Laura E. Niklason
Thank you, Tom, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our second quarter 2025 financial results and business update call. Following the landmark success of obtaining FDA approval of Symvess for the treatment of extremity vascular trauma last year, we continue to execute on the commercial launch of this groundbreaking product. Progress during our second quarter and recent weeks was marked by continued expansion of our value analysis committee, or VAC, approvals. This has led to a major expansion of the number of approvals that are now able to purchase Symvess Recently, we also announced that the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency granted electronic catalog or ECAT listing approval to Symvess. Going along with this, we have recorded our first sale to a U.S. military facility. We did encounter some headwinds during April and May due to unsubstantiated public attacks by certain detractors. However, we've seen an acceleration in VAC approval activity and commercial sales in June and July, coupled with the continued advancement of our acellular tissue engineered vessel or ATEV, in our pipeline programs, we believe that we're positioned for growth and value generation in 2025 and beyond. During today's call, I'll review these developments in more detail before turning the call over to Dale for a review of our financial results. B.J. Scheessele, our Chief Commercial Officer, will then join us to help answer your questions. Beginning with our commercial launch of Symvess , we're pleased by the traction that we've continued to gain in our interactions with civilian hospitals. To date, a total of 13 organizations have completed the VAC process and have approved the purchase of Symvess. Because some of these VAC approvals include multi-hospital networks, a total of 82 civilian hospitals are now eligible to purchase Symvess. This is an enormous increase from the 5 civilian hospitals that were eligible to purchase Symvess at our last quarterly earnings call. Furthermore, an additional 40 VAC sites are currently conducting reviews of Symvess, and we expect that the number of hospitals eligible to purchase Symvess will continue to grow. After VAC approval, contracting and negotiations with each individual hospital are completed before sales and shipments to that hospital can commence. Currently, our sales team is actively targeting high-volume centers having VAC approval for contracting negotiations. July product sales of approximately $0.3 million exceeded the total sales that we recorded for the first half of the year. Also in July, we announced that Symvess was awarded the electronic catalog or ECAT listing approval from the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency. ECAT is an Internet system that provides the Department of Defense and other federal agencies with access to manufacturers and -- I'm sorry distributors' products. The ECAT approval makes Symvess available to health care professionals treating military service members, veterans and other patients receiving care at approximately 35 military treatment facilities and approximately 160 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals. With ECAT approval in place, it's not generally necessary to also obtain VAC approval at the military treatment facilities or VA sites. Instead, purchases facilitated directly through the ECAT system. Since obtaining ECAT approval just a few weeks ago, we've already recorded our first commercial sale to a U.S. military facility. This facility is a state-of-the-art medical complex located on a major U.S. military base and provides health care to approximately 200,000 active duty service personnel, retirees and their family members. Subsequent to the initial shipment, this facility has also reordered Symvess. We have great interest in improving the medical options that are available to health care professionals who are treating military personnel and their families, and we're actively advancing our discussions with additional military treatment facilities. In August, we were notified that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, declined to approve our application for the new technology add-on payment, or NTAP, for Symvess. Our application was submitted in October of 2024. And along with the majority of applications that were submitted to CMS this cycle, our application was also denied. The reason provided by CMS was that Symvess does not have a unique mechanism of action as compared to veins or synthetic grafts and therefore, did not qualify for their newness criterion. This conclusion was extremely surprising to us. We believe that the potential impact of the NTAP on our commercial success is fairly limited because only about 4.3% of vascular trauma patients who are falling within our approved indication are covered under Medicare reimbursement. Because private pay insurers are the most common source of reimbursement for vascular trauma patients that are falling within our indication. We're engaging in discussions with private payers about supplemental reimbursement for Symvess in the trauma indication. We believe that the results of our budget impact model, or BIM, which we published several months ago, along with our published clinical trial results, will encourage supplemental reimbursement from private payers. I'll now turn to the ATEV, a program, which is our next priority, which is the dialysis access for patients with end-stage kidney failure. We're pleased to see that results from our V007 Phase III trial were presented in a plenary session at the Society of Vascular Surgery Annual Meeting in June. The V007 results presentation that was focused on patients at high risk of fistula nonmaturation was 1 of only 3 selected for special mention by the society in their own announcement. The V007 clinical trial enrolled a total of 242 patients, of which 110 were considered to be at high risk of fistula nonmaturation. Among this high-risk cohort functional patency at 6 months and secondary patency at 12 months were significantly higher in ATEV recipients as compared with fistula. Duration of access usability over the first year was also significantly higher in the ATEV group at 8 months versus only 4.5 months for arteriovenous fistula with a p-value of 0.0002. Results of the V007 trial have also been accepted for presentation at the Annual Kidney Week meeting for 2025 later this year. Women and men having diabetes and obesity, make up more than half of the dialysis access market. Patients with a high-risk of fistula nonmaturation have historically been underserved by the current standard of care since waiting for fistula maturation can result in prolonged catheter exposure, increased risk of infection and additional procedures performed to assist in the maturation of the nonfunctioning fistula. Because of these risks, patients with fistula nonmaturation have a high unmet medical need. We believe that the efficacy and safety results of the V007 subgroup combined with the approximately 50% fistula failure rate in this high-risk group means that this is an excellent population for us to target in the market. We look forward to publication of the results from the V007 Phase III trial in a major peer-reviewed medical journal later this year. After discussions with the FDA about a supplemental BLA filing in dialysis access, we're planning to target the general subgroup of patients at high risk of fistula nonmaturation. Before we file a supplemental BLA, which we anticipate later in 2026, our plan is to complete the interim analysis of the currently ongoing V012 Phase III trial that's being conducted only in women and which compares the ATEV to fistula for hemodialysis access. To date, a total of 100 patients have been enrolled in the V012 Phase III trial out of a target of approximately 150 patients. An interim analysis is planned when the first 80 patients reach 1 year of follow-up, and this enrollment threshold was achieved in April of 2025. Subject to these interim results, Humacyte's plan is to submit a supplemental BLA in the second half of 2026, including data from V012 and the V007 Phase III pivotal studies to expand the Symvess label and add AV access for hemodialysis as an indication. We're pleased with the progress that we're making in 2025, and we look forward to sharing our progress with all of you as the rest of the year unfolds. With that, I'll now turn it over to Dale for a review of our financial results and other business developments.