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ClearPoint Neuro, Inc. (CLPT)

Q3 2022 Earnings Call· Tue, Nov 8, 2022

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to the ClearPoint Neuro, Inc. Third Quarter 2022 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this call is being recorded. Comments made on this call may include statements that are forward-looking within the meaning of securities laws. These forward-looking statements may include, without limitation, statements related to anticipated industry trends, the company's plans, prospects and strategies, both preliminary and projected and management's expectations, beliefs, estimates or projections regarding future results of operations. Actual results or trends could differ materially. The company undertakes no obligation to revise forward-looking statements for new information or future events. For more information, please refer to the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021 and the company's quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended June 30, 2022, both of which have been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the company's quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended September 30, 2022, which the company intends to file with the Securities and Exchange Commission on or before November 14, 2022. All the company's filings may be obtained from the SEC or the company's website at www.clearpointneuro.com. It is now my pleasure to introduce Joe Burnett, Chief Executive Officer. Thank you, sir. You may begin.

Joe Burnett

Analyst

Thank you, and thank you to all of our investors and analysts on today's call for being a part of the ClearPoint vision and journey. Our mission and our priorities are to help restore quality of life to patients and their families, who are suffering from some of the most debilitating neurological disorders imaginable. We cannot do this without your support. In the third quarter of 2022, we continued to make progress across our four pillar growth strategy, including biologics and drug delivery, functional neurosurgery navigation, therapy and access products and in achieving global scale. Despite a continued high cancellation rate due to COVID, historically high surgeon transitions and daily supply chain and hospital staffing challenges, our team was able to achieve near record revenue of $5.1 million for the third [Technical Difficulty] representing 13% year-over-year growth. As a company, we believe we remain well capitalized with over $40 million in cash and short term investments, and we'll continue to execute against our strategy and carefully manage our expenses. We continue to expect total revenue for 2022 to be in the range of $21 million to $22 million, representing 30% to 35% growth for the year depending on timing of revenue recognition for some capital sales and biologic services. I will now turn the call over to Danilo, our CFO to review our financial performance in the third quarter, after which I will add some detail to our four pillar growth strategy. Danilo? Danilo D’Alessandro: Thank you, Joe, and thank you all for being here with us today. Looking at the third quarter 2022 results, total revenue was $5.1 million for the three months ended September 30, 2022, and $4.6 million for the three months ended September 30, 2021, which represents 13% growth versus the third quarter of 2021. Our…

Joe Burnett

Analyst

Thank you, Dino. The third quarter of 2022 was another quarter of progress and execution against our four pillar (ph) strategy. This included FDA clearance of three new navigation and therapy products, the addition of multiple new biotech partners, the installation of systems at new hospitals, and the hiring of talented professionals across multiple functions, bringing our total direct employee count to just under 100. This is not including the support and teamwork we receive from our pharma, biotech and device partners that make us look and feel much larger. Let's break that progress down into those four growth pillars. First, our biologics and drug delivery team continued to add additional partners and services into the third quarter, adding multiple new partners to our accounts, which is now approximately 50 active relationships in the space. We continue to keep pace with our past two years history of adding approximately one new partner every month. We've also hired multiple new team members and expertise to the biologics and drug delivery team, increasing the scope of services we can provide, and in turn, the total potential revenue opportunity with these pharma partners prior to commercialization. This is an important distinction that I want to make sure to highlight. If one of our partners or even one of the programs within a partner, would purchase the entire suite of products and services that our team can now provide, the total value of those products and services from initiation of the program through the completion of a Phase 3 clinical trial could potentially add up to $10 million per program before the drug or biologic is even approved. Therefore, our newly added capabilities will allow to access a total addressable market of several hundred million dollars in the pre-commercial space. This is one of…

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Marc with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.

William Wood

Analyst

Hi. This is William Wood on for Marc Weissenberg of B. Riley Securities. Thank you for taking our questions and congratulations on a really productive quarter. We've got a couple of -- I'll start with we've got a couple as I said, so I'll start with the first one. So just curious if you can talk about how the conversations with your BDD partners have continued to involved. And as the partners move from preclinical to the clinical phase, are you seeing any changes to the decision making process?

Joe Burnett

Analyst

No, William. Thanks for the question. So obviously, we're having conversations on a daily basis. In fact, whether it's an introductory call or an audit of our facility or a live product demonstration, these are happening, if not on a daily basis then certainly a weekly basis. And I can't say that they've changed materially in any way. I think many, many companies, I'd say if there are any differences to historical amounts one has been around sort of frustrations with the same things that we're seeing in the field relative to hospital delays and supply chain disruptions. That are certainly slowing things down to some extent, but not stopping them like we saw back in April of 2020. So I think if anything that's still a positive that these things are moving forward. And then in some of cases, we've heard that some partners have had to sort of prioritize some of their internal programs. Just to go ahead and kind of reduce the burn and save capital, especially some of the smaller companies that might be -- might see a capital raise on the horizon. They might be forced to slow down their second and third options and focus their attention and detail on option number one in their platform. But outside of that, there's no other kind of large material differences I would see. If anything, I think people are more and more excited about the space, given now that PTC and Upstaza has been the first gene therapy approved to the brain. It's certainly open doors for us and that's that we expect to see that pace of new partners continue in the year ahead.

William Wood

Analyst

Right. That makes a lot of sense. And then with regard to the your Prism Neuro Laser Therapy System, can you lay out how you expect penetration in the market to evolve over the next say 12 to 18 months? And specifically, how do you go about converting surgeons from incumbents in the market? And then what are the primary factors driving their decisions?

Joe Burnett

Analyst

Yeah. I mean, I think we're going to probably operate within a limited market release for the balance of this year and at least through the first half of 2023. I think, this is our first therapy product and we want to make sure that we're doing it in the most responsible manner ever. So I see us starting primarily with our existing users that are already using ClearPoint navigation for their laser cases. If, you know, I don't expect us to always convert all of the business at a hospital over to ClearPoint, but I think our reputation in the market and the quality of our products has earned us the right to at least get a trial. And most of the surgeons that we've spoken to at this point at our active centers are more than happy to give us a chance. And I think one of the biggest components of why they're willing to use our technology is again the team that we've established and the competency and credibility of our clinical specialist team. The process of us having one person that can be responsible for the entire procedure. Starting at the beginning with the navigation and all the way through to the end with the delivery of the therapy is something that's very attractive with hand off and responsibility halfway through. So I think that's going to be a major component for us. And we're very, very excited about this laser market and excited to get started. As I mentioned, we do expect the first couple of cases to really happen here in the next month or so.

William Wood

Analyst

Awesome. We look forward to see how that pans out. With -- can you talk a little about how your domestic versus ex-U.S. expansion is progressing. I know you've mentioned Europe a little bit. And do you expect to see any material changes to either U.S. or obviously ex-U.S. in the near term? And then additionally, can you update us on your expansion efforts in China?

Joe Burnett

Analyst

Yeah. Sure. Thanks. So domestically, I think that's where most of the revenue dollar growth is we expect in the next couple of years as well, whether it's through our laser program, through new customers that are in doing MRI guided DBS and MRI guided laser procedure and eventually our expansion into the operating room as well. So the U.S. is still going to be the primary focus. Arguably, we're going into Europe a little bit earlier than we normally would. But again, this is in order to support our biologics and drug delivery customers that are interested in enrolling clinical trials across Europe with local researchers especially for our European partners. So where we don't expect a massive revenue opportunity for DBS or laser ablation in the near term in Europe. We are expecting to initiate a number of clinical trials in the next couple of years in Europe. And in most cases, the pharma companies we're working with don't want the very first patient in their trial to be a -- their first patient where the doctors using ClearPoint. So we do a number of role in patients as typical where they might do a biopsy, a laser procedure, and DBS procedure to get familiar with ClearPoint before they start enrolling those patients. So most of our revenue opportunity in the near term is going to be around clinical trial sites that are becoming familiar with our technology in Europe. We do have approval in Singapore. We do have approval in Israel at this point. And we have started our submission process in a number of other countries, including Brazil, for example. And as -- but in each of those situations, it's not that we're trying to penetrate the entire country of Brazil, for example. It would be the same center of excellence model where we would have our system installed in one or two centers, and then we'd be transporting these patients with chronic diseases to get treated at these centers of excellence, not at their local hospital across the street. And I think you specifically asked on China. China, we're evaluating a couple of other options. Again, we have the luxury, I would say, although not confirmed in that, [Technical Difficulty] it is focused on centers of excellence, meaning we're not trying to deploy our technology across an entire country, but maybe at only even one hospital or two hospitals in a country. And there's actually a number of sort of alternative regulatory pathways, whereas it is a very, very focused technology like what we're trying to deploy. There's ways to accelerate that access to technology. So that's something we're exploring in different countries, but most of our OUS expansion is really at the request of our biologics partners and not necessarily something we're driving on our own. That's hopefully that helps, William?

William Wood

Analyst

Yeah, absolutely. And then finally from us, can you talk about how your COVID restrictions impacted you in the quarter and maybe just quantify the drag if there was any? I know you sort of touched on this already.

Joe Burnett

Analyst

Yeah. I mean, I don't have too much to add other than, it's always the worst surprise when you show up at the hospital that morning all ready to go and the patient fails their COVID test and has to postpone for a couple of weeks because in general, we've then lost the airfare, we've lost the day of capacity from our clinical team and we've lost the MRI day. So it's kind of painful for us. It's great. We don't lose the patient. We're still able to treat them and help them in the next two weeks. However, that day we lose the case. And historically, pre-COVID, our sort of routine cancellation or postponement rate was always in the 8% to 12% range. Since COVID initiated and sort of has calmed down from the initial stoppage, that postponement rate has been north of 30%/ So the good news is, we're scheduling more cases, but there's still a very high percentage that currently are being canceled. And I think we're seeing this in a number of different avenues. But in our case, if the patient has COVID or our specialist has COVID or the surgeon has COVID or the MRI tech has COVID, if any one of those four essential parts of the equation, test positive for that or the flu or RHC or anything like that, we end up losing the case that day, which is unfortunate.

William Wood

Analyst

Makes sense. Okay.

Joe Burnett

Analyst

So William to continue on that too. We're going into the winter months to kind of expect sort of this depressed or high postponement rate to continue at least until the spring, so certainly for the next two quarters that's kind of what we've built into our plan.

William Wood

Analyst

Okay, understandable. Well, that's it from us. I appreciate it and congratulations again on your quarter.

Joe Burnett

Analyst

Right. Thanks, William.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Frank with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Frank Takkinen

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Hey. Thanks for taking my questions. Wanted to start with your new commentary around biologic and drug delivery total revenue per asset potential. I think you call out $10 million on the call. I was hoping you could walk us through that figure in a little bit more detail and more specifically talking to the cadence of recognition across the drug's development. My assumption is once it becomes Phase 3, it becomes a much larger revenue opportunity, but maybe just kind of walk us through how that $10 million is recognized over the life of development for specific assets?

Joe Burnett

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Yeah. Sure. Thanks. So maybe building backwards since you brought up the clinical trial revenue itself. I must say typical because a lot of our pharma companies are still learning. But to put in perspective, if you remember the study that the FDA had approved, for Voyager Therapeutics to treat Parkinson's disease, which again is a moderate sized market opportunity in the grand scheme of things, an opportunity that would require a sham arm because there are alternative treatments to the disease. That's kind of the best barometer we have of what normal might look like for trial design. And for their Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials that they were granted to operate in parallel, I believe the target number of patients in those trial were about 220. Okay. So if you look at the Phase 2, Phase 3 aspect of it, we were selling approximately $20,000 of equipment into that trial between navigation and cannulas. So 4 million of it is really product related revenue that you would see in the Phase 2 and Phase 3. So kind of the outward years just before commercialization. So that's sort of one bucket. Backing up from there, you have to do your safety trials, your Phase 1 and a couple of Phase 1a trials, things like that, which could be anywhere from 30 to I think 48 patients is a typical size that we've seen with some of our existing partners. So again, with that same $20,000 per case estimate, that's about $1 million for kind of that Phase 1 and Phase 1 SAP study, Phase 1a, Phase 1b. So probably 50 -- I'm sorry, $5 million of the $10 million I would expect to be within the clinical trial product category of that estimate. So everything else is coming…

Frank Takkinen

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

No, that's perfect. I was hoping that just as an extension to that question of your 50 partners if you're thinking about an approximate number, how many of those could be approaching a Phase 2 or Phase 3 trial in the next call it 12 to 24 months to try and tease out which ones are approaching that inflection point?

Joe Burnett

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Yeah. I mean, 2023, I think we're going to see the initiation of a lot more of the Phase 1 studies, for example. So in the next 15 months, I think it's going to be highly focused there, with maybe a couple of Phase 2s that begin. However, if the timing holds or the timeline holds for a number of these programs, then you could see 5 to 10 in that Phase 2 range starting probably in 2024. I think that's kind of realistic based on where some of our partners are. The one caveat I'd add to that though is that, some of these -- there is an alternative where in with some of these very rare pediatric disorders, you don't necessarily have to go through the same gamut. So it could be a different, there could actually be commercialization of some by 2024, albeit there's kind of smaller rare disease opportunities. But those kind of follow a slightly less rigorous pathway.

Frank Takkinen

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Got it. Okay. That's helpful. Maybe switching over to the laser to get a more color there. You previously spoken to a concept of 100 to 100 (ph) systems each doing 100 procedures, I'd call it, on average 10,000 per procedure, making for $100 million revenue business. Maybe speak to the lasers specific contribution to that equation and how impactful that the launch and scaling of the laser can be?

Joe Burnett

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Yeah, I think it'll be a very important launch for us. Again, we're not trying to kind of overpromise the speed at which we're going to go. One thing to consider in our clearance that CLS got with the FDA around Prism is that the first clearance is actually only for three [indiscernible] scanners. It does not yet include the 1.5 [indiscernible]. So that's about half of our customers that are on the 3T magnets and sort of where we're starting first. We would expect the 1.5 that proved probably early 2024 I think is realistic. But that's why we're going to be operating in a little bit longer of a limited market release. But if we can get to the point where we're opening kind of new -- a couple of sites each quarter and trial and getting some ramp and some stickiness with the technology. If you think about the next 15 months, that's kind of the speed at which we hope to go to. If you fast forward into the future and you think about your question, which was the contribution to when we're $100 million business, how much of that is laser and laser navigation. I think this could easily be a quarter of that number. So probably 25% of that is sort of what we would expect ballpark, which could go faster, it could go slower based on what our biologics business does. But we're counting on this to be a meaningful part of our equation and important part of our business.

Frank Takkinen

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Okay. That's helpful. Thanks for the color. I'll stop there.

Joe Burnett

Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Okay. Thanks, Frank.

Operator

Operator

We have no more questions at this time.

Joe Burnett

Analyst

All right. Well, once again, thank you to everyone that’s interested in being a part of our team's journey here at ClearPoint. We recognize the challenging global environment that we are all forced to live in today. We assure you that we are going to help patients around the world as best as we can by keeping our heads down, staying focused and executing against our strategy to develop products that truly improve the quality of life for our patients and their families. As management, we will react quickly and thoughtfully to future challenges, which we realize are always around the corner. Good night, everyone.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your call. You may disconnect at this time. Once again, this concludes your call and you may disconnect at this time.