RTW Investments acquired 1,181,990 IRTC shares during Q4 2025, with an estimated position value of $210 million based on the 13F reported at quarter-end.
The position represents 2.1% of RTW’s 13F reportable AUM.
The new stake makes IRTC the fund's eleventh-largest holding (out of 91 total positions).
According to an SEC filing dated Feb. 17, 2026, RTW Investments disclosed a new position in iRhythm Holdings (NASDAQ:IRTC) after acquiring 1,181,990 shares during the fourth quarter. The fund’s quarter-end position in IRTC was valued at $210 million.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue (TTM) | $747.1 million |
| Net Income (TTM) | -$44.6 million |
| Price (as of market close Mar. 19, 2026) | $117.78 |
| One-Year Price Change | 14.2% |
iRhythm Holdings, Inc. is a digital healthcare company specializing in innovative cardiac monitoring solutions. Its core offering, the Zio platform, leverages wearable biosensors and advanced analytics to improve arrhythmia detection and diagnosis.
RTW Investments isn't a generalist fund making a casual bet -- it's a specialized healthcare and life sciences investor with deep sector expertise, which makes this move worth a closer look. Opening a brand-new position of this size signals real conviction: at roughly $210 million, the IRTC stake becomes RTW’s eleventh-largest holding -- representing about 2.1% of the fund's total 13F-reported portfolio -- a meaningful commitment from a manager that already holds concentrated positions in names like Madrigal Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:MDGL) and Insmed (NASDAQ:INSM).
iRhythm Holdings sits at an interesting intersection of medical devices and digital health. Its flagship Zio patch -- a discreet, wearable cardiac monitor -- has carved out a strong niche in ambulatory ECG monitoring, a market that's likely to grow as remote patient monitoring becomes more standard in cardiology. Unlike a traditional Holter monitor, the Zio system collects continuous data over days or weeks and runs it through a cloud-based analytics platform, giving physicians a much richer picture of a patient's heart rhythm. That combination of hardware, software, and services gives iRhythm a recurring revenue model that can be stickier than a simple device sale.
For retail investors interested in the digital health space, iRhythm represents a focused play on cardiac care innovation. Those who prefer broader exposure might also consider ETFs like the Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEMKT:XLV) or the iShares U.S. Medical Devices ETF (NYSEMKT:IHI), which provide diversified access to companies operating across health technology and medical devices. Either way, when a specialized healthcare fund with RTW's track record makes a move this size into a new name, it's a signal worth researching.
Andy Gould has positions in Argenx Se. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Argenx Se. The Motley Fool recommends Protagonist Therapeutics. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.