 acquisitions over 10 years isn’t that many (although the authors caution that acquisitions of multi-state or national practices and imaging chains would be counted as a single deal). 

  • And the researchers acknowledge that there’s little data on the impact of corporatization on healthcare quality, at least in radiology (although they do cite a study showing that PE ownership was associated with an 8.2% increase in radiology prices).  

The Takeaway

Private equity investment in radiology practices may still be in the early stages relative to other medical specialties, but radiologists will watch PE acquisitions closely for signs of how the trend may impact them. The new study serves as an important baseline for tracking future activity.   

Radiology’s VC Funding Boom?

Radiology venture capital funding appears to be gaining momentum in the first few weeks of 2025. This past week has seen the release of six funding rounds, led by a massive $260M Series B from preventive medicine firm Neko Health. 

Venture capital funding is a closely watched barometer for any industry built on innovation, and radiology is no exception, especially the imaging AI sector. 

  • Radiology venture capital funding got off to a particularly slow start in 2024, and by year end funding specifically for imaging AI was down 48% compared to 2023 ($335M vs. $646M according to Signify Research). This raised concerns about whether imaging startups might face a decline in VC investment – the equivalent of choking off their air supply before products in development could begin generating commercial sales. 

A CB Insights report earlier this month found that the nature of venture capital investment in digital health has indeed changed, with fewer but larger deals getting done.

  • This was widely seen as VC firms pivoting to quality, with investors demanding proof of progress in the clinical, regulatory, and commercial realms.

That brings us to the recent funding rounds …

  • Neko Health raised $260M that it will use to expand its Neko Body Scan from its current beachheads in Stockholm and London to other locations in Europe and the U.S.
  • Rad AI raised $60M in a round that follows on a $50M Series B less than a year ago as it moves to commercialize its AI-powered radiology reporting software. 
  • Quibim raised $50M in a Series A round to advance its work in imaging biomarkers through AI foundation models that analyze MRI, CT, and PET scans.
  • Annalise.ai parent Harrison.ai received $20M (USD) in funding from an Australian government investment fund to further develop its radiology and pathology AI.
  • Springbok Analytics raised $5M in a Series A round to fund its AI technology for analyzing muscle health from MRI scans.
  • Sycai Medical raised $3.1M for its AI for detecting abdominal cancers.

These six deals – combined with other recent funding rounds from Median Technologies, Core Sound, and BrainSightAI – show that January 2025 has already exceeded the five radiology venture capital deals recorded during the first four months of 2024.

The Takeaway

Do this week’s developments in radiology venture capital funding represent a boom, a boomlet, or just a string of coincidences? Whichever it is, startups would have to acknowledge that any interest from VC investors is better than the alternative.

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