Carrie Manner
Analyst · Citi
Thanks, Scott, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. We are pleased to report on the progress we continue to make in our strategic transformation, beginning with strengthening our foundation for growth, allowing us to elevate our core growth and then to accelerate profitable growth. This quarter, we strengthened our foundation and bolstered our cash position with meaningful potential to unlock working capital moving forward. We saved on costs, we delivered on COVID-19 with record IntelliSwab volumes, and we completed our business unit integration while culturally reinforcing our mantra, innovating and operating with disciplined execution and accountability. We also grew sequentially in our core. Equally important, we are focusing on our innovation road map with organic and inorganic opportunities including strategic partnerships, which we believe can provide fuel for growth. Starting with the detail on our cost savings, we implemented headcount reductions in February. Those affected 11% of our non-production workforce as we had previously shared with you. In addition, IntelliSwab volumes began to taper in Q2, and we have taken further steps to reduce our cost structure, starting with manufacturing and operational headcount. As a part of these changes, we're shutting down manual assembly operations overseas for IntelliSwab to fully leverage our automation capabilities that we've built in the US. We will continue to align our cost structure with COVID-19 demand and deliver additional cost savings as we work to achieve breakeven in cash flow from operations in 2024. Furthermore, in order to improve gross margins via product cost reduction, we completed our IntelliSwab packaging redesign in March. One month ahead of schedule and began to ship products in the new configuration in the quarter. We believe these changes will save over $0.50 per test. We're looking at the opportunities to translate these learnings and their benefits, more broadly across our product portfolio in an effort to drive longer-term gross margin improvement, while also positively contributing to sustainability. InteliSwab volumes set a new record this quarter with over $118 million in total sales for our COVID-19 diagnostic testing. As I previously mentioned, we expect InteliSwab volumes to taper in Q2, and we saw lower demand in April, consistent with disease incidents in the U.S. We are currently working with our Public Health Partners on a path to ensure warm-base manufacturing and readiness for potential infectious disease outbreak. They utilize previously appropriated funds existing InteliSwab contracts. Part of these discussions includes the potential to extend the timeframe under which orders for test could be fulfilled similar to what occurred last year. The cash generated from InteliSwab, in addition to our cost savings is critical to fund business investments, innovation and our future growth opportunities. To this end, we've been working to elevate our core portfolio with a longer-term goal to drive sustainable core growth. On our core, we grew sequentially this quarter in diagnostic tests outside of COVID-19 as well as in molecular products. And our HIV and HCV franchises, there were a number of catalysts in Q1. First, we began shipping, the first product of our partnership with Emory University under the Let's Stop HIV Together Program, funded by the CDC which focuses on outreach testing to rural and disadvantaged communities where HIV and its comorbidities are most prevalent in the United States. The early success of this program could potentially lead to its expansion. For HIV -- HCV, sorry, we are also encouraged by the recent White House plan to eliminate HCV, which was highlighted in a recent JAMA article by Dr. Francis Collins, the former Head of the National Institute of Health. Unitaid also made a $31 million investment in preventing HCV and high-risk individuals, such as injectable drug users and prisoners, where up to 25% of these populations have an active HCV infection. Both of these initiatives demonstrate the priority to increase HCV surveillance as well as data collection, through outreach testing. Overall, the focus on HIV and HCV and Public Health, aligned with our strength in both our product offerings themselves as well as in our distribution for two important sexually transmitted infections that affect at-risk population. It's a really good example of why sexual health is a priority within our innovation roadmap. Shifting to molecular products, we also grew sequentially in Q1 at 7%. We signed three new important commercial partnerships in the quarter, following our recent Quest Diagnostics and Grifols announcement. Each of these deals highlights precision health companies looking to leverage the expanded patient access and reliability that our saliva collection devices can provide. The first deal is with enriched DX. This deal is a co-promotion using our Colli-Pee device to develop liquid biopsy applications using first-void urine, which has enriched biomarkers for cancer and FDA testing. The second is with Ziwig, a French Biotech company commercializing Ziwig Endotes a breakthrough innovation using Salivary MicroRNA to diagnose endometriosis. This painful condition, which, on average, takes eight years to diagnose, impacts quality of life and, in some cases, fertility for the estimated 190 million women in the world who suffer from this. The third deal is with Novozymes a global biotechnology company and leader in biosolutions to provide a full service offering in support of their BiomeFx product. BiomeFx is a personalized health microbiome test which leverages insights from the gut and vaginal microbiome to empower participants to lead healthier lives. The service launched last month and microbiome samples will be collected using sample collection kits from our DNA Genotek subsidiary and microbiome sequencing and analytics services provided by Diversigen. These collaborations build upon our other recent commercial partnerships in precision health. And I mentioned this, our partnership supporting Quest, Genomic Sequencing Services Group, test offerings and our collaboration with Grifols that supports alpha-1 testing for patients at risk for COPD and other lung disorders. Also on our molecular product portfolio, we made clinical progress this quarter with Colli-Pee, Recently, a team of researchers from Manchester University and Aquarius Population Health, a U.K.-based organization have authorized the manuscript that has just been accepted for publication in a period viewed journal entitled and economic evaluation of two self-sampling strategies for HPV primary cervical cancer screening compared with clinician-collected sampling. The model compares the cost and effects of three sampling strategies for HPV primary screening, including routine clinician-collected cervical sample, self-collected first void urine using our Colli-Pee device and self-collected vaginal flows in 10,000 women who are eligible for the NHS cervical screening program. Notably, the study concluded that cell sampling for routine HPV cervical cancer screening with Colli-Pee device could provide a less costly alternative to clinician-collected sampling and other self-sampling approaches. This could support expanding the reach of affordable Colli-Pee mediated cervical cancer screening to underserved women at scale in the U.K. and possibly elsewhere. Through ongoing and prior studies that demonstrate the value of the Colli-Pee collection product as an easy-to-use noninvasive self-sampling device. OraSure is committed to an evidence-based affordable solution with improved patient experience for women around the globe. Beyond our current offerings, we are working to accelerate profitable growth through innovation, as we focus on pipeline expansion, we are advancing both organic and inorganic opportunities across each of our portfolios. In molecular products, we are exploring the potential to build additional functionality for our customers that will further extend our leadership position. We believe that these technologies could provide meaningful complement to our strengths in sample collection and stabilization and they could be long-term differentiators for us. In our Diagnostics portfolio, we anticipate sharing more regarding new infectious disease and sexual health test later in the year. In diagnostics and across our portfolio, we are also actively evaluating partnerships to meaningfully extend our product pipeline and growth opportunities. Ultimately, the goal of our innovation is to reignite core growth and leverage our unique capabilities to power the shift in healthcare that meets patients where they are with effortless solutions and point of care and self-test diagnostics in sample collection and stabilization and in our services solutions. As we look to the future, we will also look for ways to accelerate profitable growth by deploying capital through M&A and further evaluating our long-term capital structure. Our strength today, well position us as a partner and collaborator now and for the future. And with that, I'm pleased to turn the call over to Ken to talk about our financial results and guidance.