Datawatch

Electrophysiologists’ Priorities for Medtech in 2026

What's essential for successful electrophysiology product adoption and shaping R&D, market access, and commercialization strategy.

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The global electrophysiology (EP) market is entering a period of rapid transformation. Fueled by rising arrhythmia prevalence, aging populations, and technological innovation, demand for advanced EP devices—particularly ablation catheters, mapping systems, and diagnostics—continues to accelerate. For medical device developers focused on electrophysiology, understanding what practicing electrophysiologists (EPs) will value most in 2026 is essential for successful product adoption and for shaping R&D, market access, and commercialization strategy.

Growth, Opportunity, and Strategic Stakes

The EP device market is experiencing strong expansion. In 2025, the global electrophysiology and cardiac ablation device market was expected to reach approximately $13.8 billion and is projected to reach almost $20 billion by 2028—a CAGR of ~13% (Table 1).1 Ablation catheters comprise a high-growth share, driving greater than one-third of market value due to rising procedural volumes and technology upgrade cycles.

Table 1: Growth in the global electrophysiology medical device market1

This forecast highlights significant commercial opportunity, but also intense competition and heightened expectations from clinician end-users.

Precision, Predictability, and Durable Outcomes

Electrophysiologists are increasingly intolerant of device variability. Catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation (AFib), ventricular tachycardia (VT), and other arrhythmias is now widespread and often guided by advanced mapping. Clinical outcomes, however, still vary significantly by operator and case complexity. In 2026, EPs will prioritize technologies that deliver predictable lesion sets and durable procedural success, not just incremental feature improvements.

Developers should emphasize:

  • Predictive analytics tied to lesion durability
  • Contact-force and real-time lesion assessment tools
  • Evidence of reduced recurrent arrhythmia

Real-Time Mapping & AI-Assisted Insight

Cutting-edge electrophysiology relies on high-resolution, 3D mapping systems that reduce procedure time and improve target identification. Adoption of these tools is linked to clinical accuracy, workflow efficiency, and physician confidence.

In 2026, EPs expect:

  • Unsupervised pattern recognition to identify arrhythmogenic substrates
  • AI-enabled metrics to guide decision pathways in complex cases
  • Integrated visualization with anatomical imaging overlays

AI-guided mapping systems will be among the fastest-growing device categories, with innovations such as software analyzing the complex electrical behavior of AFib in real time to detect patterns human eyes and other software cannot. This technology helps physicians with real-time analysis of three-dimensional heart maps.2

Industry adoption trends will reflect this: While only 20 hospitals in the U.S. reported integrating AI for cardiac arrhythmia analysis, enhancing detection, and interpretation capabilities, this number is expected to increase substantially in 2026.2

As with robotics, patients have been receptive to AI-guided mapping systems, with most having a favorable response to the introduction of AI in their treatment. Additionally, physicians recognize AI is a tool that augments their practice, helping them interpret better by giving them information not previously available.

Delivering Fast, Safe, and Consistently Durable Lesions

Ablation technology remains the centerpiece of EP therapy. Market projections suggest the ablation segment within EP (including radiofrequency, cryo, and pulsed-field ablation) will continue to experience robust growth. Pulsed-field ablation, in particular, is expected to grow rapidly, driven by safety and precision claims.

EP clinicians are seeking:

  • Shorter procedural times with equivalent or better lesion quality
  • Reduced collateral damage (e.g., to the esophagus or phrenic nerve)
  • Higher first-pass success rates

Safety narratives matter significantly; clinicians value clear evidence that new modalities reduce risk compared to legacy tools. Designing devices that integrate real-time safety feedback and lesion confirmation mechanisms will differentiate in the marketplace.

Integrated Platforms Drive Value 

EP workflows span pre-procedure planning, intra-procedure mapping and ablation, and post-procedure monitoring. Clinicians increasingly demand end-to-end platforms that provide seamless interoperability rather than disparate tools that require workarounds.

This integration should deliver:

  • Unified data capture and analytics across procedures
  • Cross-platform visualization modalities
  • Ongoing learning systems that improve with case volume and outcomes

Devices that operate as part of a comprehensive ecosystem benefit from higher switching costs and more durable commercial relationships.

Outpatient EP and Remote Monitoring 

EP procedural volumes are no longer confined to tertiary hospitals. The rising shift toward outpatient hospital departments and ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) is growing (Table 2), particularly as minimally invasive techniques and reimbursement evolve.

Table 2: Forecasted shift of electrophysiology procedures by site of care3

Research suggests ambulatory settings will grow faster than traditional hospitals through 2030, reflecting broader pressures on cost, efficiency, and patient preference patterns. 

Additionally, remote monitoring tools such as wearable ECGs and rhythm patches are seeing uptake. Worldwide demand for wearable cardiac monitoring devices is reported to have increased significantly, with remote monitoring adoption rising in tandem with EP procedural growth.

Where appropriate, medical device developers should ensure devices are compatible with remote diagnostics and integrate smoothly with cloud-based patient management platforms.

Data Interoperability and HEOR

EP physicians and hospital administrators expect devices to produce standardized, interoperable data that can feed into broader analytics, registries, and economic models. Without integration, devices are at risk of being sidelined in favor of solutions that offer better data transparency and actionable insights.

Electrophysiologists value evidence that demonstrates:

  • Reduced hospital readmissions
  • Lower total cost of care
  • Improved quality of life metrics

Generating health economic and outcomes research (HEOR) data as part of device evidence portfolios will be vital to reimbursement success and hospital procurement committees in 2026.

Four Strategic Takeaways 

  1. Invest in AI that Augments: EPs will value transparent, explainable analytics
  2. Design for Integrated Ecosystems: Platforms win; silos lose
  3. Account for ASC and Remote Trends: Expansion outside traditional hospitals will be substantial
  4. Prioritize Data and Evidence Strategy: HEOR and interoperability influence adoption

These priorities mirror not just clinical preferences but market realities. The electrophysiology devices sector—projected to expand significantly in the second half of the decade—rewards technologies that align with clinician workflows, deliver robust evidence, and integrate across care pathways. For device developers aiming to lead in EP by 2026, the mandate is clear: Develop with precision, integrate with insight, and validate with evidence.

References
1 Cardiac and Electrophysiology Survey, BTIG, October 16th 2025, Marie Thibault, Sam Eiber, Alexandra Pang.
2 tinyurl.com/mpo260302
3 tinyurl.com/mpo260303


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Maria Shepherd has more than 20 years of experience in marketing in small startups and top-tier companies. She founded Medi-Vantage, which provides marketing and business strategy for the medtech industry. She can be reached at mshepherd@medi-vantage.com. Visit her website at www.medi-vantage.com.

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