CareDx, Inc (CDNA) on Q1 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Greetings, and welcome to the CareDX, Inc. First Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Greg Chodaczek, from Gilmartin Group. Please go ahead. Greg Chodaczek: Thank you. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today. Earlier today, CareDx released financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2021. The release is currently available on the company's website at www.caredx.com. Reg Seeto, Chief Executive Officer; and Ankur Dhingra Chief Financial Officer will host this afternoon's call. Reginald Seeto: Thanks, Greg. Good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us. Welcome to CareDx’s first quarter 2021 earnings conference call. We had a very strong start to the year with a record first quarter result. Our vision of being leader in the transplant ecosystem continues to resonate as we remained focused on the transplant patient. As the largest transplant focused company in the U.S. we're proud to be the leader in innovation by bringing the first and best in class transplant specific technologies through AlloMap gene-expression profiling and AlloSure donor-derived cell-free DNA. Notably we are again first in driving new trends at innovation. We recently introduced the first and only recognized multimodality approach with heart care, which laid the foundation for kidney care in future years in other organs. I am proud really company continues to invest to bring innovation, especially the sort of transplant which is often overlooked. As the CEO of CareDx, I am continually being told or should I say reminded that we are the transplant company. On behalf of CareDx I'm proud to accept that title and association. Ankur Dhingra: Thank you Reg. Hello everyone, I'm very excited about being a part of such a dynamic organization. Over the past several years, CareDx has transformed itself into a premier diagnostics company and the leader in healthcare solutions for transplant patients and caregivers. In my first few weeks here at CareDx my conviction has only grown stronger that CareDx is uniquely positioned to realize this tremendous opportunity. Turning to the income statement. Our first quarter of 2021 testing services revenue increased 89% year-over-year to $59.3 million. The first quarter testing services revenue growth was driven by AlloSure Kidney and AlloMap Heart patient results and an excellent start to AlloSure Heart. Our first quarter product revenue increased 23% year-over-year to $5.8 million and our digital and other revenue was $2.3 million. Moving to gross margins. For the first quarter the gross margin was 68%, compared to a gross margin of 68% in the same period of 2020. The non-GAAP gross margins for the quarter was 70%, compared to 71% in the prior year's quarter. As you may recall, last year in Q2 we successfully built our RemoTraC service, which has been and continues to remain a big enabler of transplant patients to limit exposure to COVID. For the first quarter of 2021, net loss was $0.7 million, compared to a net loss of $5.8 million dollars in the same period last year. Our net loss per share was $0.01 for the quarter compared to a net loss per share of $0.14 in the first quarter last year. On non-GAAP net income, our first quarter net income was $7.2 million compared to a non-GAAP net income of $0.2 million in the same period. The basic and diluted non-GAAP net income per share for the first quarter of 2021 was $0.14 compared to zero in the same period of 2020. As a reminder, we define adjusted EBITDA as non-GAAP net income before interest, income tax, depreciation, amortization and other expense. For the first quarter of 2021, we recorded positive adjusted EBITDA of $7.7 million, compared to an adjusted EBITDA gain of $0.2 million last year in the same quarter. Our focus remains on driving top line growth, and continuing to expand our reach in the transplant ecosystem through our innovative products, services and a rich pipeline, and also efficiently scaling our business. Moving to the balance sheet, cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities at March 31, 2021 was $374 million. As Reg mentioned, we strengthened our cash position in the quarter as we successfully completed a public offering of approximately 2.2 million shares of common stock raising roughly $189 million in net proceeds. In January, we repaid the CMS advance payment of approximately $20.5 million in full. Adjusting for this CMS repayment and timing of certain annual outflows, our operating cash flow was neutral for the quarter. Turning to guidance, we are updating our 2021 revenue expectations to reflect our strong first quarter results and continued strong demand for our solutions. As of today, we anticipate $270 million to $280 million in revenue for the year. This represents an increase of $15 million at the midpoint versus our earlier guidance. Our new guidance balances the uncertainties around the ongoing pandemic, and the continued market penetration of our products and services. We are very excited about the opportunities in front of us and the team is off to an excellent start to 2021. With that, I will open the call for questions. Operator: The first question is from Brandon Couillard from Jefferies. Please go ahead. Brandon Couillard: Hey thanks. Good afternoon. Reginald Seeto: Hi Brandon. Brandon Couillard: Reg and Ankur, if I just annualize the first quarter revenue that would get me to the low end of the new range for the year which is $270 million, which was seem pretty conservative and sort of look out over the balance of the year, what are some of the puts and takes that would get you to the high end or above that new revenue outlook for the year? And Ankur any update in terms of some of the OpEx items for 2021? Thanks. Reginald Seeto: Yes Brandon, firstly, thanks for the questions. We were really excited about the quarter we just had. It was a great Q1 just getting cooperation show hard for the first quarter, and we've got three unique business lines which continue to grow at different rates. Really excited about the testing services which is growing well above the 50% range, the products business which is in the 10% to 20% range and also we have also in single digits the digital business. So as we look at that I'm going to let Ankur comment a bit about the actual guidance range that we have set. Ankur Dhingra: Yes, sure. So Brandon, as we were looking at the expectations for the year and considering that we're off to an excellent start for the quarter as Reg was saying, we saw great execution by the team, an excellent first quarter, both on AlloSure Heart, the heart care as well as the penetration in the nephrology setting. So very, very pleased with the momentum there. And then as we started looking at the entire year expectation kind of took our first quarter performance and then grazed the remainder of the year. At the low end, you're right, we anticipated a continued strong performance similar to what we had in Q1 represents that lower end, and then high end, that represents our ability to continue to penetrate in that market especially around the nephrology setting. Our aim is to keep working that and as we continue to make further progress on the nephrology market, we'll keep looking at it through the year. Brandon Couillard: Got you. Then in terms of AlloSure Heart, the 5900 tests that you ran in the first quarter, what's the capture rate in terms of number of heart patients that are getting an AlloSure heart test as well and has the mix changed at all in terms of the Medicare versus commercial payers, and have you begun a dialogue with some of those commercial payers yet or is that less of a near term probably? Thanks. Reginald Seeto: Yes, we were, again AlloSure Heart we had the first full three months and for us it was really exciting to have that fully rolled out, particularly if you look at the different attachment rates increased during this quarter. I'll hand over to Ankur to make a full comment. Ankur Dhingra.: Yes from a heart care perspective, we saw slightly north of 80% attach rate for our new product there on AlloSure Heart, and we were still, there is a Medicare mix in it and there is a fairly high sizable mix of commercial participation there as well. We expect the commercial side to slowly convert to revenue over a period of time. Brandon Couillard: Reg, I'll leave it there. Thank you. Operator: The next question is from Andrew Cooper from Raymond James. Please go ahead. Andrew Cooper: Hi guys, thanks for the questions. I guess really first, I want to focus in on gross margins for a second here on the testing services side, it was down sequentially but you had more tests and importantly, more AlloSure Heart that I would have thought would really be driving that number higher. Is there anything to think about there, whether it's some of the data generation costs and sort of R&D costs that that are captured in gross margin or how should we be thinking about that metric, and would have expect all else being equal that maybe it was trending a little bit higher than sort of what we see in the last two quarters? Reginald Seeto: Yes, so maybe I'll just clarify first and I'll hand it over to Ankur. As a reminder, with AlloSure Heart we had prior to getting commercial approval, we had 60% of these testing done on a research basis and now it's up to, as I mentioned above 80%. So we've actually the test previously there on the research side were not included in terms of the numbers we provided. So I think now what you see with that 5900 is, including those at baseline for example, 60% over there. So I'm going to hand over to Ankur to answer that. Ankur Dhingra: Yes so, on the margin side, but we don't see any structural issues there it is one. We continue to invest further in RemoTraC with our direct to patient part of the journey. And that part reflects primarily in the testing services side of things. So, moving forward, we do expect as we build out RemoTraC, there will be some more investments through the year, but overall from our ability to drive margins purely from our testing services perspective remains intact. Andrew Cooper: Okay, okay, that's helpful. And then maybe just clarify, I know you said Reg 2Q and on the tech assessment on lung, but can you give us a little bit more flavor on what you think payment could look like when it could start and sort of what the process from there is, and then maybe just lay out how you think about sort of the next phase what's after lung if that was easy changes, or the way you approach CMS and approach doing the timing on any of the other organs or anything to that effect? Reginald Seeto: Yes I think that we afford the universal LCD, we believe is the market leader. It allows us now to bring other solid organs in the fray and lung is obviously the next one that would be, we'd be bringing into the transplant community, as mentioned in the prepared statements. This discussion will happen during the course of this quarter and we're looking forward to those discussions. It sort of brings forward some of the initial guidance we had given in the prior quarter which was we expect those discussions having in Q3. So we're really excited by this because it creates this pathway for faster coverage for different solid organs. And I think you know that we also have liver as part of the MAPLE study that we have with AlloSure Liver. And obviously you should consider that all other organs, it's all fair game in that sense that we'll be looking at as well if we haven't already started. So I think you all know us as leaders in the space and we'll continue to bring AlloSure across all those solid organs. So that's probably that approach won't change and once we do then we'll bring the multimodality pathway. Andrew Cooper: Okay, and just to be clear, nothing from lung included in the guide, correct? Reginald Seeto: Correct. Andrew Cooper: There has been cost up there and I'll follow up offline. I appreciate it. Reginald Seeto: Thank you. Operator: The next question is from Alex Nowak of Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please go ahead. Alex Nowak: All right, great, good afternoon everyone. I just wanted to follow up to Andrew's last point there, the LCD change, just any comment on how the announcement changes the timelines for kidney care here, because this has always been a AlloMapp Kidney has always been the kind of idea out there, but it's always been a few years out. So what's that you are going to do on a AlloMapp Kidney, how could this pull forward any sort of announcements of reimbursement there and just what to expect over the next couple of years? Reginald Seeto: Yes, Alex, it's a great question, because I think, we were excited when we saw the universal, because now it lays out the pathway of multimodality but also recognizes the value that multimodality can bring by demonstrating this incremental clinical utility, and it's the first and only company that's done that so far in heart care. We were really excited to see that included as part of the universal LCD. And so what that means is that we've actually, that's what we're doing with kidney care. Kidney care actually looks at the addition of multiple technologies to increase that clinical utility, and now this universal LCD provides that pathway. So as we learn more about it, I think this brings forward, the potential for how we would view our multimodality offerings given the A, the precedence will set the deal, so the guidance there provided as part of that. So I think that's probably, your assumption I think is correct. Alex Nowak: And the studies there are still supposed to read out end of this year, early next year on AlloMapp Kidney? Reginald Seeto: Yes, the study will actually complete by the enrollment by the end of the year, but there are datasets we can obviously out and obviously one of the key things is developing a publication. Alex Nowak: So, yes, okay, that makes sense, and maybe the previous, some of the clinical utility data on KOAR that you're going to present at the American Transplant Congress just any particular endpoints, we should be watching for us as EGFR improvement or graft survival? Reginald Seeto: Yes that tail endpoints that we'll describe and I think, thinking of what we've seen also ADMIRAL study was not a bad way as a proxy of looking at it. So I think in our correlations with EGFR is the right way to think about it, looking at the formation of is not a bad way to think about it. So I think, also looking at even what are the learnings from different types of interpretations subclinical rejections. So, I think as you go through the different learnings, which were highlighted through ADMIRAL, which was also a long term multicenter study and I think one could expect to get some parallels from that. Alex Nowak: That's great. And just one more question if I could, just on the vaccine data and transplant patients, we've seen the results have been suboptimal. How do you think that influences the use of AlloSure now and throughout the standard of care going forward? Because last year and even Q1 here, it seems like there was a real pull forward non-invasive options, do you think the vaccine data is going to make that dynamic stick even more going forward? Reginald Seeto: Yes, no, absolutely. I mean I think we have -- what we have learned in -- I've been in the field for the last four weeks talking to two different doctors and that's being one of the key data points that's come up with, how patients aren't fully vaccinated and there was concern with these patients in how we can continue to monitor and even with the vaccines that are available. So, yes, no I'd say I think your -- again Alex your interpretation is correct. Alex Nowak: Okay, understood. I appreciate the update. Thank you. Reginald Seeto: Thanks again, Alex. Operator: The next question is from Steven Mah from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Steven Mah: Great, thank you. Congrats on a great quarter and great to meet you Ankur. AnkurDhingra: Yes, likewise, thanks. Steven Mah: So, yes, my first question, so the patient engagement initiative, the direct to patient and community nephrologists with Transplant Connect, AlloCare and others, patient care managers. So, these things would be really working to drive adherence and new patient adoption. Could you give us a sense of which one of those levers is having the most impact on your volume growth? Reginald Seeto: Steven, it's Reg. No, I think all the different areas you mentioned, particularly outpatient care managers, the use of the AlloCare platform, they're all contributing to mention here . I think as a reminder, when outpatient care managers actually do the scheduling and the calling the adherence is double that of when the center does it. So, there's actually this premium service that's offered and also this relationship that’s built in, it's all about building this overall relationship with making that stickiness be there as well and that's where that AlloCare platform comes in. So, I think all things are contributing, but I think it will start with the patient care manager. Steven Mah: Okay, got it, all right, yes that does that makes sense. And then maybe pivoting over to AlloCell, can you provide any updates on your AlloCell partnerships? I know you're limited to what you can say with your partners but maybe without naming names, could we get a sense on the number partners you have? And how should we be thinking about the timing of new partnerships and also clinical milestones and how you're going to update investors on progress in AlloCell? Reginald Seeto: AlloCell Therapy and AlloCell business is one which is, had a lot of, as we mentioned excitement interest as we've engaged with partners. I think we continue to see strong interest and participation on partners. I think there were two variables we mentioned, one is, when we can probably disclose those. But the second also is also a bit dependent on their progression through different clinical stage milestones. So, for example, if there was a partner whose study did not progress for example, and so then that limited the very progress he was making there. So, as we go through a new field which we think is absolutely exciting, this progression is absolutely important for us that these partners continue to evolve through the clinic. But overall I think we are still holding a strong position being the first in this space, we see strong interest, and I think it's going to be a partnership and learning, working with these different companies that are creating that breakthrough. Steven Mah: Okay, great, thanks Reg for the color. And final one for Ankur, so are we were talking about RemoTraCa a little bit. You guys are currently at 40%, what do you think the steady state level of RemoTraC will be going forward? And how do you think about the long term impact on gross margins and your long-term goal of getting to 75% gross margins given the additional cost of the remote phlebotomy? Thank you. AnkurDhingra: Yes, I think we are at the levels that we are at now in that 40%, give or take a few points range. And our expectation is that that's a good run rate. We don't expect substantial changes here in the near term. And that's our view from the long term perspective as well, is to say the size of the investment that we've made substantially represents a good structure for us for the medium term here and enables us continuing improvement in the gross margins, especially from a path to 75% perspective. Yes, I think we've made majority of the investment there. Steven Mah: Okay, great. Thanks and congrats again. AnkurDhingra: Thanks. Operator: This concludes the question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Reg Seeto for closing remarks. Reginald Seeto: Again, on behalf of CareDx I want to say how excited we are to have such a great strong start to 2021. Our mission is clear on how we bring innovation and continue to make a difference in the lives of transplant patients in terms of increasing their long-term outcomes, survival of their organs. And so with that, I want to thank everyone for dialing and staying, listening to how we have progressed as a company and we’ll catch you during the subsequent fall calls. Thank you. Operator: This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.
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