Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Chicago medical imaging and AI diagnostics (NASDAQ: GEHC) ~$19.7B FY2024 revenue; GE spinoff Jan 2023, Edison AI 100+ models, 4M+ installed devices, Alzheimer's PET tracer competing with Siemens Healthineers.
GE HealthCare Technologies Inc. is a Chicago, Illinois-based medical technology and digital health company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: GEHC) as an S&P 500 Health Care component — designing, manufacturing, and servicing medical imaging systems, patient monitoring equipment, pharmaceutical diagnostics, and AI-powered clinical decision support software through approximately 51,000 employees in 160 countries. GE HealthCare was spun off from General Electric Company in January 2023 — one of the most significant healthcare demergers in history — and has operated as an independent public company building its own capital structure, R&D investment priorities, and operational identity separate from GE's industrial conglomerate structure. In fiscal year 2024, GE HealthCare reported revenues of approximately $19.7 billion, with its four business segments contributing: Imaging (MRI, CT, X-ray, molecular imaging — ~$9.1B), Ultrasound (~$3.0B), Patient Care Solutions (monitoring, anesthesia — ~$3.6B), and Pharmaceutical Diagnostics (PET/SPECT contrast agents — ~$2.6B). CEO Peter Arduini has prioritized accelerating GE HealthCare's AI integration across its imaging portfolio — the Edison AI platform (100+ AI models cleared or in development for radiology workflows) embeds AI-assisted detection, workflow optimization, and image quality enhancement into GE HealthCare scanners, positioning the company as a digital health platform rather than a hardware manufacturer.
Wilmington DE oncology/inflammation biopharma (NASDAQ: INCY) ~$3.9B FY2024 revenue; Jakafi $2.7B myelofibrosis franchise, Opzelura topical JAK inhibitor, Novartis Jakavi royalties competing with BMS and Pfizer.
Incyte Corporation is a Wilmington, Delaware-based biopharmaceutical company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: INCY) as an S&P 500 Health Care component — focused on oncology and inflammation, best known for Jakafi (ruxolitinib), the first FDA-approved therapy for myelofibrosis and polycythemia vera — rare blood cancers driven by JAK kinase pathway mutations — and the topical ruxolitinib cream Opzelura (for atopic dermatitis and vitiligo). In fiscal year 2024, Incyte reported revenues of approximately $3.9 billion, with Jakafi net product revenues of approximately $2.7 billion (the primary revenue driver) and collaboration revenues from Novartis (which pays Incyte royalties on Jakavi — the ex-US brand name for ruxolitinib — representing a significant royalty income stream from international myelofibrosis and polycythemia vera markets). CEO Hervé Hoppenot's strategy of building a diversified hematology-oncology pipeline beyond ruxolitinib has progressed through the development of axatilimab (anti-CSF-1R monoclonal antibody for chronic graft-versus-host disease — FDA-approved 2024 as Niktimvo) and povorcitinib (JAK inhibitor for prurigo nodularis and hidradenitis suppurativa — phase 3 trials in dermatology). Incyte's JAK inhibitor chemistry platform (ruxolitinib — Jakafi/Opzelura/Jakavi, parsaclisib, itacitinib, tofacitinib licensed from Pfizer collaboration) provides a productive medicinal chemistry foundation for developing next-generation kinase inhibitors with more selective pharmacology profiles.
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