(Reuters) - German health technology company Siemens Healthineers reported on Tuesday second-quarter revenue growth slightly below consensus expectations, as it was hurt by declining revenue in China.

Revenue in the second quarter reached 5.44 billion euros ($5.86 billion), compared with analyst expectations of 5.48 billion euros, according to a consensus compiled by Vara Research.

Adjusted earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) came in at 822 million euros, increasing by 8% year-on-year.

The company, which was spun out from industrial giant Siemens in 2018, provides technology in the healthcare sector, including in the fields of laboratory and care diagnostics, therapeutic imaging and molecular medicine.

The subsidiary grew in its two largest markets, the Americas and EMEA, with a 5% and 8% comparable revenue change respectively.

But revenue in China fell by 14%, with the company citing temporarily delayed customer orders in preceding quarters and the comparison to an outstanding prior-year quarter as reasons.

Siemens Healthineers has been grappling with a Chinese anti-corruption campaign targeting the bribing of doctors in drug and medical equipment sales that began in July 2023.

In its Imaging unit specifically, the company said it saw very strong comparable growth in EMEA and strong growth in Americas, but a revenue decline in China in the low double-digit percentage. The segment saw a 2.6% comparable revenue rise, down from 13% the year prior.

"We assume that Imaging will end the financial year in the lower half of the sales and margin assumptions" CFO Jochen Schmitz said in a media call, adding that expectations of accelerated development in the second half of the year remains unchanged.

For the third quarter, Siemens Healthineers said it anticipates good revenue trend, on the upper half of its 5-7% yearly guidance, excluding antigen tests.

The company confirmed its targets, including a year-on-year revenue growth between 4.5% to 6.5%, or between 5% and 7% excluding revenue from rapid COVID-19 antigen tests.

Siemens Healthineers however raised its guidance for its Diagnostics units, adjusted EBIT margin of between 4% and 6%, from a previously expected range of 2.5% to 4.5%.

The diagnostics unit, which encompasses its laboratory testing and includes the now-ended COVID-19-test business, is currently transitioning away from old laboratory devices and focusing on its "Atellica" platforms.

It reported that the unit's new generation of laboratory lines is growing at double-digit rates.

The med-tech shares fall around 3.47% at 0839 GMT to November 2023 lows.

(Reporting by Marleen Kaesebier and Tristan Veyet in Gdansk, Alexander Hübner in Munich; Editing by Himani Sarkar, Jamie Freed and David Evans)

By Marleen Kaesebier and Tristan Veyet