Paul Gudonis
Analyst · Alliance Global Partners. Please go ahead
Thanks, Kim. Good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us. As we reported in our earnings press release, we had a very solid quarter with year-over-year growth in revenue and in all of our key operating metrics. More specifically, we continue to increase shipments of our MyoPro device and to build our patient pipeline for future revenue growth, now including Medicare Part B patients. We received the final license payment for our joint venture in China, which has enabled the launch of the business there. And most importantly, we had a significant positive development in our efforts to secure Medicare Part D coverage for our [indiscernible] so that we begin serving this large patient population. I'll start by reviewing the operational highlights during Q2 from the front end of the pipeline through delivery and revenue. Our direct-to-consumer marketing strategy of using TV advertising and social media to inform patients and family members about the MyoPro to restore movement in paralyzed arms is working very well. We added more than 400 medically qualified patients to the patient pipeline in the second quarter and these candidates are all covered by insurance plans that have paid for MyoPro in the past. Earlier this year, we began focusing on payers that have a track record of reimbursing for the MyoPro, resulting in what we believe is a higher-quality pipeline than in the past, and we're building it more efficiently with the smaller staff this year. We obtained authorizations and orders for 125 devices during the quarter, which is up 23% from the year-ago quarter. And with the shipments in payments we received, our product revenues were up 15% year-over-year. In addition to the product revenue, we repaid the final installment of the China joint venture, initial license fee of just over $1.7 million, bringing our Q2 total revenue to $6 million. We've been working on this joint venture for several years now and with the COVID-19 pandemic winding down and resumption of economic activity in China, our joint venture partners, Ryzur Medical and Chinaleaf Ventures were able to move contently forward to fund Jiangxi Myomo, and we're now in the process of setting up manufacturing sales operations to serve the Greater China market. With an estimated 14 million people of paralyzed arms and 2.5 million new strokes each year, China represents the world's largest market opportunity for the MyoPro. We have a joint venture project team that's assisting in preparing the manufacturing infrastructure, establishing the supply chain for components and engage in rehab hospitals for distribution of the MyoPro to patients. We sent a couple of our clinical specials to China to train the JV staff and to demonstrate the technology to rehab hospital therapists. We've also received a total of about $300,000 in orders, the clinical version of our product called the Mobile Arm Rehab Kit to be used for demos and training and for the MyoPro control system, chips and software, which will be used in the initial production run by the JV. The MyoPro control system order represents the initial purchase commitment under the guaranteed minimal payment provision of the JV contract. And this contract provides for a total of $10.75 million in MyoPro control unit purchases over the next 10 years and I also want to note that these components are manufactured in the US in our IP space firmly with Myomo. And then on June 30th, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, known as CMS, issued a proposed rule that is adopted would reclassify the MyoPro as a covered benefit in the brace category with a lump sum payment. In addition, CMS stated its intention to post a feat for the MyoPro and an upcoming public community. This is a very significant development, because it allows us to serve patients in the US who are covered by Standard Medicare or Part B and C for service and would allow the MyoPro to be reimbursed and works on basis the way all the other payers in the US currently pay for MyoPro. We currently provide the MyoPro to seniors of certain Medicare Advantage plans, at half the seniors in the US are covered by Part B, so our addressable market is poised to increase substantially. For those of you who are new to Myomo, here's a quick summary on Medicare. In January 2019, CMS made unique product building codes referred to as HCPCS Codes effective for the MyoPro. However, CMS classified the MyoPro, as Durable Medical Equipment or DME which classified as a device is paid on a monthly rental, with coverage on a case-by-case basis. While this opened up the large Medicare Advantage patient population to us, our position has been that the MyoPro is a custom fabricated base for long-term use and that it should be classified in this benefit category. Discussions with the CMS staff got delayed due to COVID, and then we were invited for meeting at the CMS Public Hearing in June of 2022. At that presentation, we made that presentation and we have follow-up meetings with the CMS staff and with the Medical Directors of the DME MAC's, The Medicare Administrative Contractors. The most recent of these meetings was this past April, where we presented compelling new research about the patient outcomes and the value of the MyoPro to individuals of Medicare age. We are encouraged to file claims for Part B patients, so we've now treat six patients and submitted six claims for payment. These claims are under review at this time. And it's unclear how the proposed rule is now come out with effect the processing of these claims that were submitted to the DME MAC's before the publication of that proposed rule. So what's next? CMS is excepting public comments on this proposed rule, until the end of August, and then they'll hold a Public Hearing on this topic as well as proposed the allowable fee for our devices. While there's no specific timeline for implementing the new role or holding a public hearing, next hearing is usually in the fall, and the coverage and pricing go into effect sometime after that. Although, I'd love to have a definite answer for you this time, the process of the MyoPro covered as a powered arm race is closer than ever to the goal line. And meantime, we're not sitting still, since many Part B patients contact us each month about a MyoPro the paralyzed arm, we're proceeding to see these patients for medical eligibility and we're building a pipeline of Part B patients so that we can serve them after coverage in a fee are established. So with that overview, I'll now turn the call over to Dave Henry, our CFO, for a more detailed discussion of our financial results and operational metrics. Dave?