overgrowth
- 12 May 2005 22:21
Mediwatch is a small
company destined to become a much bigger fish by the time this year is
out.
Mediwatch are already a market leader in urological medical diagnostics
equipement and are currently exporting their products throughout the UK,
Canada, Europe, India and Japan.
That doesn't leave much of the globe left for them to capture - until
you remember the good ol' US and China.
These are the two massive markets which are destined to be added to MDW's
export client portfolio by the end of 2005.
|
|
The company is currently
heavily undervalued. This is probably because Mediwatch's speciality is
not a very glamourous business to be in as their equipment is used extensively
to diagnose prostate cancer in men and other nasty urological conditions
affecting both men and women. However, don't let that put you off investing
in these guys. This is big business and is growing at an exponential rate
as more and more people globally become health-aware as they get older.
Mediwatch normally
supply their products through to global markets via distribution agreements.
They already have the best of distribution partners in the well known
US medical distributor CR Bard who supply Canada and Europe and GE Medical
who supply Japan. The UK business is handled by Mediwatch's own dedicated
sales team.
US FDA approval was
gained for MDW's products at the start of last year, however a whole year
of US legal wrangling meant that they were unable to seek a suitable partner
for the crucial distribution agreement until the start of this year. This
distribution agreement is expected by the board to have a "significant
effect" on the share price so they are reluctant to give any clues
as to when it will be signed, sealed and delivered. The general consensus
is that this US distribution agreement will be announced in July/August.
In China and Hong Kong, MDW have done things the other way round. They
have set up distribution agreements with major Asian medical equipment
distributors and have stock already out there waiting to sell into the
markets - all they are waiting for is SDA approval (which is a "rubber
stamp") from the Chinese authorities - this can take anything up
to 12 months to come through and MDW applied during Autumn 2004 - so even
more good news coming soon this year.
Epidemiological data from British Association of Urology conference last year: On average 30-45% of all men between the age of 50 and 70 have at least one PSA test per year in the US / Italy / Australia.
If that's not enough
to convince you to invest a few hard earned coppers in MDW, they are also
developing a PSA stick test product (PSAWatch) which is revolutionary and causing
some excitement in medical circles. This product can also be adapted (at
very low cost) for a whole spectrum of medical disciplines from Cardiology
to Veterinary Practice! This product is likely to be released in the next
few weeks. Philip Stimpson the CEO has said that this product is going
to be their "gold mine" - I'm sure it will prove to be ours
too.
|

optomistic
- 16 May 2006 12:13
- 956 of 1497
Take the 2 100K (?) trades out, the rest are all buys. Should be worth more than 1/2p rise on the day.
leedslad
- 16 May 2006 14:14
- 957 of 1497
The MM's can't keep the lid on this now for long
banjomick
- 16 May 2006 14:36
- 958 of 1497
:-)
banjomick
- 16 May 2006 16:43
- 959 of 1497
Not a bad day
banjomick
- 16 May 2006 17:53
- 960 of 1497
MDW have actually updated their website which includes todays news,wonders will never cease
banjomick
- 16 May 2006 18:02
- 961 of 1497
EAU Paris - 4-8 April
Mediwatch joined the Medtronic stand at the Palais de Congres. We received a large number of enquiries from all over Europe, as well as some from further afield. Two scientific papers were presented on the PSAwatch system which generated a great deal of interest.
banjomick
- 16 May 2006 20:50
- 962 of 1497
Overgrowth,do you fancy updating this thread?
optomistic
- 16 May 2006 20:55
- 963 of 1497
Good idea Banjo, make the chart show up to 50p,
can always adjust it higher later :-)
banjomick
- 16 May 2006 21:06
- 964 of 1497
lol opto
Treblewide
- 20 May 2006 22:21
- 966 of 1497
some cracking deals????? really no one actually stated what they are worth......down trend still in tact
banjomick
- 21 May 2006 00:18
- 967 of 1497
LOL Treblewide,Did you run out of fingers for a rough guess?
banjomick
- 21 May 2006 00:26
- 968 of 1497
And I see by your previous posts that you have sold up,more or less,so why bother posting negative coments like that-lol
imo,you are Wide off the mark and if you had held you would have Trebled your investment in three months time!
Each to their own and good luck in your future investments,you may need it!
banjomick
- 21 May 2006 00:28
- 969 of 1497
OG,Cheers for response,look forward for an update.
banjomick
- 21 May 2006 10:19
- 970 of 1497
Morning all,
This is the cover of the FDA May/June consumer magazine:
http://www.fda.gov/fdac/306_toc.html
leedslad
- 21 May 2006 11:11
- 971 of 1497
Onwards and upward.
One of the safest growth plays around.
banjomick
- 21 May 2006 12:39
- 972 of 1497
Leeds,Best of luck for today.
optomistic
- 21 May 2006 13:20
- 973 of 1497
Are they playing football today? So wet in Leeds the lads will get that white kit so very muddy :-)
Some while since the players, (the old team) nipped out of the back of the South Leeds Con. club, the night before the match as the manager walked in the front. All heresay I might add :-)
Didn't do them any harm, great team then.
banjomick
- 21 May 2006 15:04
- 974 of 1497
So much for getting the gardening done,it's pouring down!
While many argue that the PSA era is drawing to an end, research has proven that it still has its place in prostate cancer detection and diagnosis, said Dr. Presti. This new research supports the continued use of PSA as a clinical marker and diagnostic tool, even as new detection tools develop.
http://news.auanet.org/article_display.cfm?article_id=127
banjomick
- 22 May 2006 18:19
- 975 of 1497
Publishing #: 1502
Presentation Title: PSAwatchTM - a 10 minute, quantitative PSA assay on stored plasma.
Category: 41 Detection and Screening
Author Block: Ram Vaidyanathan*, Mohit Sharma, Slough, United Kingdom; Matthew Partridge, Donna Cochrane, Rugby, United Kingdom; Mark Emberton, London, United Kingdom; Omer Karim, Ian Walker, Slough, United Kingdom; Ian Davidson, Rugby, United Kingdom
Abstract Body: Introduction and Objective: PSA is routinely used as a serological marker for diagnosis and surveillance of prostatic disease. PSAwatchTM has been developed as a 10 minute point-of-care PSA assay for whole blood, serum and plasma. We present the first clinical experience of the PSAwatchTM assay on stored plasma using a portable reader system (BioScanTM). Methods: Following appropriate consent, two blood samples were taken from men attending our outpatient clinic. One sample was submitted for laboratory serum PSA testing using industry standard assays. Plasma from the second sample was stored at 4C for subsequent analysis using the BioScanTM system. After equilibrating to room temperature, 35μL aliquots of plasma were placed in the PSAwatchTM cassette, comprising of a porous cellulose membrane impregnated with monoclonal anti-PSA antibodies and gold sol. Antibody-PSA complexes induced an immuno-chromatographic response to PSA which was measured by the BioScanTM reader. Plasma from 33 female volunteers served as negative controls. Results: 192 men (age 18 to 87 yrs) were recruited to the study. Laboratory PSA values ranged from 0.01 - 977 μg/L. Correlation between the two methods was strong across the whole of the range tested (R2= 0.99). The PSAwatchTM assay precision was <8%, across the range and demonstrated a specificity of 99.5% with sensitivity to 0.25 μg/L. Conclusions: This is the first clinical experience of a quantitative, portable, point-of-care PSA reader system using plasma. This study demonstrates the versatility of the PSAwatchTM system, which, in addition, to being a 10 minute point-of-care assay, may be used to measure PSA on stored plasma, batched from busy clinics.
Keywords: PSA,Diagnosis,Immunoassay