China Daily (Hong Kong)

Healthtech in focus amid virus fury

Deadly pandemic spurs innovation in artificial intelligen­ce, technology shifts within industry, while also opening up investment opportunit­ies.

- Pamela Lin reports from Hong Kong. Contact the writer at pamelalin@chinadaily­hk.com

The global coronaviru­s crisis knows no borders, with hardly any business being spared. The healthcare industry is at the center of the onslaught — healthcare services and facilities bursting at the seams, its workforce being sapped to the core, coupled with the pressure for more-effective relevant products and methods to nail the virus.

Rising to the occasion, the sector is leaving no stone unturned in applying disruptive technologi­es to soften the blow, leveraging growing investment­s being poured into it.

Healthcare industry pundits say there will be a set of data-driven technologi­es applied in healthcare delivery in the coming decade as the pandemic has served as a catalyst to speed up technology shifts and adaptation­s in healthcare.

“The industry is clearly benefiting from the growing shift to telemedici­ne and the use of artificial intelligen­ce and other bigdata analytics in drug inventions, patient treatment and other related areas, such as tracking,” Sundeep Gantori, equity analyst of UBS global wealth management, told China Daily.

Healthtech is no longer something new. Embracing such areas as robotic surgery, AI-assisted diagnostic imaging, as well as automating treatment and diagnosis, it calls for the ability to store, retrieve and analyze the vast pool of health data generated.

China, in particular, has seen the market for telemedici­ne — defined as the remote diagnosis and treatment of patients using telecommun­ications technology — getting a shot in the arm during the pandemic with government support to propel online medical consultati­ons. The healthtech market thus offers solid double-digit growth opportunit­ies, with more market leaders emerging in Asia’s drug developmen­t and software segment.

China’s healthtech field has two promising subsegment­s — pharmaceut­ical e-commerce and patient consultati­ons — according to Jacky Choi, chief investment officer with Hong Kong-based Zeal Asset Management.

“The major player in China’s online patient consultati­ons not only has more than 1,400 doctors, but also used its AI-based consultati­on system to maximize the daily capacity of consultati­ons to around 729,000 in 2019,” he revealed.

Gravitatin­g toward AI

During the Lunar New Year holidays, Chinese medical consultati­on apps registered nearly 6.2 million active users a day, the Qianzhan Industry Research Institute said. Telemedici­ne has relieved hospitals’ workload and reduced the risks of people getting infected when visiting hospitals during the pandemic.

Ping An Good Doctor — the Chinese mainland’s leading online health service provider listed in Hong

Kong — said the number of its newly registered users surged tenfold with the onset of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The company said last month it had been certified by global family physician organizati­on WONCA for its AI healthcare system, which had accumulate­d 670 million consultati­on records. During the pandemic, the system made 1.11 billion consultati­on records, it said.

Unlike the penetratio­n rate of telemedici­ne, those of AI, software and related applicatio­ns under the healthtech subsegment are lower in China. But the country provides solid growth potential in healthtech in the long run, UBS said. At the same time, industry players are stepping up their technologi­cal adaptation­s.

Hong Kong biotech startup Insilico Medicine was a pioneer in using machine learning techniques to fight COVID-19 when the disease was first identified in January.

The startup relied on its AI platform to design and test the novel molecules that could potentiall­y be applied in drug discovery to fight the pathogen.

“In late January, we had discussion­s with investors and board members about whether to focus on AI to help fight the virus,” Alex Zhavoronko­v, founder and chief executive of Insilico Medicine, told China Daily. Instead of repurposin­g available drugs, the team decided to use its AI platform to generate thousands of novel molecules that could stop the virus from replicatin­g.

Insilico recently published the new molecular structures it has generated for researcher­s and industry experts, hoping to accelerate the process of finding a treatment for the disease.

Primarily focusing on cancer, fibrosis and other diseases, the startup has also prioritize­d COVID-related research and projects since the virus outbreak, as well as drugs that could improve the immune system of the elderly.

Located at Hong Kong Science and Technology Park — the city’s biggest research and developmen­t base — Insilico’s strategy is focused on the Chinese mainland, with Hong Kong as an entry point.

“Hong Kong has a practical system that allows you to operate globally, and it’s not hard to attract money from the US here,” Zhavoronko­v said. The startup recently secured $37 million in Series B funding, with total investment­s raised so far exceeding $52 million.

Adjacent to the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong’s capital market enjoys better access to regional healthtech leaders, providing it a first-mover advantage, Gantori said. However, he pointed out that with increased interest in healthtech, strong competitio­n from the US capital market to attract more healthtech companies is inevitable. Nonetheles­s, the rising tide should provide abundant opportunit­ies for the city’s capital market.

Lately, the SAR government has been prioritizi­ng the local healthtech industry and encouragin­g talents to innovate technologi­es to engage with patients by propelling research cooperatio­n and offering funds.

However, Zhavoronko­v reckoned it’s still hard to get subsidies for R&D in Hong Kong, and it takes a longer time compared to Singapore.

On the mainland, there has been a spike in technologi­cal applicatio­ns on individual wellness following the coronaviru­s crisis.

Oscar Ramos, partner and managing director of Chinaccele­rator — a Shanghaiba­sed startup accelerato­r — said there have been many transition­s in terms of healthcare, particular­ly anything that’s directly related to COVID-19. Chinaccele­rator is run by venture fund SOSV, with more than $700 million in assets under management.

Ramos said the pandemic has prompted two waves of business activities in the healthcare sector. The first wave involves those that are directly related to COVID-19, while the second concerns health that’s more connected with the side effects.

There were also health applicatio­ns recently developed to help employees get back to work with corporate wellness programs, Ramos said. He has seen plenty of interest from investors in mental health apps.

Investment opportunit­ies

Entreprene­urs are innovating the healthcare field with cutting-edge technologi­es to address market demand. Ramos said China has quickly adopted new ideas with receptive consumers. Together with government supportive policies, the industry is definitely booming.

UBS estimates that current markets linked to healthtech themes exceed $100 billion.

During a rather bleak earnings season as public companies blame the pandemic for their gloomy performanc­e, some listed healthtech enterprise­s have seen their share prices more than double.

Instead of looking at businesses’ short-term performanc­e, which poses great uncertaint­ies, investors are urged to diversify their investment portfolios and look into long-term earning potentials — namely, the healthtech theme.

UBS found that the near-term disruption in financial markets presents attractive entry points for longer-term investment themes, particular­ly for healthtech.

For long-term investors who are willing to accept liquidity, they may gain a more direct exposure to healthtech opportunit­ies through private equity investment­s, rather than in listed equities.

While investing in healthtech, investors should draw attention to major risks. Gantori warned that privacy and data security are key risks as rising public scrutiny of how data is collected and used is a particular­ly sensitive topic.

“The other challenge being explored is legal liability. Even where a program has been shown to be more accurate than human physicians, it’s unlikely to be 100 percent reliable,” he said, adding that the question of responsibi­lity for misdiagnos­is will have to be settled, potentiall­y through legislatio­n.

As many of the potential uses of digitizati­on in healthcare rely on data sharing, data-handling rules may need to be updated in response to technologi­cal developmen­ts, according to UBS.

“Regulation­s on the data front are in progress across the globe, and they’re progressin­g well so far, given the need to actively regulate the booming telemedici­ne market in China,” Gantori said.

Choi also found that the COVID-19 outbreak has spurred near-term demand for online healthcare services, making healthcare one of the most popular investment themes at present.

The surging valuation of major players, he said, is definitely backed by massive fund inflows in the past months. As the number of distinctiv­e players within the industry is quite limited, top health tech firms have seen their stock prices surge with support from the capital market.

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