Neal Fowler
Analyst · Serge Belanger for Needham
Good afternoon and thank you for joining us. On the call with me today are Rich Katz, our Chief Financial Officer; Tushar Shah, our Chief Medical Officer who joined us in May, as well as other senior members of company who are available to answer questions, if needed. Before Rich and I jumped into describing our accomplishments from the second quarter, I wanted to express how excited I am to have Tushar joining our team at a pivotal moment in our company's evolution. Transitioning from Teva Pharmaceuticals as Head of Global Specialty Clinical Development, Tushar brings nearly three decades of clinical development experience across respiratory, immunology and neurology. It's quite clear that he shares our passion for improving patient's lives. We are excited to have a support and helping drive the approval of our products and strengthening our pipeline in the years to come. So, welcome again, Tushar. Like most of the countries the second quarter of 2020 found our team adjusting to a new way of living and working under the threat of a global pandemic. We quickly adapted and continued to build on the momentum from last quarter as we strengthened the company's portfolio, leadership and balance sheet. We had a strong start to the quarter with the FDA's acceptance of the LIQ861 NDA. As a reminder, LIQ861 is inhaled dry powder formulation of treprostinil. A prostacyclin analog used to treat pulmonary arterial hypertension or PAH by targeting the pulmonary arteries. We believe that LIQ861 has the potential to maximize the therapeutic benefits of treprostinil by safely delivering higher doses directly into the lungs, using a convenient palm-sized dry powder inhaler. Our team is well prepared to support the agency's review which from our point of view has not been greatly impacting during this pandemic. With a November 24 PDUFA goal date on the horizon, we will provide relevant updates when needed, but for now all eyes are focused on the end of the year milestone. In addition to agency interactions, we continue to engage the medical community at virtual conferences with clinical data from our pivotal and INSPIRE study. In April, we presented the final safety and tolerability data from INSPIRE trial at the month two time point, confirming that 861 had met the primary endpoints and potentially offers a convenient, safe, well tolerated option for inhaled prostacyclin therapy. And last week, we released data on six exploratory from the same study through a virtual presentation at the American Thoracic Society or ATS annual meeting. While we can't draw any conclusions on efficacy from the open label uncontrolled study, we do believe that the observations further illustrate the value of inhaled traprostonil. Overall, when compared to baseline; we were pleased to see at month two that most patients maintained or improved New York Heart Association Functional Class. Their median six minute walk distance increased. Their quality of life improved as measured by the Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire, and that a greater percentage of subjects met two or three PAH low risk criteria. And we did not see clinically meaningful changes in NT-proBNP. We did observe that the majority of transition patients preferred our 861 dry powder inhaler compared to their Tyvaso inhalation system. The detailed data from both presentations is available on our publication page and continues to generate significant interest among physicians and patients to use 861 if approved. We must also note that the FDA's ability to approve 861 is subject to recent legal actions taken by United Therapeutics. In June United Therapeutics asserted a patent infringement suit against Liquidia under The Hatch-Waxman Act in the U.S District Court of Delaware. While we do not comment on the strategy of our legal actions, we believe these patents are invalid and not infringed by the practice of 861, and we will vigorously defend the suit and our freedom to pursue the commercialization of 861. Lastly, we close the quarter announcing our intent to acquire RareGen and a subsequent raise of $75 million in gross proceeds. The combination of these events clearly establishes Liquidia's commitment to the PAH community, expands our capabilities and strengthens our financial position. We believe that the strategic benefits of the merger once closed are clear. It improves Liquidia's position to provide a broader PAH offering to patients should 861 be approved. It adds a profitable business unit from RareGen operations through the sales of Sandoz's first-to-file generic version of Remodulin, the perennial formulation of traprocenol. We add new board members with deep experience in public companies with commercial revenue and PAH in Paul Manning and Roger Jeffs. And it provides potential synergy with RareGen's commercial strategy, scalable PAH infrastructure, marketing capabilities; and relationships with hospitals, specialty pharmacies; and national and regional payers. RareGen and Liquidia will remain separate entities until the shareholder vote later this year after which both companies will consolidate under a new holding company that is expected to trade under the ticker symbol LQDA on NASDAQ. We look forward to the time where we can speak about our combined business, but for now we'll remain focused on the operations of Liquidia. And to that point, I would now like to turn the call over to Rich to review our second quarter financial summary.