Integra LifeSciences used its update at the ongoing 2026 JP Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco to frame 2025 and 2026 as a deliberate transition period. The company described a shift from disruption and remediation toward more predictable execution, supported by product relaunches, a more resilient supply chain and reimbursement changes that could make parts of its wound portfolio more financially attractive in outpatient settings.
Integra dedicated an important part of the presentation to its “two horizons” plan. As presented, Horizon 1 is about rebuilding a sustainable foundation through quality systems, supply chain reliability and improved working capital discipline. Management emphasized that demand in 2025 exceeded what it could deliver, and that better manufacturing planning and consistency is expected to translate into better service levels and greater capacity to meet demand, along with stronger cash flow and improved profitability over time.
Horizon 2 is intended to deliver faster growth through the generation of clinical evidence, new indications for existing tissue technologies, and investment in neurosurgery and otolaryngology, enabled by a 2025 portfolio prioritization exercise that management says helps direct capital toward higher-growth, higher-margin areas. The company positioned these workflows as moving forward simultaneously, with fundamental improvements aimed at making growth initiatives more repeatable and scalable.
The practical test of this reset is whether Integra can restore availability to product lines that have faced recalls or extended exits from the market. Multiple products have been affected by quality and remediation issues, which has limited supply. Integra noted that it relaunched PriMatrix and Durepair in Q4 2025, and highlighted SurgiMend as a planned launch for Q4 2026. GlobalData’s SKU analysis suggests early traction from this relaunch, with PriMatrix sales at US healthcare institutions increasing by more than 80% between 2024 and 2025.
To further support these efforts, the company discussed supply resiliency initiatives, including a new manufacturing facility in Braintree, Massachusetts, expected to be operational in the first half of 2026. Looking at the recalls and relaunch priorities disclosed to date, tissue-based wound and reconstruction products appear to be at the center of both the recent disruption and planned recovery, making execution on this franchise critical to regaining momentum.
Tissue technologies are an important part of Integra’s revenue mix and investor narrative, and the Tissue Engineered Skin Substitutes (TESS) segment is one of the fastest growing areas within it. GlobalData estimates that the TESS market will grow from $2.6 billion in 2025 to $3.9 billion in 2030, implying a compound annual growth rate of 8.6%.