PUBLISHER: iData Research Inc. | PRODUCT CODE: 2034938
PUBLISHER: iData Research Inc. | PRODUCT CODE: 2034938
Global Integrated Operating Room Component Market Report to 2032
The global integrated operating room component market was valued at $948 million in 2025. It is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 9.6%, reaching $1.8 billion by 2032.
This report covers the global market for integrated operating room components, including routing systems, touchscreen command centers, digital recording systems, ergonomic OR design elements, and digital image integration capabilities.
The analysis includes unit sales, average selling prices (ASPs), market size, market shares, growth trends, market forecasts through 2032, and historical data back to 2022.
Market growth is supported by demand for more efficient ORs, rising use of image-guided minimally invasive procedures, and increased adoption of surgical robotics. However, inadequate infrastructure and the entry of new competitors are expected to moderate growth.
Market Overview
The global integrated operating room component market includes the systems and infrastructure that allow operating rooms to function as digitally connected surgical environments.
An integrated OR typically includes routing systems for data, voice and video, touchscreen command centers, digital recording systems, ergonomic room layouts, and the ability to send and receive diagnostic images through PACS, RIS, HIS, EMR, DICOM or similar hospital systems.
Demand is being driven by the increasing volume of complex and image-guided procedures. These cases require coordination between surgical tables, imaging platforms, displays, cameras, lighting, equipment controls and digital routing systems.
Integrated ORs give hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers the infrastructure needed to improve procedural efficiency, support real-time visualization, enable advanced surgical programs and create better workflow across increasingly complex surgical environments.
Market Drivers
Demand for More Efficient ORs
Demand for more efficient operating rooms is one of the main drivers of the integrated OR component market. ORs are a major source of revenue for both hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers, so even small workflow improvements can have meaningful operational value.
Integrated ORs save time through ergonomic layouts, centralized control systems, equipment routing and improved access to video and diagnostic information. These capabilities reduce unnecessary movement, simplify setup and support faster room turnover.
As technology continues to improve and more equipment is incorporated into the OR, the need for better functionality will continue to increase. Integrated OR components are becoming more important as facilities look to manage complex procedures while improving efficiency and reducing operational friction.
Growing Number of Image-Guided Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures
The use of image-guided minimally invasive surgical procedures has increased across several specialties, including cardiovascular, orthopedic, spine and neurosurgery.
These procedures require real-time visualization, advanced imaging and coordinated equipment management. Integrated ORs support these needs by allowing imaging systems, surgical cameras, displays and navigation tools to work together in one connected environment.
As hospitals and ASCs continue shifting toward less invasive procedures that improve patient outcomes and shorten recovery times, demand for integrated ORs is expected to increase. This is especially important for facilities expanding advanced surgical programs or investing in image-guided care.
Surgical Robotics and Digital OR Workflows
The adoption of surgical robotics is also supporting demand for integrated OR components. Robotic procedures often require precise positioning, multiple displays, camera systems, routing capabilities and coordinated control of different OR devices.
Integrated ORs provide the digital and physical infrastructure needed to support robotic workflows. This includes video management, image capture, equipment control, communication tools and room designs that improve visibility and reduce clutter.
As robotic surgery becomes more common across specialties, hospitals will require OR environments that can support complex device ecosystems. This is expected to create continued demand for integrated OR components over the forecast period.
Market Limiters
Inadequate Infrastructure
Inadequate infrastructure is a major limiter in the integrated OR component market. Most integrated OR installations are refurbishments of existing operating rooms rather than new builds.
As procedures become more complicated, integrated ORs require more equipment and infrastructure. Upgrades can include electrical wiring, fiber optic cables, ventilation ducts, wall or ceiling openings and replacement of outdated components.
These construction costs can be very high, especially in older facilities. Even when hospitals want integrated OR functionality, the expense and disruption of upgrading existing ORs may discourage or delay integration projects.
Entry of New Competitors
The integrated OR market is becoming more competitive due to the entry of new companies. Some competitors specialize in integration projects outside the medical field and are applying that experience to operating room environments.
Companies that manufacture OR equipment, such as surgical tables and surgical lights, are also beginning to compete in the integrated OR space. This is increasing competition and creating more supplier options for hospitals.
As facilities focus on purchasing equipment from fewer suppliers, strategic alliances between companies are expected to form. Increased competition may place pressure on pricing and make it harder for established players to maintain share.
Implementation Complexity
Implementation complexity can also limit adoption. Integrated OR projects require coordination between hospital leadership, surgeons, nurses, biomedical engineers, IT teams, construction teams and equipment vendors.
Systems must connect to imaging infrastructure, communication platforms, recording systems, display networks and hospital information systems. This can create technical and operational challenges, especially when different vendors are involved.
If integration is not planned carefully, hospitals may face delays, cost overruns or underused technology. These risks can make some facilities cautious about major integration investments.
Market Coverage and Data Scope
Markets Covered and Segmentation
The report covers the global integrated operating room component market as a dedicated segment within the broader video and integrated OR equipment market.
Integrated OR systems include routing systems that allow delivery of data, voice and video services over an IP network. These systems extend audio-visual communication from the OR for teleconferencing, resident teaching, collaboration and telesurgery-related workflows.
The market also includes touchscreen command centers capable of receiving and displaying information and video from other OR devices. These systems can control equipment settings and relay video or information to areas outside the OR. In many cases, surgical lights are also controlled through these systems.
Digital recording systems are also included. These devices support HD video and image recording, with functionality varying across systems. Some can record multiple video sources at once, while others record one source.
Ergonomic room design is another component of the integrated OR market. These designs optimize OR floor space through overhead equipment booms, cabinets and other features that reduce clutter and improve workflow.
Finally, integrated ORs include the ability to electronically send and receive diagnostic images through PACS, RIS, HIS, EMR, DICOM or similar systems.
Each area is analyzed by market size, market shares, market forecasts, market growth rates, units sold and average selling prices.
Competitive Analysis
In 2025, KARL STORZ was the leading competitor in the global integrated OR component market. The company was the second competitor to enter the OR integration market and continues to benefit from a large installed base, replacement sales and strong name recognition.
KARL STORZ offers several integrated operating room solutions under the OR1(TM) umbrella, including the newer OR1(TM) NEO integrated OR solution with 4K video broadcasting technology. In 2024, the company launched Pathway.AI in the United States, an AI-driven tool developed with the Artisight Smart Hospital Platform to monitor and optimize OR workflow in real time.
Stryker is another major competitor through its iSuite(TM) integrated OR solution, which was the first integration component released. The iSuite family includes Endosuite(TM), OrthoSuite(TM), CardioSuite(TM) and NavSuite(TM).
Stryker also offers the SwitchPoint(TM) Infinity 3 Control System, which includes surgical checklist integration, customizable room presets, quad view, centralized control and teleconferencing. The SwitchPoint(TM) Infinity 3 Lite is designed for smaller ORs, while Studio(TM) 3 media management and ConnectSuite(TM) IP Video software support the broader platform.
STERIS ranked third in 2025. Its integrated OR offering is led by the Harmony iQ(TM) integration platform, including the Harmony iQ 3600 system. This platform supports HD video routing, centralized control, vendor-neutral connectivity, collaboration and workflow management in complex surgical environments.
Technology and Practice Trends
IP-Based Video Routing
IP-based routing systems are becoming central to integrated OR design. These systems allow data, voice and video to move across a networked OR environment.
This supports teleconferencing, teaching, collaboration and room-to-room communication.
Touchscreen Command Centers
Touchscreen command centers are increasingly used to control equipment, display information and manage video sources.
These systems help centralize OR control and reduce workflow complexity during procedures.
4K Video Broadcasting
4K video broadcasting is becoming more important as hospitals demand higher-quality visualization and documentation.
Platforms such as OR1(TM) NEO support advanced video workflows for teaching, recording and external communication.
Digital Recording and Documentation
Digital recording systems are important for procedure documentation, training, quality review and image management.
Systems that can record multiple sources at once provide more complete procedural records.
AI-Enabled Workflow Optimization
AI-driven tools are beginning to support OR workflow monitoring and optimization. Pathway.AI is an example of technology designed to detect workflow status changes and help reduce turnover times.
These tools may become more important as hospitals look to improve OR efficiency.
Vendor-Neutral Integration
Vendor-neutral connectivity is gaining value because hospitals often use equipment from several suppliers.
Platforms that can connect different devices and systems may be preferred by facilities seeking flexibility and long-term scalability.
Geography
This report provides global coverage across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa.
The Global Integrated Operating Room Component Market Report from iData Research answers these questions with device-level analysis, ASP data, company share insights and forecasts through 2032. Use it to evaluate demand, benchmark competitors, understand integrated OR adoption and support commercial planning in the global integrated operating room component market.