DEPLOY

Buying guide

Versius vs mBos TKA System in 2026

Comparing 2 humanoid robots across availability, pricing, capabilities, and verified deployments. Current as of 2026.

Attribute
ManufacturerCMR SurgicalMonogram Technologies
Form factorsurgicalsurgical
Maturitycommercialresearch
Availabilityinternal-onlyenterpriseinternal-onlyenterprise
PriceNot announcedNot announced
Capability claims
Brain
Verified deployments2CMR Surgical, CMR Surgical1Ahmedabad
Privacy practices
Sources on file189

Editorial summaries

Versius

CMR Surgical's Versius (and Versius Plus) is a modular, multi-arm, soft-tissue minimal-access surgical robot from UK-based CMR Surgical, and the international-soft-tissue archetype of DEPLOY's surgical cluster. Its modular multi-arm architecture is a deliberate contrast to the monolithic design of Intuitive's da Vinci: it is teleoperated and software-driven, capturing telematic, video, and outcome data. On regulatory status (a correction worth recording): Versius is US-FDA-cleared for cholecystectomy via a De Novo authorization in October 2024, with Versius Plus cleared via 510(k) on December 18, 2025 (also cholecystectomy) and a gynecology 510(k) submitted April 29, 2026 (pending); it is not broadly 'US-pending', only the gynecology indication is. It is CE-marked and commercial across Europe, Latin America, AMEA, and Australia. As enterprise B2B surgical equipment sold to hospitals, there is no consumer price.

mBos TKA System

The Monogram mBos TKA System is a robotic total-knee-arthroplasty platform from Monogram Technologies, a Zimmer Biomet subsidiary since October 2025. It is the autonomy-boundary case of DEPLOY's surgical cluster: unlike the AI-augmented, surgeon-controlled systems (Stryker Mako, Smith+Nephew CORI, Zimmer Biomet ROSA), where the surgeon makes the cuts, the cleared mBos is semi-autonomous, with a robotic arm (built on a KUKA arm) executing the bone cuts itself under AI control within a surgeon-approved, patient-specific CT-based plan and active surgeon supervision. There is no consumer price: it is pre-commercial enterprise surgical equipment that has not sold any units. Several verified-vs-claimed cap-flags matter. It received FDA 510(k) clearance on March 17, 2025, but the exact K-number could not be independently verified, and the 'semi-autonomous' characterization is sourced to Zimmer Biomet and trade coverage rather than the FDA letter (Monogram's own clearance release described it more softly as robotic-assisted TKA). A separate fully-autonomous, hands-free, saw-based version is not FDA cleared and remains in development, targeted around late 2027 or 2028; its first live-patient procedure (July 26, 2025, Ahmedabad, India) was under an India CDSCO 102-procedure investigation, not US FDA, a single index case with no verified peer-reviewed outcomes. Monogram was founded by orthopedic surgeon Dr. Doug Unis (chief medical officer and founder, not CEO; the pre-acquisition CEO was Benjamin Sexson) and was acquired by Zimmer Biomet at about $168M enterprise value plus contingent value rights, with commercialization alongside Zimmer Biomet implants targeted for early 2027. The registry records it at research maturity: cleared but pre-commercial, with its headline fully-autonomous capability still in development.


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