It has laid out an ambitious plan to scale up operations and has earmarked Rs 250 crore (Rs 2.5 billion) for the purpose.
Not far back, in 2010, SRL Diagnostics, promoted by former Ranbaxy promoters Malvinder and Shivinder Singh, acquired the diagnostic services business of Piramal Healthcare for Rs 600 crore (Rs 6 billion).
The deal allowed SRL access to network of 107 laboratories across the country.
Not to be left behind, another all-India diagnostic chain, Metropolis, acquired two brownfield ventures in Chandigarh and Jodhpur last year and has plans to invest Rs 1 crore (Rs 10 million) each in Lucknow, Bareilly and Jalandhar to set up new centres.
Diagnostics, the poor cousin of the $65-billion healthcare industry, is churning and expanding as the rise in chronic diseases and increasing awareness about preventive medicine open up new opportunities for established players in smaller cities and towns.
The sector, largely unorganised and fragmented, has around 60,000 players.
Experts believe for the few big players -- Dr Lal Pathlabs, SRL Diagnostics, Metropolis Healthcare, Thyrocare and Quest Diagnostics -- there is a huge potential for expansion in the regional market where the quality of services offered are often suspect.
“There is a huge potential in the radiology space because it is a niche area, which requires high capital investment, but offers tremendous volumes,” says Charu Sehgal, senior director of strategy and operations consulting at Deloitte Touche.
To quickly fill the gap, large players are taking the mergers and acquisitions route to expand their footprint.
Om Manchanda, chief executive officer, Dr Lal Pathlabs, says the company is much more focused on inorganic growth, and has earmarked Rs 250 crore (Rs 2.5 billion) for the purpose.
It is in buy-out talks with various diagnostic chains in Chennai, Hyderabad, Bangalore and Kolkata.
However, with only a handful of large players, companies are mainly looking at city-based players with more than one centre.
They are also merging the traditionally distinct arms of diagnostics -- radiology and pathology -- into one.
According to a recent PricewaterhouseCoopers study, the diagnostics market is estimated at Rs 18,502 crore (Rs 185.02 billion), or about five per cent of the total healthcare industry.
Of this, pathology, which includes testing of samples, accounts for Rs 10,339 crore (Rs 103.39 billion) while radiology makes up for Rs 8,162 crore (Rs 81.62 billion)
The segment together is growing at 15
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