Earnings Labs

Longeveron Inc. (LGVN)

Q1 2023 Earnings Call· Fri, May 12, 2023

$0.88

-1.77%

Key Takeaways · AI generated
AI summary not yet generated for this transcript. Generation in progress for older transcripts; check back soon, or browse the full transcript below.

Same-Day

-1.82%

1 Week

+0.00%

1 Month

+9.70%

vs S&P

+4.87%

Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to Longeveron's call today to discuss the company's 2023 First Quarter and Financial Results. All participants are currently in listen-only mode. Following the formal presentation, we will open the call up for a question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference over to James Clavijo, Chief Financial Officer of Longeveron. James, you may now proceed.

James Clavijo

Management

Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Longeveron's first quarter 2023 Call. Today, we will provide a business update and discuss financial results for the first quarter of 2023. Earlier this morning, we issued a press release with these results, which can be found under the Investors section of our website at www.longeveron.com. I am joined on the call today by the following members of Longeveron's management team; Mr. Wa’el Hashad, Chief Executive Officer; Dr. Joshua Hare, Co-Founder, Chief Scientific Officer and Chairman; and Dr. Chris Min, Acting Chief Medical Officer and Consultant to Longeveron. Mr. Hashad will begin with a brief statement and corporate overview, then Dr. Min will provide a review of updates from Longeveron's clinical programs in Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome or HLHS, Alzheimer's disease and aging-related frailty, after which I will review our 2023 first quarter financial results. Last, we will open the call for Q&A As a reminder, during this call, we will be making forward-looking statements, which are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially from these statements. Any such statements should be considered in conjunction with cautionary statements in our press releases and risk factors discussions in our filings with the SEC, including our annual report on Form 10-K and cautionary statements made during this call. We assume no obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements or information. Now, I'd like to turn the call over to Mr. Wa’el Hashad, Chief Executive Officer of Longeveron. Wa’el?

Wa'el Hashad

Management

Thank you, James. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Longeveron first quarter 2023 business update and financial results call. Longeveron is a clinical stage biotechnology company, developing regenerative medicine for unmet medical needs. Our lead investigational product called Lomecel-B is a living cell product made from a specialized cells isolate from the bone marrow of young healthy adult donor aged 18 to 45. These specialized cells are known in the literature as medicinal signaling cells or MSC, and are essential to our endogenous or built-in repair mechanism. MSCs are known to perform a number of complex functions, including the ability to form new tissue. They also home to sites of injury or disease and secrete bioactive factors that are immunomodulatory and regenerative. We believe that Lomecel-B has multiple mechanisms of action that may lead to anti-inflammatory provascular regenerative responses, and therefore, may have broad application for a range of aging-related and rare diseases. Since I joined the company in March, I have been very pleased with the progress we have made in advancing Lomecel-B for our suite of rare diseases and aging indications. We have ongoing trials on Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome or HLHS, Alzheimer's disease and recently, we dosed the first patient in our Phase 2 study evaluating, Lomecel-B for Aging-Related Frailty in Japan. Earlier this week, we were especially pleased to share additional long-term follow-up data from our Phase 1 study of Lomecel-B in patients and children with HLHS. We look forward to sharing additional details on this new data and our ongoing clinical program. In April, Chris Min, departed Longeveron to pursue other opportunities, but Chris has agreed to continue to support our work and consulting capacity until a permanent replacement has been identified through our ongoing search. With that, I would like to turn over the call to Dr. Chris Min, to provide detailed updates on our clinical program. Chris?

Chris Min

Management

Thank you, Wa'el. I'm pleased to be here today to provide an update on Longeveron's clinical progress. First, I will begin with an update on our HLHS program. Earlier this week, we announced new long-term follow-up data from our ELPIS-1 trial of Lomecel-B for patients with HLHS. The data showed, that 100% of the 10 patients who participated in the ELPIS-1 trial, survived and remained heart transplant free for up to five years of age, compared to 20% survival at five years observed in historical clinical trials. These data reinforce the potential, survival benefits for Lomecel-B for patients with this severe disease. As a reminder, HLHS is a rare congenital heart defect that affects approximately 1,000 babies per year in the United States. Infants born with HLHS have been underdeveloped or absent left ventricle, impairing the heart ability to pump blood and left and treated, this condition is always fatal. The current standard of care is extraordinarily burdensome, comprised of three reconstructive operations all before the age of five. Further, even with those surgical interventions, children with HLHS are an elevated risk of short-term mentality, delayed development and long-term complications, including organ failure with only is somewhere between 50% to 60% surviving your adolescents. We hope that Lomecel-B can play out heart to address the burden of HLHS and improve cardiac performance in patients. 10 patients participated in the Phase 1 ELPIS-1 trial during which, Lomecel was injected concurrent with Stage 2 surgery, also known as a Glenn Procedure. Today, all 10 patients have been monitored for at least 3.5 years after treatment. These new data show that 100% of those patients, including two that have reached five years of age have survived after treatment, compared to historical clinical trial results showing that children with HLHS who undergo the Glenn…

James Clavijo

Management

Thanks, Chris. Most of what I'll be covering this morning will be presented in more detail in our condensed financial statements and in our management's discussion and analysis of operations for the quarter ended March 31, 2023, and in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q, which will be filed today. In the first quarter, March 31, 2023, revenue for the first quarter, 2023 was $0.3 million and $0.4 million, respectively, compared to 2022. Clinical trial revenue, which derives from our Bahamas Registry Trial for the three months ended March 31, 2023 and 2022 was $0.2 million and $0.3 million, respectively, representing a 23% decline. Despite an increase in demand for the first quarter 2023 compared to the first quarter 2022 discounts and a one-time price adjustment reduced the overall revenue from our Bahamas Registry Trial. Grant revenue was approximately less than $0.1 million for both the first quarter 2023 and 2022. The Research and development expenses in the first quarter of 2023 were $2.8 million compared to $1.4 million for the same period of 2022. The increase of approximately $1.4 million or 94% was primarily due to an increase of $1.1 million in research and development expenses that were not reimbursable by grants, in addition to the equity-based compensation allocated to research and development expenses increased to $0.3 million for the three months ended March 31, 2023, from $0.1 million for the same period in 2022. General and administrative expenses in the first quarter of 2023 were $1.9 million compared to $2 million for the same period in 2022. The decrease of approximately $0.1 million or 5% was primarily related to a decrease in equity-based compensation expenses allocated to general and administrative expenses. The net loss was $4.6 million in the first quarter of 2023 compared to $3.5 million for the same period in 2022. Cash and short-term investments, was $13.7 million and $19.6 million as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022. Based on the company's current operating plan and financial resources, we believe that our existing cash and short-term investments will be sufficient to cover expenses and capital requirements into the second quarter of 2024. With that, thank you, and I will turn the call over to Wa’el.

Wa'el Hashad

Management

Thank you, James. As you have heard today, we have made a steady progress in advancing Lomecel-B in the first quarter for multiple indications. We look forward to building on this progress in the remainder of 2023. I would now like to open the call for questions. So operator, please let us know if there's any questions.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] So our first question comes from the line of Michael Okunewitch of Maxim Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Michael Okunewitch

Analyst

Thank you very much for taking my question and congrats on the progress. So I'd just like to say if you could give us a bit more of an idea of what you'd be presenting when you do end up presenting this long-term follow-up. Besides survival, are there any other end points that you've been looking up as you're following these patients out to 3.5 years post transplant or post procedure?

Chris Min

Management

Hi, Michael, thank you for the question. So what we have been doing is mainly following up in terms of the -- as you said survival and the lack of intervention by a transplant. We have chosen in the long-term follow-up study not to be looking at a lot of other outcome measures because of the long time frame involved. So we do -- we are continuing, for example, with annual evaluations of RVF, although we do try to find out information just in their clinical care, but it's not part of our long-term follow-up study.

Wa'el Hashad

Management

And Michael, I will add that the intention of the follow-up is mostly for the safety aspect. And of course, when you do a follow-up on safety you have to look at the survival of the children, we also look at transplant, and we look at other things. But we don't look for a specific clinical measure. As Chris mentioned, it becomes much more difficult to perform and also burdensome to these patients.

Michael Okunewitch

Analyst

Yes. Thank you for that. And then just to follow-up on that. Obviously, a 100% overall survival is fantastic to see, but that was also transplant free. So you could provide a bit more color on the importance of preventing cardiac death in these patients? And then what the expected transplant rate would be by that five years old range?

Wa'el Hashad

Management

To be honest with you, Michael, I did have those numbers in my head at one point. I don't want to quote a number that's inaccurate. I would have to come back to you, but there is information on that. And I just don't want to give a wrong number without having the reference in front of me. But there is an expectation that a certain number of patients despite the reconstructive surgery require heart transplant. And so that's one factor and then a certain number security condition and actually unfortunately die because, as you know, hard organs are not always available as needed. But the overall that, we give is kind of a sum of what is expected, like 20% overall either have required a heart transplant or die from the condition.

Michael Okunewitch

Analyst

All right. Thank you. And then just one more for me and I'll hop back into the queue. In terms of the in terms of the pathway in Japan for aging-related frailty, have you given any thoughts to the next steps following your ASRM targeting trial? Is this something where you would follow up with something to demonstrate efficacy and go for a more robust approval, or do you think that the ASRM approval is sufficient to start really commercializing this in Japan?

Wa'el Hashad

Management

So Michael, I think the first step is we want to get the ASRM approval. That definitely will give us access to a good portion of the market. Our goal is definitely always to make sure that the access to the product is available to the wider population. So I would say that, yes, the intention is to go beyond that. But no formal plans have been set in place around what is the next step yet.

Michael Okunewitch

Analyst

All right. Thank you very much for taking my questions there.

Wa'el Hashad

Management

Thank you, Michael.

Operator

Operator

That concludes the question-and-answer session of this call. I would now like to turn the conference call back over to Mr. Wa'el Hashad for closing remarks.

Wa'el Hashad

Management

All right. Well, thank you. On behalf of the company, I would like to thank everyone for their continued interest and support, and wish you all happy and good day today. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. Have a great day ahead. You may now disconnect your lines.