Phil Gomez
Analyst · factors that could cause results to differ, please see the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including, without limitation, the Company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, and its subsequent reports on Form 10-Q and Form 8-K. I would now like to turn the conference over to Phillip Gomez, Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead
Thank you for taking the time to join today's call. Today I'm joined by Dan Luckshire, our CFO. Dan and I are pleased to have this opportunity to provide a quarterly update in our business and upcoming objectives. On this call, I will provide a business update and Dan will provide a financial update. We'll then be happy to take questions. The second quarter of 2021 reflects our continuing momentum for international sales. We delivered approximately $7 million of oral TPOXX to Canada this quarter, following 3 million in deliveries in the first quarter. We believe these sales represent our first success and a multiyear initiative to build an international business for oral TPOXX. In coordination with Meridian Medical Technologies, we continue to actively work toward turning opportunities into additional sales. Specifically, we are currently working with Meridian and a new foreign jurisdiction toward finalizing an order that would be similar in size to the initial orders received from Canada in 2020 and early 2021. The timing of the completion of the order has been and may continue to be impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. On this last point regarding timing, I would like to reiterate comments from the last investor call and provide some incremental color. While we are currently having success in delivering international orders this year, the pandemic has created a headwind, slowing the pace of activity which we expect will continue in the near term, subjecting SIGA to the continuing risk of international business development activities coming to fruition slower than we would have anticipated pre-pandemic. As noted in the previous investor calls, it is clear to us that the impact of the COVID pandemic continues to stress countries' ability to organize and finalize funding, contracting, logistics and procurement activities that are outside of the COVID-19 response efforts. As we actively pursue regulatory approvals for oral TPOXX with the European Medicines Agency and Health Canada, I would like to note that while some countries like Canada can purchase products like TPOXX by relying on FDA approval, others must wait for regulatory approval prior to purchase. This is the case with several large countries in Europe, so EMA approval would be an important step in the procurement discussion with these countries. Dennis Hruby, our Chief Scientific Officer will provide an update on our next call on the regulatory review status in Europe and Canada. For now, I will summarize the current status by affirming that we continue to track the late 2021 early 2022 approval dates in both Europe and Canada. With regard to the procurement activities in the United States, we continue to work with ASPR and BARDA staff in the performance of the 19C contracts. And we continue to manage our supply chain to build inventory in anticipation and preparation for a procurement option exercise under the 19C contract. We are hopeful to receive clarity from the United States government in the near term regarding a procurement option exercise considering that the new Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Dawn O'Connell was sworn into the role approximately a month ago. And we have seen some recent announcement of contract option exercises. I'd like to note that since 2013, we've delivered a total of more than 2 million courses of TPOXX with a seven year shelf life to the Strategic National Stockpile under the Obama and Trump administrations and we expect the Biden administration will continue to support this decade plus long partnership in order to ensure at a minimum maintenance of the current stockpile levels of 1.7 million courses of TPOXX for smallpox. With respect to pandemic preparedness, I believe it's important to highlight that smallpox should not be the only Orthopoxvirus for which the United States government as well as other governments prepare. In June, we announced that we provided TPOXX as a compassionate treatment for a monkeypox case in the United Kingdom. And last week, we announced that we have a collaboration with Oxford University to provide TPOXX as a compassionate treatment for monkeypox cases in the Central African Republic. Additionally, in July, it was announced there was a monkeypox case here in Texas. These recent events in combination with recent reports highlighting the increase in monkeypox cases in Central Africa, which is likely due to the cessation of smallpox immunization in the 70s that had provided some cross protection highlights that monkeypox should be a threat that is top of mind for public health officials. Having an effective treatment would be critical to treat patients and control the outbreak in the US or elsewhere. In terms of how TPOXX fits within this discussion, we believe it has the potential to effectively treat several different Orthopoxviruses including monkeypox. The approval of TPOXX for smallpox, the current label for TPOXX was based in part on efficacy data in monkeypox and non-human primates. And TPOXX had no serious drug related adverse events during clinical development. Relying on that same data SIGA has applied for a broader label which includes monkeypox and regulatory filings with EMA and Health Canada and we plan to seek the same broader labeling from the FDA next year. I'll now pass the call over to Dan who will provide a financial update. Dan?