Cordis | |
Founder: | Dr. William P. Murphy Jr. |
Area Served: | Worldwide |
Products: | Medical devices |
Foundation: | 1957 (as The Medical Development Corporation) |
Location: | Santa Clara, California, U.S. |
Homepage: | Cordis.com |
Cordis is an American international medical company that develops and manufactures medical devices for diagnostics and interventional procedures to treat coronary and peripheral vascular diseases. The company operates in the North America, Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America markets.
Cordis was founded in 1957 by Dr. William P. Murphy Jr. as The Medical Development Corporation in Miami, Florida. Currently, the company is jointly headquartered in Baar, Switzerland and Santa Clara, California. The headquarters also act as a hub for Cordis' operations in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. The North American operations are based out of the San Francisco Bay area. The Asia-Pacific hub is located in Singapore, and the Latin American hub is in Puerto Rico.[1]
The Medical Development Corporation was founded in 1957 in Miami, Florida, by Dr. William P. Murphy Jr. and focused on interventional vascular medicine and neuroscience.[2] In 1959, the company's name was changed to Cordis.
In 1970, Cordis introduced the first sheath introducers with hemostasis valves, designed to minimize blood loss during an angioplasty procedure.
In 1996, Cordis joined the Johnson & Johnson Intervention Systems (JJIS)[3] [4] and a year later, Cordis Corporation expanded into electrophysiology after Johnson & Johnson acquired Biosense Inc. and merged it with Cordis.[5] In 1998, Biosense Inc. merged with Webster Laboratories to form Biosense Webster, Inc.
In 2015, Cardinal Health acquired the Cordis business from Johnson & Johnson for $1.944 billion.[6] [7]
On March 31, 2017, Cardinal Health announced two new strategic agreements that enabled Cordis, Cardinal Health's interventional vascular business, to expand its cardiology product offering in China.
In March 2021, Cardinal announced plans to sell Cordis to private equity firm Hellman & Friedman for $1 billion.[7]