Claude Maraoui
Analyst · Cantor Fitzgerald
Sure. Okay. Thanks, Brandon, good to hear you. I will begin that regarding Qbrexza. So just to kind of give a level set and let you know how this brand is doing in terms of execution from the field and the demand that we're generating for this. If you take a look at year 2020, again, using Symphony data, the total prescriptions for that were 92,000. That was under the realm at the time of Dermira, which was part of Eli Lilly. And then in 2021, with Qbrexza, we finished the acquisition, brought over the set towards the middle to the end of May. That year, it ended up hitting 98,000 in prescriptions. And now at a full year through nine months of 2022, right now, if we just average out the last few months of the year, we're looking at approximately anywhere from 115,000 prescriptions to 120,000 prescriptions, if that were to happen on the average, which would be a 20% plus gain over last year. So when I look at it from that perspective, and when we rely on a highly tenured commercial sales team, I see a lot of progress there in that front. And then in terms of revenue and what it's generating for us on a regular quarterly cycle, we're looking at anywhere between $6 million to $7 million. So when we take a look at through nine months, Qbrexza by itself has brought in just about $20 million in three months. We still have this full quarter to go in Q4. And then when you add on top of that as well the additional milestone revenue that we received from our partners Maruho in Japan, a milestone payment of $2.5 million, you're looking at a potential run rate from $28 million to $30 million. So I think that the brand is doing well. It's meeting our expectations. We certainly believe with the successful settlement that we had, that’s going all the way out to 2030, that we have ample room to grow this brand over time. And we've been doing a very strong effort on the DTC front and search engine optimization, and then owning the offices with our providers and dermatologists. So on that front I think Qbrexza is well in a good position. We certainly want to ramp it up some more. And this is a market really that's being created, right? Patients are not even aware that this is really a disease. They're not aware that they can get provided a product that typically has 77% of patients reporting that their underarm sweating is much better to moderately better in just four weeks of utilization. So this has all the characteristics of building a brand that's significantly more than $30 million over time. In terms of DFD-29, this is a -- we have rights to it globally with a few exceptions. I'm going to have Ramsey talk about that. And then also discuss a little bit more about the financial backing regarding DFD-29, perhaps Ernie will jump in there.