Steve Chapman
Analyst · Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open
Great. Thanks, Mike. Let us get into the highlights on slide three. As you can all see from the press release, we had another stellar growth quarter in Q1. Total revenue came in at $194 million, driven by strong volume and ASPs. Year-on-year product revenues increased by roughly 58% and 14% sequentially from Q4. Pro forma for the one-time $28 million Qiagen benefit in Q1 of last year, total revenues were also up 57%. Test process grew north of 40% year-on-year and more than 10% sequentially versus Q4 of last year. Keep in mind, this should be tough comparisons. 2021 was a breakout year for Natera and yet the business continues to accelerate. We will get into the drivers shortly, but we are seeing excellent growth across the business, especially in oncology with our Signatera clinical volumes. Given the traction, we are seeing in late Q1 and so far in Q2, we are able to raise our revenue guidance for the year. We started the year at $770 million to $790 million, and we are now forecasting total revenue of $790 million $810 million for the year. We are rapidly getting operating leverage on the investments we have been making in R&D and commercial channels, which has given us more clarity on when we can get to cash flow breakeven. Mike will spend more time on this later in the call. As a reflection of our confidence in the company and the substantial upside value creation we have achieved -- we believe is achievable, the Board, executive leadership and I opted to take our compensation in stock for the balance of the year. Our lead independent director also bought 5 million in shares on the open market. On the heels of a strong 2021, our first quarter results show we are firing on all cylinders and our increased guidance shows we are confident in our ability to maintain the momentum. Turning to a few notable highlights from the quarter, we have had a slew of exciting milestones in our transplant business, which has seen record volume levels on the back of 10 peer-reviewed papers published in the past roughly six months. We have recently announced the publication of VALID study a prospective clinical validation of Prospera1, we announced a 1,000 patient real-world study with Renasight and we announced a multi-site clinical validation of Prospera Heart was published in the Journal of Heart and Lung transplantation, a leading Journal in this space. A few weeks ago, we were also very pleased to announce that Dr. Sangeeta Bhorade joined us as Vice President of Organ Health Medical Affairs. Dr. Bhorade is a leading academic physician in the lung transplant space having founded the Lung Transplant Program at the University of Chicago and separately at Northwestern. Dr. Bhorade joined Natera is the latest addition among other recent notable medical leadership hires including Dr. Michael Olymbios, Medical Director of Heart Transplantation and Dr. David Ross, Medical Director of Lung Transplantation. Dr. Olymbios was previously a member of the Heart Transplant program at Cedars Sinai and the author of many peer-reviewed publications in heart transplant. Dr. David Ross is an academic transplant pulmonologist credited with starting one of the first lung transplant programs at Cedars Sinai in 1989 and has served as the Medical Director of the Lung Transplant Program and Professor of Medicine at UCLA. We also continue to make excellent progress in oncology. We were very pleased to see an update in the landmark circulate data in an oral presentation at the Society of Surgical Oncology 2022. The key update there was Signatera is now showing a 75% detection of recurrence in Stage II and III patients with a single time point MRD blood draw at four weeks post-surgery versus the previous analysis from ASCO GI in January, which showed a single time point detection of 68%. Also, the circulate papers now in submission to a top tier medical journal, which is incredibly exciting. As we have said before, getting the paper published was a key step on the path to NCCN guidelines. So I am really proud of our collaborators and the Natera team for moving so quickly to get the paper submitted. In addition, we have had some good breast cancer data presented recently at AACR further validating Signatera performance in triple-negative in HR-positive diseases in collaboration with Genentech in their I-SPY 2 consortium. And we also have an exciting lineup coming to ASCO this year. On the Signatera reimbursement front, we completed the first pricing measurement period for our ADLT rates since the price was initially established at $3500 last year. As of April 1, 2022, the ADLT rate for Signatera has now been revised upward to $3,920. Obviously, that gives an immediate boost to Medicare reimburse volumes, but I think it also strengthens our position with commercial payers over time. Moving to slide four, let us get into some of the trends. The next slide is a longer run view of our quarterly volume progression. I think this view gives helpful context to the rapid progress we have made. For example, you can see the volumes are more than twice of what they were as recently as Q1 of 2020. Of course, a big reason why we have been outperforming is the product launches in oncology and Organ Health are progressing well above our expectations. For Signatera, we have seen tremendous growth, particularly in the clinical volumes. We have gotten a significant boost from the ASCO GI circulate presentation colorectal cancer and we are still seeing significant organic uptake across a broad range of cancer types of work -- as word of mouth spreads. Clinical ASPs are also ahead of plan. We had a hypothesis that our Medicare mix might increase as we got further into our launch and received more community-based units. That appears to be happening. We are rapidly getting scale on the investment that we made in our oncology commercial channel and Mike will spend more time on this later in the call. We had a great quarter for the Organ Health products as well, particularly in kidney transplants and we are just starting to see the benefit from our efforts in the other organ types as well. That strength is continued and we are currently seeing record Prospera volume levels over the past several weeks. These results clearly demonstrate that we are on track and more broadly, I think the concept of cell-free DNA is a tool for monitoring graft health is taking hold. On the next slide, you can see the revenue trajectory has outpaced the volume trends, as we benefited from positive overall ASP trends over the past few years. The left hand side of the slide shows the year-on-year revenue growth we have seen in Q1 versus prior years and clearly Q1 of 2022 was very strong. The right-hand side puts into perspective the revenue trajectory of the business has been on just the last four quarters. As these new products are starting to ramp, we are very encouraged to see that we are quickly getting leverage on the channels we have built in transplant and oncology and Mike will talk more about that later in the call. Okay, let me cover a few slides on our recent progress in Organ Health. We are now seeing the fruits of our labor with data generation in Organ Health having published 10 peer-reviewed papers in roughly the past six months. On the next slide, our DEDUCE study in heart transplant was published in the Journal of Heart and Lung transplantation, a premier high impact journal in this space. This multi-site clinical validation study Prospera Heart demonstrated the test ability to identify acute rejection in heart transplant patients with an AUC of 0.87 in the perspectives arm of the study, which included more than 700 samples. We are continuing to build robust medical evidence with our ongoing NIH-supported DTR study and the Natera-sponsored DETECT randomized controlled trial. I want to spend a bit more time on Renasight, which is a test we haven’t spent a lot of time on in the past. Renasight is a hereditary gene panel that addresses the large market opportunity in chronic kidney disease. There are approximately 37 million patients in the United States living with chronic kidney disease and about 750,000 patients are newly diagnosed per year. In 2019, a large scale validation study of multi-gene testing was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and showed that about 10% of chronic kidney disease patients have a genetic etiology and of those 89% would have had a change in clinical care as a result of their genetic test. This is exceptionally high clinical utility, a very large area of health care. To-date testing has been mostly offered on a limited basis with an academic centers. We introduced Renasight to the nephrology and transplant community, because we thought we could make a big impact on patient care by making genetic testing accessible at scale. Our first study for Renasight was published in the American Journal of Nephrology analyzing the commercial experience of the first 1000 tests with positive findings found at 21% of patients tested. We also had previously invested into a large scale definitive multi-site prospective trial called RenaCARE and are excited to say that we are almost finished with enrollment. RenaCARE will access the clinical utility of Renasight and we actually expect to submit the results of the study for publication in late 2022. I want to make one other comment about our financials before I turn the call over. The RenaCARE study is a good example of a larger trend in our overall business where in many cases we pre-invested into a big future opportunity. While this impacts our near-term operating expenses, many of these are one-time expenses, like RenaCARE where the trial cost goes away once the study is over, but the longer term upside opportunity remains. Another example of this is the randomized controlled trials we are doing in heart and lung transplants. Once those are done, you don’t have to do them again or similarly we have invested in a very talented nationwide oncology sales force, despite they being very underpenetrated in their geographies. This creates leverage because now, operating expenses can stay relatively stable as volumes grow and we can charter path to cash flow breakeven. Mike will give more details on this in his section later in the call. With that, let me now hand the call over to Solomon to provide an update on oncology. Solomon?