Roche Diagnostics Corp. is expanding one of its Indianapolis manufacturing plants to keep up with growing sales of its leading brand of blood glucose monitors.
The Swiss-based company, which runs its
North American operations out of Indianapolis, is spending $37 million
to build out
a nearly 30,000-square-foot wing of its
plant that makes the test strips used in its monitors.
The project, expected to be complete at
year’s end, will add 50 to 60 jobs to Roche’s local operations. With
nearly 3,000 workers in Indianapolis and
Fishers, Roche is the 20th-largest employer in Indiana.
Even though Roche’s diabetes care
division has struggled in the United States recently, globally it is
enjoying double-digit
growth in demand for its Accu-Chek Aviva
meter, which is sold under the name Performa in many international
markets.
Patients using the meters place a drop of blood on a 1.5-inch strip of paper covered with a thin gold electrode
and coated with chemicals, which test the level of sugar in a patient’s blood.
All the strips used in Aviva meters are
made in one of two plants: one in Ponce, Puerto Rico, and the other in
Indianapolis—just
off Interstate 69 along Hague Road. The
Aviva meters themselves are made in Alabama.
The Puerto Rico plant will max out its
capacity in a couple of months. So Roche workers are busy installing
equipment in
a vacant wing of the Indianapolis plant to
keep up with the growth.
The expansion is expected to boost
capacity here by two-thirds, from about 1.8 billion strips a year to
roughly 3 billion.
Production volumes in Indianapolis have
grown nearly 44 percent in the past three years, and Roche expects
another 30-percent
boost over the next three to four years.
The plant currently employs 120 production workers.
“We’ve been investing more on the
single-strip platforms, Performa and Aviva,” said Brian Heald, vice
president
of manufacturing operations for Roche
Diagnostics’ Indianapolis headquarters. “We’ve realized significant
growth in that platform on a global
basis.”
Roche is riding a rising tide of diabetes
around the world. The International Diabetes Federation expects the
number of people
suffering from the chronic illness to leap
from 285 million last year to nearly 440 million two decades from now.
Much of that is due to aging populations
in developed countries like the United States and Japan. But at the same
time, economic
growth in Asia has created a huge middle
class with the incomes to eat like Westerners—and to pay for the medical
conditions
those Western diets induce.
Roche does not break out how its diabetes
products are selling in individual countries. But its overall
diagnostic sales
last year jumped in Asia 20 percent and in
Latin America 16 percent.
“Self-monitoring is fast catching up in
developing countries,” reads a January report on diabetes diagnostics
from Global Industry Analysts, a
California-based research firm. “In these markets, diabetes-screening
programs are
likely to drive increase in patient
awareness.”
Indeed, Roche is promoting patient
education in emerging markets as a way to boost sales and use of its
products.
Roche claims an industry-leading 31
percent share of the global market, according to data compiled by Close
Concerns Inc.,
a San Francisco-based diabetes market
research firm. Its blood glucose monitors racked up sales of $2.6
billion last year.
Roche is one of four major players in the
$8.5 billion industry, along with Illinois-based Abbott Laboratories;
Germany-based
Bayer Corp.; and LifeScan, a unit of New
Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson.
Roche’s brand is strong in its home
territory of Europe. But in other mature markets—the United States and
Japan—Roche’s
diabetes franchise has struggled mightily.
Sales of its diabetes products fell 2 percent in the United States last
year to
$680 million.
Those totals include sales of Roche’s
insulin pumps, which add $25 million a year to its total, according to
2009 estimates
from Close Concerns. Roche’s U.S. insulin
pump business is operated out of Fishers, just up the road from the
Indianapolis
campus.
“They’ve made several, several mistakes,”
said David Kliff, a former portfolio manager who now writes an
industry newsletter called The Diabetic Investor. As Kliff sees it, Roche was slow to adapt when U.S. health insurers
and retailers started demanding lower-priced products, and lost market share as a result.
In addition, Roche tangled with the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration over an enzyme it uses in its test strips,
which has
so far prevented Roche from introducing
its newest products into the U.S. market.
“Now, they’re in serious danger of becoming a bit player here in the United States,” Kliff said.
In part, Roche’s expansion in
Indianapolis is merely part of its natural product cycles. The plant
space in Indianapolis
was, up until 2009, used to make Roche’s
older Comfort Curve strips, which will over a period of years be phased
out.
But Roche consolidated production of the
Comfort Curve strips in Puerto Rico to gain efficiencies of scale. That
freed up
the space in the Indianapolis plant, which
is now being filled as Roche grows Aviva to replace its older models of
glucose
monitors.
But even with the growth, Kliff noted,
pricing pressures from U.S. health insurers and government health
agencies around
the world have crimped profit margins on
blood glucose meters.
Roche has done well with the Aviva meter,
but it’s one of Roche’s lower-margin meters, Kliff said. An Accu-Check
Aviva kit, including 10 test strips, can
be had for $15-$20 at retail stores. Strips cost about $1 apiece, coming
in bundles
of 50 and 100.
“With the increased emphasis on costs,
they’re going to be forced to compete at a lower price point,” he
said.
Shrinking margins helped drive Roche’s
Indianapolis expansion. With newer equipment, as well as a set-up that
incorporates
the best practices Roche has learned from
its other manufacturing facilities, it can increase its efficiency,
noted Heald,
Roche’s local chief of operations.
“We’re constantly optimizing the cost
structures to make sure that we’re bringing the most economic benefit
to the market,” he said.
And to the bottom line. Kliff noted that
savings of a quarter-penny per strip could add hundreds of millions of
dollars straight
to the bottom line because Roche is making
2.8 billion strips per year now and will ramp up even more with the
expansion.
Globally, Roche has been fueling sales by
introducing a smaller version of the Aviva, called the Nano, as well as
a combination
product that links the Aviva monitor with
an insulin pump.
Roche’s competitors already were rapidly
growing those combination products before Roche got in the game with its
2010
acquisition of Israel-based Medingo Ltd.
Roche hopes to win regulators’ approval
to introduce both products in the United States this year.
source: www.ibj.com
