
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) subsidiary DePuy Synthes Spine said it’s expanding its collaboration with Brainlab on surgical navigation and imaging devices, in addition to co-marketing Brainlab’s Airo Mobile Intraoperative CT.
The expansion of the year-old partnership, announced at the 28th annual North American Spine Society meeting, comes as the 2 companies announced navigation-ready instrumentation for its Viper 2 and Expedium spine systems, based through Brainlab navigation systems, in addition to the Airo Mobile. The navigation systems continuously track surgical instruments in relations to patient anatomy, making procedure less invasive.
“The broader collaboration between DePuy Synthes Spine and Brainlab will enable us to provide a seamlessly integrated solution of implants, instrumentation and navigation systems that have the potential to improve patient outcomes, inform decision making during surgery, increase efficiency of spinal procedures and reduce or time,” DePuy Synthes Spine president Max Reinhardt said in prepared remarks.