Gastroenterology practices operate independently across most American markets, with individual physicians or small groups maintaining ownership and clinical autonomy. This fragmentation persists despite economies of scale available through consolidation: shared administrative infrastructure, enhanced payor contracting leverage, and centralized management systems. When Waud Capital Partners exited GI Alliance in September 2022 at a $2.2 billion valuation, the transaction demonstrated how physician practice management can achieve venture-scale outcomes through systematic aggregation.
The 2018 formation of GI Alliance began with a physician executive team seeking capital and operational support to build a national platform. Reeve Waud and Waud Capital Partners provided the backing, initiating operations across just two states. Four years later, the platform had expanded to 14 states and secured position as the largest independent gastroenterology practice management company in the United States.
Growth Architecture
Physician count growth of nearly five times during Waud Capital’s ownership period reflected aggressive but systematic expansion. Each affiliation required careful evaluation of clinical quality, referral patterns, endoscopy center economics, and physician culture fit. Failed integrations create lasting organizational damage in healthcare services businesses, where physician satisfaction directly affects patient outcomes and retention.
The platform pursued multiple growth vectors simultaneously. Geographic expansion into new markets required recruiting anchor physician groups with strong local reputations. Within existing markets, the company added physicians through individual recruitment and small group affiliations. Ambulatory surgery center development provided ancillary revenue streams while improving patient convenience and procedure economics.
David Neighbours, a partner at Waud Capital, noted the importance of leadership recruitment: the firm worked closely with Dr. Jim Weber and the physician executive team to scale operations nationally while maintaining clinical autonomy at the practice level.
Capital Structure and Exit Mechanics
The September 2022 recapitalization structured as a physician-led buyout, with Apollo Global Management joining as the new institutional capital partner. This transaction type allows physician shareholders to realize liquidity while maintaining ongoing equity participation. For Waud Capital Partners, the structure enabled full exit from its controlling position at a substantial valuation after just four years.
Reeve Waud’s prior experience building Acadia Healthcare from inception provided relevant pattern recognition for the GI Alliance investment. Both involved creating scaled healthcare service platforms in fragmented markets with complex clinical operations and regulatory requirements. The physician alignment models differ—Acadia employed physicians while GI Alliance partnered with independent practitioners—but the fundamental consolidation logic remained consistent.
Industry Context and Replication Potential
Specialty physician practice management has attracted significant private equity capital across ophthalmology, dermatology, orthopedics, urology, and other procedure-intensive specialties. Gastroenterology presents particularly attractive characteristics: aging population demographics drive procedure volumes, colorectal cancer screening guidelines support utilization, and ambulatory surgery center development shifts procedures from hospitals to lower-cost settings with superior economics.
The $2.2 billion valuation for a company formed just four years earlier suggests substantial value creation through operational improvements, beyond multiple expansion alone. Revenue growth, margin improvement through administrative efficiency, and ancillary service development all contributed to the outcome.
For Waud Capital Partners, the GI Alliance exit validated the firm’s ability to identify capable physician executives, provide patient capital supporting aggressive growth, and execute complex transactions in healthcare services. The success has informed subsequent investments in physician-aligned models across multiple specialties within the healthcare portfolio.
Read: Waud Capital Partners Releases First Annual Responsible Investing Report
