Francois Michelon
Analyst · Ascendiant Capital
Thank you, Yvonne, and good afternoon, everyone, and thanks for joining us today to discuss ENDRA's third quarter 2023 financial results and business highlights. I'm delighted by the momentum that's building for our Thermo Acoustic Enhanced Ultrasound liver system known as TAEUS. This momentum checks a number of boxes, including clinical, regulatory and commercial along with the convergence of a number of factors that put ENDRA in the right place at the right time. We spent the last few days of the liver meeting held by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases where we interacted with experts in the field, clinical users, prospective customers and partners. Steatotic liver disease known as SLD is the umbrella term for a multifaceted metabolic disorder, resulting in too much fat in the liver. Anything over 5% liver fat is of clinical significance. And this fat can irritate and inflame the liver, then scar it and ultimately lead to irreversible end-stage liver disease. Steatotic liver disease is estimated to affect more than 2 billion people worldwide and is predicted to become the leading root cause of liver transplant in the U.S. by 2030. The American Association of Clinical Endocrinology and the American Diabetes Association have updated their guidelines over the past 18 months to include the screening for fatty liver in adults with obesity prediabetes and type 2 diabetes. The good news is that the new GLP-1 obesity drugs have demonstrated clinically significant reductions in liver fat and a rich pipeline of targeted therapies to treat SLD in both obese and nonobese patients is approaching commercialization with the first drug approval is expected in early 2024. This intersection of variables, a heavy public health burden, a lack of practical diagnostic tools and the near-term availability of the first treatments creates an opportunity to address the large unmet clinical need for a noninvasive, cost-effective tool to assist in identifying and monitoring patients. That's where ENDRA intends to lead. As discussed on our last conference call, we submitted the TAEUS de novo request to the FDA on August 14 of this year and since then, the submission has entered the substantive review period. The de novo submission was a significant milestone for ENDRA as this regulatory pathway should strengthen our competitive position with distinctive patent-protected capabilities as a noninvasive point-of-care tool to aid in the characterization of liver fat. We look forward to working with the FDA during the review process, and the FDA's published goal is to make a decision on a de novo request within 150 review days. Since our FDA submission, we've had our second positive clinical data set reviewed and accepted for presentation by the European Association for the Study of the Liver. These clinical abstracts are available on ENDRA's website under the tab Research and Media. The most recent abstract includes 45 subjects comparing ENDRA's TAEUS liver measurements to MRI, and we're very pleased with the results. We believe the data in these published abstracts and related presentations are crucial to building awareness of the TAEUS system and its capabilities with clinical users and to supporting commercial adoption of our new technology. The clinical data is the most critical element for getting commercial traction with clinical customers. Mike Thornton will provide more detail on our clinical data in a moment. In terms of commercial activities, we've been actively showcasing our TAEUS liver system at the key clinical conferences in hepatology, endocrinology and radiology in our target markets of the U.K., Germany, France and the U.S. We've participated in eight clinical conferences this year, including five since September, mainly the British Association for Study of the Liver, European Association for the Study of Diabetes, French Society for Hepatology, Drei Lander Treffen, which is the annual meeting of the Ultrasound Societies in Germany, Austria and Switzerland. And I've just returned with Mike Thornton from the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases in Boston which is the preeminent liver meeting in the U.S. We also sponsored a great multidisciplinary panel discussion on liver disease while at AASLD from the perspective of a hepatologist, the liver experts and endocrinologists, the metabolic obesity and diabetes experts and a radiologist, the imaging experts. Steatotic liver disease resonates with each of these specialties and there's a growing interest in the primary care arena as well. Turning to intellectual property. We continue to bolster our portfolio and recently achieved a great new milestone of 70 issued patents with three additional patents issued during the third quarter and three more patents issued in Q4 thus far. Portfolio with 70 issued patents and no in-licensing dependencies is a remarkable achievement for a company of our size and a testament to the innovation of ENDRA and the proprietary nature of our technology. These newly issued patents protect and further differentiate ENDRA's thermal acoustic systems in areas of high unmet clinical need, such as the early detection of steatotic liver disease. The Company is also actively exploring licensing opportunities in non-core indications with outside partners to augment the value of our growing intellectual property portfolio. With that update, I'll turn the call over to Mike Thornton for more details on our clinical and regulatory progress. Michael?