Pacira BioSciences, Inc.

Pacira BioSciences, Inc.

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$22.48

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HealthcareDrug Manufacturers - Specialty & Generic

Pacira BioSciences, Inc. provides non-opioid pain management and regenerative health solutions for healthcare practitioners and their patients in the United States. The company offers EXPAREL, a bupivacaine liposome injectable suspension; ZILRETTA, a triamcinolone acetonide extended-release injectable suspension; and iovera system, a non-opioid handheld cryoanalgesia device used to produce controlled doses of cold temperature only to targeted nerves. It also develops proprietary multivesicular liposome, a drug delivery technology that encapsulates drugs without altering their molecular structure. The company was formerly known as Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and changed its name to Pacira BioSciences, Inc. in April 2019. Pacira BioSciences, Inc. was incorporated in 2006 and is headquartered in Tampa, Florida.

At a Glance

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Market Cap$884.35M
EPS0.1600
P/E Ratio140.52
Earnings Date08/04/2026

Earnings Call Transcript

PCRX โ€ข 2024 โ€ข Q4

Operator
Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Pacira BioSciences Fourth Quarter 2024 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]. Please note that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Susan Mesco, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Susan Mesco
Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to today's conference call to discuss our fourth quarter and full year 2024 financial results. Joining me are Frank Lee, Chief Executive Officer; and Shawn Cross, Chief Financial Officer. Kristen Williams, Chief Administrative Officer; Tony Molloy, Chief Legal Officer; Jonathan Slonin, Chief Medical Officer; and Brendan Teehan, Chief Commercial Officer, are also here for today's question-and-answer session. Before we begin, let me remind you that this call will include forward-looking statements subject to the safe harbor provisions of federal securities laws. Such statements represent our judgment as of today and may involve risks and uncertainties. This may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to differ materially. For information concerning risk factors that could affect the company, please refer to our filings with the SEC. These are available from the SEC or the Pacira website. Lastly, as a reminder, we will be discussing non-GAAP financial measures on today's call. A description of these metrics, along with our reconciliation to GAAP can be found in the news release issued earlier this afternoon. With that, I will now turn the call over to Frank Lee.
Frank Lee
Thank you, Susan, and good afternoon, everyone. The considerable progress we made in 2024 leaves us well positioned for 2025 and beyond. Key highlights from last year include record revenues of $701 million, the high end of our guided range, separate CMS coverage and product-specific reimbursement codes for both EXPAREL and iovera. RMAT designation from the FDA for PCRX-201 and the readout of compelling 2-year data from our 72-patient Phase 1 study. And importantly, establishing a best-in-class commercial, market access and medical powerhouse to drive top line growth. Looking ahead, the year is off to a strong start. We're sharply focused on executing our 5/30 strategy and becoming an innovative biopharmaceutical organization. We believe executing on this strategy is the best way to achieve growth and value creation as a leader in musculoskeletal pain and adjacencies. The plan focuses on five key objectives that we intend to achieve by 2030. These objectives support two broad strategic imperatives: first, accelerating growth in our strong commercial based business; and second, advancing an innovative pipeline and potentially transformative assets like PCRX-201. To summarize our 5/30 goals patients. We expect our products to be benefiting more than 3 million patients annually by 2030. Products, we plan to grow product revenues by double-digit CAGR over the next 5 years. Profitability, we expect to achieve a 5-percentage point expansion in gross margin over 2024. Pipeline, we anticipate having five novel programs in our clinical development pipeline. In partnerships, we plan to establish at least five clinical or commercial partnerships. When we look at Pacira's commercial-based business, we have a solid foundation. Our three best-in-class products are generating significant cash flow. Each of these franchises has ample room for increased penetration and market expansion with multiple key growth drivers starting to kick in this year. For our flagship product, EXPAREL, the NOPAIN Act is now in effect. This means we have reimbursement pathway for 18 million outpatient surgical procedures. Approximately 6 million of these procedures have CMS coverage and 12 million had commercial coverage. EXPAREL now has its own product-specific J code with the reimbursement rate of average selling price plus 6%. Securing this code was particularly important milestone as it will expand patient access to best practice of opioid sparing care. In addition, the J code will streamline the reimbursement and billing process. It is also more likely to be recognized and covered by commercial figures. While it's still early days, our field teams are seeing evidence of progress since the rollout of NOPAIN on January 1. This includes the recent formulary wins as well as a rising level of awareness around the J code. While we're pleased with the positive early indicators, it will take time for our customers to adopt this new reimbursement. In addition, our IQVIA claims data can take up to 4 months to process. We look forward to sharing future updates as more data become available. On the payer front, we continue to highlight the extra value proposition with real-world evidence. In addition to CMS, we now have commercial payers beginning to recognize the importance of reimbursing EXPAREL outside of the bundled payment. Recent progress includes several national payers adopting NOPAIN like policies. This represents roughly 40 million covered lives and more than doubles our previous commercial coverage map. Our teams will continue to focus on expanding coverage, and we'll keep you apprised on future calls. Along with favorable patient outcomes, separate reimbursement helps our customers navigate financial challenges. At the same time, it gives them the opportunity to be at the forefront of opioid experience pain management. This is especially relevant for those accounts receiving discounted pricing through 340B or GPO networks and the benefit is mutual given the anticipated EXPAREL volume expansion. We launched 2 GPO partnerships last year, both are performing according to plan, with volumes up and only modest impact on net sales dollars. Our third and final GPO agreement is expected to go live in the first half of this year. And once completed, more than 80% of our current EXPAREL business will be under contract. Given our progress on the market access front, along with our learnings from market research, we believe it's the right time to invest in targeted direct-to-consumer marketing. We expect this DTC investment to expand utilization by driving patient demand for EXPAREL to be a part of their treatment plan for postsurgical pain. We will begin with targeted pilot programs in the first half of the year and adjust our investment accordingly based on the ROI data. These patient-focused programs augment the EXPAREL value proposition we are presenting to physicians and other key stakeholders. Turning to
Shawn Cross
Thank you, Frank. I'll start with an update on sales and margin trends. Fourth quarter EXPAREL sales increased to $147.7 million versus $143.9 million in 2023. Volume growth and a 2024 price increase were partially offset by a shift in viral mix and discounting associated with GPO partnerships. Fourth quarter
Frank Lee
Thanks, Shawn. In closing, 2024 was a tremendous year of progress across the organization. All the work completed has allowed us to enter 2025 sharply focused on 5/30 and our transition into an innovative biopharmaceutical organization. We are confident the steps are taking position us for sustainable growth and success as a leader in musculoskeletal pain and adjacencies. With that, operator, we're ready to open the call for questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. Our first question coming from the line of Oren Livnat with H.C. Wainwright. Your line is now open.
Oren Livnat
Thanks. I got a couple of questions. Just big picture, can you just talk more about the assumptions for no pain, both implementation on the customer side and uptake. You're obviously not trying to get ahead of yourself by talking about a second half ramp. But I'm trying to understand what would be the impediments to sort of an aggressive rapid uptake on the customer side given hospitals? Certainly, would like to be making margins here? And I'll wait for the follow-up.
Frank Lee
Well, thanks for your question, Oren. It is Frank Lee here. We're excited about no pain. And as we've said consistently, it will take time for our customers to really get traction around no pain, and we think that's going to be starting in the second half -- some of the things that we've got to make sure we do with our customers has certainly raise awareness, get them comfortable with the day code and in many cases, our customers are trying out the code to make sure that they're getting reimbursed. And so, there's a learning period there. And so, we have to go through that, and we have some encouraging signs that we're seeing in terms of the use of the J code, the awareness of no pain and customers utilizing that code and starting to get reimbursed. And so, the early signs are good, but certainly, it takes time for us to get traction on something like this.
Oren Livnat
All right. And I guess you sort of segued into my follow-up, which was about what experience people are already having. Are you seeing successful reimbursement such that any cautious approach to using it for fear of not getting paid back is already starting to make some headway there. And have you had more access or penetration into accounts or geographies already that you hadn't at all before where, obviously, there are many accounts that don't use EXPAREL at all for financial raises, but I'm wondering if you've broken new ground with no pain already with a broader set of customers.
Frank Lee
Yes. These are all really good questions. And as we get more and more data, we'll be able to answer them factfully, right? So, as we mentioned, the IQVIA claims data, it takes some time to true up over time, that's lacking data. But you know what, we're seeing encouraging signs. And oftentimes, these revenue cycles take a little while. It could take a couple of weeks to 6 weeks, 7 weeks, 8 weeks to see the revenue cycle be completed. And so, it's still very, very early days. And what I'd say is, anecdotally, we're seeing good traction. And as we mentioned, commercial payers, we've had some wins there. And so, as you know, it's not only the accounts but also the payers that are very important. And we've always said that CMS is important certainly for the outpatient setting. But of course, they have a mix of CMS and commercial payers. And we find it encouraging that we've got some commercial payer wins out of the gate.
Oren Livnat
All right. And if I could just I don't know if you want to comment at all on litigation going forward. But just big picture, you've been very confident in your optimism for a long EXPAREL runway exclusive with exclusivity especially after your new IP issued late last year. I'm trying to reconcile your approach to capital allocation given your confidence there, especially with the market has only barely backed off its most dire concerns from earlier last year and bounced back a little bit, but there's a huge disconnect in my view between even the current business. and what it's worth, let alone major growth potential from no pay and upside optionality from a pipeline. Why wouldn't you be much more aggressive with potential buyback at these levels?
Frank Lee
Yes. So, let me start by saying, as always, we value certainty as much or more than any other investor, right? And so that's an important part. We also value making sure that we have long-term value for our shareholders. And so that's our guiding principle. And in the background, we've been, as you mentioned, very active in making sure that we continue to innovate and drive forward with new patents and new -- and I would expect that going forward. We continue to innovate, and we believe we'll be providing additional patent protections going forward. That said now, from a capital allocation, we're going through a very disciplined approach, as Sean mentioned, a very disciplined approach to make sure that we're funding our current operations. And we have quite a few catalysts here as we just talked about. We also have some important pipeline additions with -- now the great news, I really believe about GQ Bio. We can talk about that a little bit in just recent acquisition that we announced. And of course, managing the balance sheet, and we do have $125 million left on our buyback program. So, all of those, we're going to be managing in a very disciplined and balanced way. And so that's our approach. And we think that's going to get us to where we need to get to over the next 5 years.
Oren Livnat
All right. Appreciate it. I'll hop back in the queue.
Operator
Next question coming from the line of Gregory Renza with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Gregory Renza
Great. Frank and team onshore Frank, and maybe a question for Sean. And as you lay out the ranges and the guidance for 2025, just wondering if you could talk a bit about maybe the relative contributions of the product portfolio for '25. And how you're thinking about that across EXPAREL,
Frank Lee
Yes, sure. I'll let Shawn speak to that in here a second. Obviously, the EXPAREL is our flagship product, and we have a good catalyst here with the J code as well as no pain -- but certainly, we plan on putting a shoulder behind
Shawn Cross
Yes. I think the relative mix, as Frank mentioned,
Gregory Renza
Great. That's really helpful. And maybe just as a follow-up, as you've mentioned, the double-digit CAGR on product revenue with 5/30. And certainly, Frank, you mentioned of valuing certainty. Just help us understand maybe what some of the implications are and some of the competitive landscape that you're thinking about when you set those numbers through into 2030. Does it imply competitive entry with EXPAREL some degree of time line and competitive dynamics there?
Frank Lee
Sure. Greg, that's a great question. And I have to tell you we're very thoughtful as we put the 5/30 path to growth together and specifically around compounded annual growth rates are in the double digits. So, we've talked a little bit about this before, but we do not believe there will be a risk launch a generic this year or in the foreseeable future. So, on top of that, we continue to build on our IP estate -- we continue to innovate, and that gave us confidence to put forth the 5/30 strategy. And as Sean mentioned, picking up that growth rate as we exit the year with all the different catalysts that we have behind us.
Operator
Our next question coming from the line of Gary Nachman with Raymond James. Your line is now open.
Gary Nachman
Hi, guys. Good afternoon. Back to the revenue guidance range, what are you assuming in terms of volume growth versus how much offsetting pressure you'll have on gross to net from the GPO contracts just when we think about the no pain dynamic. And then for DTC, the pilot effort, just how much could EXPAREL utilization be consumer-driven versus targeting physicians and hospitals like you have done traditionally. And then I have a follow-up.
Frank Lee
Sure. Let me address the targeted DTC question first, and then I'll hand it over to Shawn to talk a little bit more about the numbers. Typically, what we see in the industry is once you educate the health care providers, -- and when you lower the access barriers that is reimbursement through payers, coding, et cetera, then it's the right time to consider a very targeted approach to activating the patient. And I want to underscore targeted because as you might imagine, the level of education and level of access, level of billing savvy varies by customer across the various geographies. So, we're going to be very, very targeted, and we're going to be ROI-driven. So, these days, you can be very, very targeted with these kinds of approaches. And as Sean mentioned, we'll pilot some of those approaches in the first half of the year. And depending on what we see, we'll adjust our investment accordingly. So that's how we're thinking about it. So, the great news here is that -- we've had a long history of educating health care providers about EXPAREL. With the J code now and no pain that's given us the opportunity to lower those access barriers. -- now is the right time to start to pilot and understand how best we can activate patients in certain settings and certain geographies. So that's our thinking there. And let me hand it over to Shawn to talk a little bit about the numbers.
Shawn Cross
Yes. We'll just keep this story. It's a pretty simple answer with regard to the forward guidance on the revenue side that it's effectively all volume growth. That's the way to think about it.
Gary Nachman
Okay. Great. But in terms of magnitude of just the gross to net, you're going to have a little bit of pressure this year when you have the additional that obviously would be offset. But is that a little bit of a headwind, Shawn?
Shawn Cross
Yes. You got to spot on. So, we take price increase and have a little bit of headwind there, and they'll offset each other. So just think about it as volume growth.
Gary Nachman
Okay. And then, Frank, just I mean, it is a notable step-up in terms of your R&D spend this year, and you have a few programs ongoing that sound pretty interesting. -- how comfortable are you with what you have in-house? And maybe you just want to comment quickly on the GQ Bio and just adding that the types of preclinical programs that you have? And do think you need to still go outside the company maybe to expand the pipeline further? Or do you have enough now internally to generate the kind of innovation that you're looking for?
Frank Lee
Yes. That's a good question, Gary. So, I want to step back and say, we're in the process of transitioning from specialty pharma innovative pharma. I don't think that transition is complete. We will be taking steps delivered that direction. That's number one. Number two, as a result of that now, we'll start to invest a little more in R&D, consistent with that kind of a company that we're talking about that more -- a little bit more innovative pharma than specialty pharma what's great here is we've got not only life cycle programs for our existing products. But now we're adding some truly innovative programs like PCRX-201 that we're very excited about. We're starting the Phase II study. In fact, the study is open now for enrollment. And as you know, that will read out sometime late next year in terms of Part A in that study. So, we're very excited about that. And we're going to carefully look at what else is in the nonclinical pipeline from GQ Bio and of course, there's some very interesting things there. And this supports the idea in our 5/30 that we'd have 5 novel development programs. by 2030. So how many of them will come from GQ Bio, I can't comment on now, but we do think there's some very interesting projects there. For the platform, the HCAd platform is something that comes with GQ Bio now. PCRX-201, we had that asset, but now we also have the platform that could also be a way to generate additional programs and molecules. So, we're excited about it. And so how much of it will come from GQ Bio and external, I can't really speak to right now, but very excited about the acquisition of GQ Bio and again, it brings with it this idea that now we have a platform, the preclinical assets. It gives us some really talented I think, talented researchers in the space, people make the difference here and capability. And historically, we haven't had a lot of that in terms of the research and early development. And finally, from a financial standpoint, I really think it's a no-brainer. -- we're taking care of the future milestones, some of which we would have to pay this year. So, all in all, it's a great acquisition, and we look forward to welcoming the GQ Bio team next week as we make a trip to Germany.
Operator
Our next question coming from the line of Serge Belanger with Needham & Company.
Unidentified Analyst
This is John on Serge today. Thanks for taking my questions. First on iovera, with the implementation of iovera no pain, do you kind of see it taking on a similar trajectory kind of adjacent to EXPAREL regarding any potential increased uptake throughout 2025? And then second, on the generic front, although it looks like it's unlikely that we'll see a generic launch in the near term. Just wanted to gauge your guys' appetite on a potential settlement agreement at this time.
Frank Lee
Yes. Let me speak to the generic first. And then we can chat a little bit about iovera. From a generic standpoint, as I mentioned earlier, we value certainty as much or more than any other investor -- any other investor out there. I think in terms of settlement, we really can't comment on those kinds of discussions. And so, I think whatever we do is going to be in the long-term best interest of our shareholders and patients. So, I'll just leave it at that. And again, I want to reiterate that we feel very good about our IP estate and we continue to innovate and what you should expect are more patents to come later on this year. With regard to iovera, what I'd tell you here is -- it's one where we're very excited about this additional reimbursement. I have to be very transparent to tell you that we didn't know we were going to get it or not. We are fairly certain about EXPAREL for sure. But for iovera, this 1 was a bit of a jump on and so we're very excited about iovera being included as part of the 11 products. So EXPAREL and over two out and provide some additional reimbursement. And maybe, I mean, Brendan, you can speak to the additional reimbursement and situation about iovera.
Unidentified Analyst
Sure. Thanks for the question. Thanks, Frank. We do see this as a key growth driver kicking in this year. with separate CMS reimbursement for iovera with a product-specific C code, again, 909 -- that's important as physicians are going to receive up to $256 for iovera when it's administered in the ambulatory surgical center or an HOPD setting via the new code. And the payment is, importantly, in addition to procedural fees that they would get -- that they would currently be receive. So, I think we see that as an untapped opportunity we look ahead as we had, we're looking at selectively investing in iovera for accelerated growth. It's in a different stage of its life cycle than EXPAREL. -- and we'll look at that and try to capitalize on the improved reimbursement landscape. And then finally, as you probably know, we have an additional opportunity with the new Smart Tip that is launching later this year for low back pain and we'll continue our Phase III registration study in spasticity.
Operator
Our next question coming from the line of Leszek Sulewski with Truist Securities.
Unidentified Analyst
This is Gavin on for Les. Thank you, for taking my questions. A quick one for me. So, with
Frank Lee
Yes. Thanks for the question. I have to tell you, I'm excited about
Operator
Our next question coming from the line of Hardik Parikh with JPMorgan. Your line is now open.
Hardik Parikh
Frank and team just had a few questions for you. First is A follow-up to the R&D and OpEx question that was asked earlier. So, this was definitely a bit higher the guide and I think we had expected I was wondering, do you guys see this kind of level of year-over-year increase kind of being more the standard? Or is this mostly onetime because of the 201 enrollment in the DTC? So that's just the first question. And then I'll follow up with that.
Frank Lee
Yes. Hardik, it's a good question. I don't want to guide for too many years. What I'll do is I'll tell you about this year. This year, we've got some really important catalysts like we just talked about. And we believe that these investments are going to return against -- we'll have a good return on investment against these investments. So that's number one. As it relates to what we're doing on the commercial medical market access side. As it relates to the development programs, as I said, it's very exciting around these development programs. And in terms of how quickly we shift towards more innovative versus specialty pharma we'll be opportunistic about that. We'll see how these nonclinical assets in GQ Bio PanL, and there are some other things we're looking at as well. And so, we'll be very, very careful there in managing our growth. And so, the key thing to take away is, let's focus on this year. And this year, we believe, because of the catalyst and investment opportunities in front of us, this is going to return in terms of the ROI that we expect.
Hardik Parikh
Okay. Great. And then you mentioned that you had some commercial payers that had adopted like no pain like reimbursement model. I was just wondering if you could give us some more insight into which payers made that switch and how close their models are to the no pain model.
Frank Lee
Yes. It's a good question now. It's a tricky thing sometimes to mention specific payers and these kinds of things because you have to get permission from those folks. But what I'll tell you, it is a national payer for sure. And we were also able to get a couple of other payers that are very important as well. And so, I want to come back to -- we're probably sitting at about double where we were before in terms of commercial covered lives. So, we've gone from about $20 million to about $40 million. And this is early out of the gate. It's early out of the gate, which is a good sign. And this is very consistent with LCMS is reimbursing. In some cases, it's north of that. So, it's outside of the bundle and at least what CMS is reimbursing. And I did fail to mention that we also got TRICARE as well. So, as you know, they service the military and their families. And so that was a great win right of the gate. So, we're encouraged by what we're seeing. We're encouraged and -- but it's still early days. So, I don't want to get ahead of ourselves. But as I mentioned in prior calls, we expected the commercial payers to lag significantly as they normally do. But having this kind of wins early on is encouraging.
Operator
And we have a follow-up question from Oren Livnat with H.C. Wainwright. Your line is now open.
Oren Livnat
Just want to try to think about how conservative or not this guidance is -- I did notice on the gross margin, the adjusted gross margin guidance, there flat to down from where we were in the entire second half of this year. And I would think with the growth, even conservative assumptions on growth above your fixed cost structure and the 200-liter skid in San Diego now online, I would have thought that would be even higher in 2025. So, can you just talk at all about the gross margin trends, maybe cadence through the year? And is there anything new or something we might be missing on that front that is factoring into that guidance?
Frank Lee
Yes, gross margins can be a little lumpy as they were last year. But certainly, Shawn can speak kind of lumpy they were last year and where we wound up. And overall, what I'd say is that we expect these margins to improve over time because of the volume range. So, I mean, Sean, you can comment a little bit about kind of where we were with margins last year and where we ended up.
Shawn Cross
Sure. And thanks for the question. And I completely agree that over time, we'll improve margins by driving volume growth, but we were pleased to see strong fourth quarter margins that exceeded our guided range of 74% to 76%. And -- but as Frank did mention, we need to emphasize this, there can be quarter-over-quarter variability in our gross margins and full year margins are a much better sort of frame of reference. And that informed our guided range for 2025 for 76% to 78%.
Frank Lee
Yes. And I think as we start to see volume pick up more going into the second half and particularly quarter 4, as we talked about, really running at that double digit. Then kind of going into next year, it will start to improve quite a bit more, and 200-liter will become more and more part of our mix. And so, all these things give us a good tailwind, but it's going to take us a little bit of time to get there.
Operator
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your questions. I will now turn the call back over to Susan Mesco, for any closing remarks.
Susan Mesco
Thank you, Olivia, and thanks to all on the call for your questions and time today. We are excited about the opportunities that lie ahead for us. Throughout the remainder of the year, we will continue to ensure we are well positioned for long-term success by executing our 5/30 plan to advance our mission. Thank you, and be well.
Transcript from February 27, 2025

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