image
Healthcare - Medical - Devices - NASDAQ - US
$ 0.7919
-8.01 %
$ 41.6 M
Market Cap
-0.29
P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2021 - Q1
image
Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Outset Medical First Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode.

After the speakers’ presentation there will be a question-and-answer session [Operator Instructions] I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Ms. Lynn Lewis..

Lynn Lewis

Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our first quarter 2021 earnings call. Participating from the company today will be Leslie Trigg, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Rebecca Chambers, Chief Financial Officer.

During the call, we will offer commentary on our commercial activity and review our first quarter financial results released after the close of market today, after which we will host a question-and-answer session. The press release can be found in the Investor Relations section of our website at outsetmedical.com.

This call is being recorded and will be archived in the Investors section of our website. Before I begin, I'd like to remind you that it is our intent that all forward-looking statements made during today's call will be protected under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

Any statements that relate to expectations or predictions of future events, market trends, results or performance are forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are based upon our current estimates and various assumptions.

These statements involve material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to materially differ from those anticipated or implied by these forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are based upon current available information, and Outset assumes no obligation to update these statements.

Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on these statements.

For a list and description of the risks and uncertainties associated with our business, please refer to the Risk Factors section of our 424(b)(4) prospectus filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 12, 2021 in connection with the company's primary and secondary public offering. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Leslie..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Thanks, Lynn. Good afternoon, everybody, and thank you for joining us to review our first quarter 2021 results. Since our last update in March, the Outset team has continued to execute exceptionally well across all of our key strategic initiatives.

We outperformed on revenue, secured new console orders across care settings and made substantial progress operationally. For the first quarter, we reported $22.9 million in total revenue, representing 219% growth year-over-year and 33% growth sequentially.

This outperformance, relative to our expectations, was driven primarily by increased product volume as well as higher ASPs. While new customer acquisition is important, a leading indicator we watch just as closely is whether our existing customers expand their use of Tablo to other facilities within their network.

This metric provides tangible validation of Tablo's value in lowering cost and increasing operating efficiencies. In the first quarter, more than 75% of the consoles ordered were for shipment to new sites within existing customer networks.

Customers continue to cite positive experiences as well as an appreciation for Tablo's economic value and ease of use as factors that are driving their decision to purchase additional consoles and expand to new locations.

In terms of new customers, we added several health systems during the quarter and are currently projecting that we will have signed agreements with seven of the top eight national health systems as well as a third of the top 100 regional health systems by the end of this year.

Achieving these goals will be a testament to the strength of our entire commercial organization market receptivity to Tablo and importantly, our future growth prospects. As more prominent health systems adopt and expand with Tablo, we're starting to see a greater number of independent publications and abstracts.

For example, Q1 saw clinical abstracts written and submitted to scientific conferences from UPMC, the University of New Mexico and HCA. These abstracts reported on Tablo's success treating high acuity patients and cost reduction. The St. Mark's HCA abstract, for example, reported a $550 per treatment cost savings with Tablo.

As we've outlined in the past, we include both acute and subacute facilities in our definition of the acute market. Within the subacute market, we're focused on penetrating both long-term acute care facilities known as LTAC as well as skilled nursing facilities.

For these customers, the Tablo value proposition is similar, supplies and labor cost reduction along with operating efficiency and clinical versatility. Our sales team has successfully communicated these advantages to LTACs across the country. And in fact, Tablo is now used by three of the four largest LTAC providers.

While we still have considerable runway, both in terms of expansion across our LTAC customers and new customer acquisition, we're pleased by the adoption uptake so far. With our installed base growing in the acute and subacute markets, we are increasingly confident that our value proposition is resonating quickly following console deployment.

We view this early momentum as critical and expect it to continue to build as key stakeholders experience the unparalleled benefits of Tablo's clinical versatility, point-of-care mobility, data-rich simplicity and economic advantages. As we move to expand our footprint, we have also continued to grow our home population.

In the first quarter, we signed master contracts with four new home customers, which in part led to a 50% sequential increase in home console orders. This early traction helps fuel our anticipated home growth trajectory and puts us in a good position to meet our 2021 home goals.

The majority of our new home contracts are with progressive, innovative customers spanning both health systems and dialysis care providers. One of our notable new customers, for example, is focused on enabling health systems to identify chronic kidney disease earlier and manage patients all the way to the home.

In this model, Tablo is their preferred home dialysis technology, while the services provider supports the patient journey from the hospital to the home for the health system. In other cases, the health system itself is standing up and managing its own home dialysis program.

In fact, currently a third of the health systems in our pipeline are interested in beginning home programs. In both models, Tablo is an important enabling technology. From a provider's perspective, we believe that as we collect and present real-world evidence, Tablo's value proposition at home will become increasingly tangible.

To-date, patient data from those at home remains exceptional. We continue to see highly differentiated patient training times on Tablo, consistently two weeks or less compared to the four to six weeks it typically takes patients to learn the incumbent device. Additionally, we have seen much lower patient attrition.

For example, published data on the incumbent device documents a training dropout rate that is 60% higher than seen on Tablo to-date. Moreover, while still very early and on a small number of patients, we have not had a patient choose to come off Tablo once they started at home.

As our patient population grows, we certainly expect the dropout rate to increase, but it's a good start and one that we are very proud of attaining.

We continue to believe that these two metrics, training time and dropout rate, are the most vital because they represent the biggest historical problems that have prevented HHD growth in the past, onerous training and high attrition. On a qualitative level, we get to see the impact Tablo is having on patients' lives every day.

We recently had a patient go back to work and another report that he is now able to cycle 10 to 15 miles per day even on the days he dialysis. These are the stories that really motivate us the most and represent the impact we intend to have on the lives of patients.

We look forward to continuing to deliver on our vision to transform dialysis for patients into a tech-enabled journey with seamless activation, training and retention, all driven by digital marketing and support features.

As orders for Tablo build, our supply chain and manufacturing teams have continued to lift production capacity while maintaining an exceptional level of quality and focus on our cost reduction activities, both of which are vital to our long-term success.

Our new facility in Tijuana, Mexico, which incorporates a state-of-the-art cloud-based manufacturing and documentation system produced 165 consoles in Q1 ahead of plan. This outperformance was the primary driver of slightly better-than-forecasted gross profit, leading to our second quarter of positive gross margin.

The factory continues to ramp, and in April alone, the team manufactured over 100 consoles. With production increasing, we remain well positioned to satisfy our forecasted shift schedule fully from the new manufacturing facility in the second half of this year.

Additionally, we submitted our 510(k) application to FDA as expected in March to enable our new contract manufacturing partner to produce Tablo cartridges.

The submission puts us on track to shift the majority of production from Asia to Mexico later this year and to see the anticipated benefit from the related cost reduction in the second half of 2021, assuming FDA clearance within the expected timeframe. Looking ahead, we remain focused on achieving three critical objectives through 2021.

First, driving growth in the acute market by expanding more deeply within our current customer base and signing new agreements with regional and national health systems, second, accelerating home patient adoption to capture incremental user data, bolster customer relationships and provide a foundation for significant growth in 2022, while working to ensure an exceptional Tablo home experience for patients and their families.

And third, continuing to focus on increasing manufacturing output and cost reduction activities to drive gross margin expansion. With the benefit of our recent follow-on offering, we are more confident than ever in our ability to drive the adoption of Tablo across multiple care settings.

The proceeds will help us fund revenue growth, which is tracking above our internal estimates for less than a year ago. Additionally, we are moving forward with various home, R&D, international and data analytics initiatives designed to drive durable long-term growth and profitability.

In summary, our first quarter was marked by strong revenue performance, continued operational execution and substantial progress across our strategic initiatives. We see demand for Tablo accelerating across the acute and subacute care settings with a growing number of providers uptaking Tablo for home as well.

At the same time, we remain on track with manufacturing and cost reduction initiatives. With interest in Tablo and clear visibility on the timing of console placements, we are confident in our positioning for consistent strong performance in 2021 and beyond.

And so, with that I'll now turn the call over to Rebecca to review our financials and provide more granularity on our expectations and key drivers for the remainder of 2021..

Rebecca Chambers

Thanks, Leslie. As Leslie mentioned, first quarter revenue grew 219% year-over-year to $22.9 million, driven predominantly by increased console shipments to acute customers, our HHS lease agreements and continued growth in consumables. Product revenue grew 207% year-over-year to $18.2 million.

Console revenue equaled $14.8 million or 194% year-over-year growth, driven by higher placements to our acute customers as well as the recognition of XT upgrade revenue.

Rising volumes associated with our growing installed base, increased utilization and higher ASPs drove consumable growth of 283% versus the prior year resulting in quarterly revenue of $3.4 million. Service and other revenue grew by 273% to $4.7 million compared to $1.3 million in the prior year period.

Services for our larger installed base as well as the impact of HHS lease service revenue contributed to the growth. Moving to gross margin and operating expenses, I will highlight our non-GAAP results. I encourage you to review the reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures, which can be found in today's earnings release.

Our non-GAAP gross margin was 1.6%, an improvement of 51 percentage points versus the prior year period. This expansion was primarily the result of significantly lower console and treatment costs and higher service margin as well as the impact of XT deferred revenue release.

Non-GAAP operating expenses in the first quarter were $24.2 million, up $8.1 million versus the prior year, driven primarily by investments in our commercial organization as well as G&A expenses tied to operating as a public company, including head count growth.

Compared to the prior quarter, non-GAAP OpEx declined $1.6 million as Q4 saw higher commissions tied to year-end bookings outperformance.

As detailed in the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation in our earnings release, first quarter stock-based compensation was $5.9 million as we recorded expense tied to satisfying the performance vesting condition for certain stock options upon the closing of the IPO as well as the quarterly expense tied to time-based grants.

We reported first quarter GAAP net loss of $30 million, resulting in a net loss of $0.70 per share compared to net income of $4.2 million or $0.74 per share for the prior year period. This included the net benefit of certain adjustments related to our private company financing.

Non-GAAP net loss was $24.2 million or $0.56 per share compared to non-GAAP net income of $4.7 million or $0.84 per share for the same period in 2020. We ended the quarter with approximately $311 million of cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and short-term investments.

This does not include the approximately $150 million of net proceeds from our recent follow-on offering in April. With this raise, we are now more confident than ever in our ability to fund growth.

Moving now to our 2021 outlook, we project revenue for full year 2021 to range from $92 million to $97 million, which represents approximately 84% to 94% growth over fiscal year 2020 revenue. This compares to prior revenue guidance of $89 million to $94 million and contemplates our modestly updated expectation for console placements.

Moving to gross margin, we are projecting a lower console cost given our cost-down activities and improved manufacturing productivity as well as the benefit of shifting towards our lower-cost cartridge manufacturer, assuming FDA clearance.

These factors are expected to drive further gross margin expansion with sequential improvements throughout the rest of the year. Additionally, we are forecasting a meaningful increase sequentially in operating expense given investments to continue to drive revenue growth.

In all, we remain confident in our position, both financially and operationally and in our ability to continue to execute according to plan as we build on our success through 2021 and beyond. Thank you for your time. We look forward to providing an update on our Q2 progress during our next earnings call. We will now move to the Q&A session.

Operator, please open the lines..

Operator

Our first question comes from Amit Hazan from Goldman Sachs..

Jamie Perse

Thank you and good afternoon. It's actually Jamie Perse on from the Goldman team. Thanks for taking the questions. Leslie, you mentioned on the three strategic priorities. So I've got one question on each. First, you mentioned the existing customers.

It sounds like that was really, really strong this quarter? What are you seeing from these customers in terms of triggers to expand their use of Tablo across other hospitals? And as part of that, I mean, you've given color in the past on the opportunities for Tablo in different-sized hospitals and things like that.

I was wondering if you could tease out sort of the TAM, if you will, with existing customers, just the opportunity to continue penetrating existing customers?.

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Sure, well let me start with your first question, then Rebecca, may want to chime on that - the second part. The first part of your question was what's really motivating these customers to expand, and the triggering event is really the quantification of the cost reduction, first and foremost.

Most of our hospitals and health systems that adopt Tablo understandably will seek to quantify how much they're saving on a per treatment basis. And we assist them in doing that. We'll often do what we'll call sort of quantify the impact meetings as early as 30 days after their start with Tablo.

And on the basis of really seeing the results firsthand, that's the real number one motivator for health systems to have a desire to expand that to other hospitals in their network is really seeing the results and also not only on cost reduction, but on patient quality.

That Tablo really gives these hospitals an opportunity to better control our patient care, putting that back in their own hands, and looking at things like reducing length of stay, reducing patient wait times for dialysis are often other reasons why hospitals choose to expand their utilization of Tablo to other facilities..

Rebecca Chambers

Yes, thanks Jamie, for the question. With regard to the TAM of existing customers, if you think about where we are today, we have six of the eight top national health systems. We have several of the top 100 health systems and three of the four top LTACs. And so that is a significant portion, not ready to quantify today.

But I would say more than the majority of the $2.2 billion acute TAM that we have contracts for and have the ability to go further penetrate. And so, I think when it comes down to it, we're very well positioned to continue to penetrate and grow the acute revenue base. And I think the success we've seen today speak to that end..

Jamie Perse

Okay, thanks for that.

And then just turning to the home opportunity for a second, two of the largest dialysis providers in the country, DaVita and Fresenius had an agreement announced in the quarter related to one of the competitor technologies? Just wondering how that impacts you from a competitive positioning standpoint and are you going to have access to DaVita and Fresenius customers or should we think about your path to penetrating the home opportunity as through other channels?.

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Well, I think the most important thing to continue to keep in mind is just the enormity of the market - I was going to say ginormity, but I don't think that's a word. So I'll go with the enormity of the market and the opportunity. There is scarcely a bigger piece of the healthcare market available today.

And again, for the last kind of 15, 20 years, there's really only been one device available to serve it. And so first and foremost, we view this to be kind of a wide open driving range as the second product to market. I can't speak specifically to the DaVita and Fresenius agreement other than what I read about it just as you did.

What I can say is that there are a growing number of providers that I talked about a few minutes ago, being health systems and some of these kind of newer entrants into the market that are specifically focused on sending patients home. So, we don't view this as an either or proposition.

We really view it as an and proposition where you'll just see the universe of home dialysis providers expanding..

Jamie Perse

Okay all very fair. And then just one last one just on the path to profitability obviously, gross margins been really strong in the last two quarters and above expectations.

Can you just update us on what you're thinking in terms of potentially pulling forward some of your time lines to profitability and to longer-term peak gross margins?.

Rebecca Chambers

Yes, happy to take that, Jamie. I think we're becoming more confident in that path. We've always had a significant amount of confidence, but each quarter under our belt obviously provides more proof points to that end. Again, we're still only a couple quarters into this. So thinking about 2025 margin structure, it's probably too early to get there.

But we’ll remain very confident in the 50% gross margin target as well as the 20% operating margin target for 2025, given a variety of assumptions around segment mix and other various contributing facts.

With regard to time line to profitability, if you recall back in last summer, we had expected the fourth quarter of 2021 to be the first quarter of profitability at the gross margin line. Obviously, we have pulled that forward now a couple of quarters.

And given incremental sequential gains on the gross margin line throughout the rest of the year, assuming we deliver those as we expect, then I think we can successfully say we're at least a couple quarters ahead of schedule there..

Jamie Perse

Okay, thanks for all that and congrats on a good quarter..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Thank you, Jamie..

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Drew Ranieri from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open..

Drew Ranieri

Hi Leslie and Rebecca. So my first question kind of piggybacks on some of the comments that you've already made. But just on the relationship in the acute setting and the home, I'd just like to get more of your view. And I understand that the acute setting momentum is building here and it remains still early days for the home.

But could you talk about how the acute channel really lays the potential for home demand going forward? How are you thinking about that funnel evolving? And any signs that you're seeing still in these early days of acceleration? I get some sense that you're still being methodical in the acute rollout, but what do you really need to see to step on the gas pedal to take advantage of the ginormity of the opportunity here?.

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

I appreciate your adoption of this new word and expect that it will be entered in Webster shortly. Yes, so let me - maybe I'll start and ask Rebecca to comment additionally. So, how we see - the acute channel helping to kind of build the funnel for home - and maybe take a quick step back.

The way that we design Tablo and our design goal from a technology standpoint from the beginning, really was the notion of an enterprise solution. That health systems would no longer need to buy and maintain two, three, four different types of machines, each of which did only one type of dialysis.

And so, the design vision was hey, could we build a single hardware platform that really could perform the functionality of all these machines for all types of acuity patients. And so in delivering on that promise, that design promise.

We're able to approach a health system, a given health system and talk to them about down selecting now to Tablo for use anywhere from the ICU to home. So that's kind of part one and the idea behind the enterprise solution.

I think the part two and what's leading health systems to pick up on the concept of managing the home patients is incremental revenue. Home dialysis for our health system is associated with the contribution margin that in.

I won't say all cases, but in many cases, is a higher contribution margin than the inpatient procedures that they're managing in their current environment. And so, we've seen health systems sort of light up at the opportunity, on the one hand, to save money with Tablo, let's say, in the ICU on the bedside of the floor.

And then make more money by managing that patient on a chronic basis, both in terms of a higher top line revenue growth rate as a result and also an incrementally differentiated contribution margin, managing that patient in the home. So that's really what seems to be resonating most with health systems..

Drew Ranieri

Got it, thank you. And just a second question on new products. You touched a little bit on this at the end of your script. But can you talk about in more detail about some of the R&D development initiatives you highlighted, maybe around analytics? And I think I heard the word international in there.

So I'd just love to get some more color on those opportunities? Thank you..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Yes, sure. Well, the - maybe I'll start in reverse chronological order with international. And our approach to even contemplating selling Tablo outside the United States will be very, very similar to kind of the measure twice, cut once approach that we first took with acute and we're now taking with home.

It's worked well for us to be thoughtful and prospective and deliberate. And so, we're going to rinse and repeat that pattern on international. And so, what we're committed to is discovery. What we're committed to is evaluation.

I know it is not lost to you, Drew anybody on this call that you don't just sort of leap into a bunch of different countries, willy-nilly. And so, we're going to do our homework. We've given ourselves a homework assignment. And we're going to use some investment dollars to go do that homework well, which countries, why.

Of course, the TAM of those opportunities, both acute and home, what problems - Tablo really solves if any, in which of those markets and why. What the margin profile might look like through various distribution mechanisms and then the sequencing of these opportunities. I mean there is - it's no secret. I mean the U.S.

opportunity here is so, so big, we do want to be thoughtful and stay focused at the same time. But the U.S. market is 30% of the global dialysis market, and we're very well aware of that, too. So I would call it an investment and discovery and smart thinking around it, Drew, for the time being..

Rebecca Chambers

One thing to add before....

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Yes..

Rebecca Chambers

Leslie moves on to new products is, international is not currently baked into any of our revenue projections for the rest of - through the forecasting period.

And really, as we've shared historically, those have primarily been driven by the acute market in the near term and in future years are augmented by the home market so, just wanted to add that in before Leslie moves to new products..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Yes, that's a good point. And I will try to not wax poetic on the new product answer because this could be a long one. But yes, so I think I'll start by saying that a big part of our - what we're excited about is cementing our position as the innovation leader in this space.

I think this space is lacked in innovation leader, and we intend to fill that void. Our ambitions in delivering on that go far beyond the Tablo device. There are so many ways that we already are inventing inside of Outset from supply chain to distribution logistics to manufacturing that we see many, many opportunities to invent broadly.

You mentioned kind of data analytics, and yes, that is one area that we are really keen to further exploit both for the benefit of patients.

You could think about all sorts of digital, virtual, app-based sort of support mechanisms for the consumer at home that might build virtual community that might give patients access to virtual support on a real-time basis that again, all in the name of benefiting retention in the home.

You might think about sort of digital or more hybrid virtual strategies around training. So all things kind of a surround sound, digital approach to consumer support might be one, and another is just building more value for the provider.

Tablo already integrates into the EMR, provides a tremendous amount of data to the provider about their patients and their treatment outcome. But in a value-based care environment, there is so, so, so much more information value that, we believe, we could deliver to health systems, both regional and national over time.

So those are the general vectors of growth Drew, without getting too specific at this time..

Drew Ranieri

Thanks for taking the questions..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Danielle Antalffy from SVB Leerink. Your line is open..

Danielle Antalffy

Hi good afternoon ladies thanks so much for taking the question.

Rebecca, I think this question is probably for you, and I apologize if I missed it, but just on the backlog that you guys had talked about on the Q4 call, is there a way to quantify how much of that contributed to Q1? Is it totally worked through or is there still more to go, and where you are from a backlog perspective? If you're still giving that number, I apologize, I can't remember if you're going to keep giving that?.

Rebecca Chambers

Yes, thanks for the question, Danielle. To hit the last part first, we plan on disclosing that number annually..

Danielle Antalffy

That's right. I'm sorry..

Rebecca Chambers

No not at all, not at all. But I'll answer the rest of your question for you. As you mentioned, we ended 2020 with meaningful backlog of approximately 550 consoles in backlog, and then those are primarily expected to ship in the first half. And so, we do still have a portion of those, obviously, in backlog here as we enter the second quarter.

But in the first quarter, we continued to see strong demand for Tablo, and we're very pleased with our backlog position exiting the first quarter. That position as well as our pipeline is what effectively allowed us to modestly raise our revenue expectations for the year just with one quarter underneath our belt.

And going forward, our focus is less on the magnitude of the backlog, but really making sure that we use it as a tool for hiring, planning and ensuring a good customer experience, which is our real - the real benefit we get from that backlog position, if you will..

Danielle Antalffy

Yes, that makes a ton of sense. And Rebecca, I'm going to keep you talking sorry, Leslie..

Rebecca Chambers

Keep going..

Danielle Antalffy

But this question is on the gross margin. So you had another pretty strong quarter relative to - we had been looking at for a decline in gross margins or a negative gross margin, I should say. You beat our number.

It looks like you came basically in line with consensus, but still a positive number and feels like you're continuing to track sort of faster.

I know you were committed - or you said last quarter that you were able to say yes, we're tracking faster? But not ready to sort of put a new number out there for long-term margins? I mean what can you say about how sustainable this trajectory of margin improvement is because it does feel like maybe now you've got two quarters of positive gross margins.

Just wondering how that - what you can say about the long-term trajectory now? Thanks so much..

Rebecca Chambers

Yes, my pleasure. I would say that we are increasingly confident in the trajectory and that you should expect to see incremental sequential improvement throughout the remainder of this year. Really, as you think about the rest of the year in the second quarter, even a higher percentage of our consoles being shipped will come from our new facility.

And therefore, obviously, that will lower the labor cost associated with each console as well as increase the absorption from incremental productivity. And then in the third quarter, we'll be fully self-sourcing, if you will. So we will be fully building the consoles needed to hit our ship schedule, and that will continue on from there.

So, we'll see an incremental benefit again in the third quarter and then timing of the cartridge move is obviously slightly out of our hands, given we have the application into the FDA, but that also should be a back-half tailwind to gross margin. And so, we're pleased with how margin is shaking out.

We're obviously still - we're incrementally confident, but we're not ready to change the 2025 target margin by any stretch of the imagination at this point in time, but our confidence is increasing..

Danielle Antalffy

Thank you so much..

Rebecca Chambers

My pleasure..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Rick Wise from Stifel. Your line is open..

Rick Wise

Good afternoon to you both. Leslie, maybe you can add some more color on your comments around the expanded Tablo use or orders from existing customers into other facilities, which I think you said was 75% of the orders in the quarter, if I understood you correctly. Correct me if I'm wrong.

But help us think about that kind of number going forward? I mean it's fantastic and a real vote of confidence in the technology and you.

Is that - do you - should we expect that to make up a significant portion of orders going forward or is opening new accounts - or how do we think about that mix in this quarter and going forward?.

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Yes, sure. I'm happy to take that. And yes, you're absolutely right about the 75% that was the correct figure..

Rebecca Chambers

Well, we don't - Rick, and I'm not sure if this is going to be totally helpful to you. We don't really think about forecasting our business that way. We have to be good at both.

We have to be great, actually, at new customer acquisition, and we have to be great at the experience that, that customer and - now our consumers have after they've adopted the technology. And so our whole commercial strategy really is kind of a - I think we talked about this before.

We kind of mantra land and expand, right, and we talked about since last summer. We have to be graded at both. And so, we just today mentioned the expansion data really to give you all some evidence for the first time that the expand part of land and expand is materializing in a way that we're really proud of.

And I used the word proud because this is certainly not easy. And I would love to take the opportunity just to kind of salute our clinical and capital field team. This is not - it's never an easy one to work with customers within a new technology and oftentimes a new kind of care delivery model.

And I think the team has done a fantastic job in introducing. And also actually getting change management in a way that is resulting in the both customer expansion and new customer acquisition.

I don't know if that's helpful color, Rick, but we just view it effectively as a reflection of our land and expand commercial strategy and just hadn't talked as much about the expand part. I thought it was a good time to do so..

Rick Wise

That's great, Rebecca, turning to the guidance. Obviously, you raised both the low end and the high end, roughly $3 million. You outperformed at least - well I think, consensus by $1.5 million or so in the first quarter.

How do we think about factoring that slightly higher guidance into the quarterly cadence? And how do we think about the sequential pattern of quarters now for the rest of the year? I mean just sort of steadily, slightly, sequentially higher or do you think that for some of the factors that you mentioned, we might see no, it might be now a shade more back end loaded the - that extra above - guide above the outperformance?.

Rebecca Chambers

Yes, happy to take that one, Rick. Your former - the former statement in that is the correct conclusion. Given our outperformance in the first quarter, we are forecasting sequential growth across the balance of the year, with roughly equivalent growth expected in the second and third quarter and then slightly lower growth in the fourth quarter.

Given, if you recall, we have the headwind with the first HHS lease coming off in that quarter. So there's some puts and takes there as you think about some chunky revenue, for lack of a better way to say it, but we are expecting pretty steady sequential growth for the rest of the year..

Rick Wise

All right, two more questions from me. First, back to the home. The 50% sequential increase in home orders, I appreciate the base is small.

But maybe help us understand what's involved there, if you could give us a little more color in that kind of order increase, how quickly you can deliver it? And I personally - frankly, would be curious about these master agreements.

What's involved there? I mean what's the - what are the implications for sort of go forward, Leslie, if you could help us understand a little more about how to think about master agreements as well?.

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Sure, let me please give you a little bit of editorial here, and then you can redirect me if we're not quite getting to what you want to learn more about. So in terms of - when you say kind of how quickly and so forth on these home contracts I would say, generally speaking.

What we found is that the home contracts are generally following a pretty typical sales cycle on the acute side. We're not seeing them necessarily any faster or longer than our typical acute sales cycle, which we've shared in the past is about nine months, some are faster and some are longer. But that's kind of what we're seeing.

And if I had to characterize our sales cycle on the home side, nothing really special to call out there. And in terms of the master agreement, we don't have a one size fits all.

There is - each one is a little bit different and unique, depending on the goals of the provider again whether that's a health system or one of these kind of innovative new entrants or a conventional dialysis care provider. But generally speaking, the master agreement is a commitment on both sides.

It typically speaks to a pretty significant commitment from the provider to put more patients on home than they have today and to do so with - principally with Tablo. So I'm not sure if I'm getting to what you're curious about, Rick, but those are a few comments that come to mind..

Rick Wise

Great, no, that's helpful. And last, I'm going to keep asking about - the macro environment and the evolving clearly positive macro tailwind. Again, maybe I'd be interested in hearing how the ETC model impact and the potentially expanded reimbursement.

How is that factoring into these discussions with providers? Is it a factor is at all? Is this a whole change in sentiment, how do we think about it? Thank you..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Yes, absolutely Rick. I would say that it has absolutely had an impact in terms of mindset and planning. On the part of those providers that are participating in it and to cover just a few of the facts. The ETC is mandatory for approximately 30% of the clinic - it's geographically based.

So if we think about kind of roughly 30% being required to participate. And over time, the ETC will either involve up to an 8% increase in the treatment base rate or a penalty of up to negative 10% off the treatment base rate, dependent on how successful that individual clinic has been in growing its own population.

So by getting back to your question, Rick, what we continue to experience pretty consistently is that because of the ETC, I do think it is shifting a mindset towards more home.

I think it's increasing motivation both with providers and also with physicians because the ETC also pays nephrologists more or less, depending on their patient census at home. And yes, I think it's accelerated some planning.

I think it activated a lot more thought and certainly increased interest in conversations around, hey, how do we drive x percent of our patients home.

And what I've noticed is that in my personal conversations with providers, their ambitions and aspirations around the percent going to home are more elevated today than they would have been maybe in conversations I would have had a year or two ago. So, those are the impacts we're noticing thus far..

Rick Wise

Very interesting, thanks so much..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

My pleasure..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Suraj Kalia from Oppenheimer & Company. Your line is open..

Suraj Kalia

Hi, Leslie and Rebecca can you hear me all right..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Yes..

Rebecca Chambers

Thanks Suraj..

Suraj Kalia

Perfect, hey ladies congrats on the quarter. So Leslie, a bunch of questions from my side, and forgive me if I didn't get this right. The attrition rates you all were implying versus NxStage is a 50% lower - I got the 50% number in my notes.

Can you just provide some additional context over what period was this measured? Were these existing home hemo customers?.

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Sure..

Suraj Kalia

What end is equal to was?.

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Sure, sure happy to. So the number that we talked about in the script was 60%. So that's kind of part one. The period of time that the attrition data pertains to is training. There are a number of our cuts that attrition data over time on the incumbent device just - because they've been around for 15 years.

And so, there's been more opportunity to study that device. But - so the way that some researchers have studied attrition rates on the incumbent device are at the time of training and then at the time of one year are some of the studies that we've read.

And so, to try to compare apples-to-apples since we just received FDA clearance in the spring of last year. We just haven't had enough time on task to measure an adequate population of course, at a year and longer. But we do feel that we have an adequate sample size - on our patient dropout rate on Tablo training.

And so, we just Suraj, in the script compared the dropout rate during Tablo training versus the dropout rates that's been reported during training - patient training on the other incumbent device. And that's when we noted that the attrition rate on Tablo during training is approximately 60% lower..

Rebecca Chambers

Additionally, Suraj, we did cite that once we have gotten patients home, we haven't seen anyone drop off. Now that is, as Leslie mentioned in the script, a very small number at this point, measured over, I would say, a handful of months, a little bit more than a handful of months, but that is notable as well.

And obviously, there's only one place to go from here. So we don't want to get too excited about it, but it is a positive indicator - as we experienced the Tablo..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

And - it does mirror so far our experience in the field and our retention - is very high retention rate in the home does mirror our data from the IDE. In the IDE, we did not have any patients’ drop - who started the home arm drop out, and that was not the case in the incumbent device trial for FDA.

So we had a little bit of a hopeful indicator through the trial and thus far, that has been the commercial experience in the real world, but I do stress again so far and in small numbers..

Suraj Kalia

Got it. And Leslie and Rebecca, I'll just throw in my two additional questions, and I'll hop back in queue. Leslie, one is just my pet topic in this whole space. Look, you guys have done so well against a tough backdrop, right, just a structural backdrop. And you mentioned you all think yourself as the innovation leader.

Leslie, why not go also on on-demand real-time PD? That is one question if you care to answer. And the second thing, maybe I missed it.

Any updated comments on NTAP, just getting the extra payment? I know we talked about the quality, the 8% upside and 10% downside, I'd be curious more so in terms of the impact? Ladies thank you for taking these questions..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Sure, yes, no I'm happy to. And maybe I'll just take those in reverse order. So the NTAP program, which for renal is called TP, I always love the name TPNIES, but spelled T-P-N-I-E-S, and stands for something that I would probably butcher by trying to pronounce it. But it's pronounced TPNIES.

So that program, no new updates there, Suraj, is the short story long. We put in our application in the winter. And we would expect that we would get some indication of CMS' thinking about our application when the proposed rule comes out midyear.

On the - but I'll maybe repeat a comment that Rebecca made earlier, that's probably important to share about TPNIES is that none of our forward-looking revenue projections assume that Tablo ever received a positive TPNIES approval from CMS.

So we're not dependent on it, would it provide some nice useful upside if it were to occur in 2021 or 2022? Absolutely, but it's not something that we count on happening. On - I think your other question was PD.

I guess I'd say - I mean look, I think we'd be foolish not to be looking at interesting technologies and adjacent - even adjacent areas within this market more broadly. And we intend to do so, and we're always engaged in doing so.

So nothing specific to share at this time, but I think we're going to be a company that takes a very broad look at where we can have impact utilizing both, I think, the people advantages that we have and the technology platform advantages that we have..

Suraj Kalia

Fair enough thank you..

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Shagun Singh from Wells Fargo. Your line is open..

Shagun Singh

Thank you so much for taking the questions. So I guess the first one is just on the average cost savings that you're seeing in the acute setting. Can you share that with us? I think previously, you had indicated about $300 to $500, but it looks like it may be tracking at the upper end just based on some of the checks we've done.

And I think in one of the cases you've been called out $550. So if you can help us there and then with respect to the guidance? Your full year revenue guidance and given what you did in Q1, it implies a deceleration on a sequential basis, just looking at - quarter-over-quarter growth versus what you did in Q1.

So how should we think about that? Is it mostly backlog or is there some conservatism baked in? And then if you could just give us the cadence of OpEx through the year. I think you mentioned there will be a step-up from Q1? Thank you..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Do you want to go first, Rebecca?.

Rebecca Chambers

Sure, I'd be happy to. Taking those - taking revenues and OpEx, you're correct. So if you think about 2021, there is really two major factors which are impacting sequential growth, the first being the HHS agreement and how that rolls throughout the remainder of the year.

If you think about the pacing from the first quarter to the second quarter and then the second quarter to the third quarter there's a $500,000 or so headwind each quarter that we have to take into account.

And then from the quarter to the fourth quarter, $1 million or slightly more, so when we think about that plus the timing of the backlog, that we had entering in the quarter. And when our customers have asked us to shift that backlog, those are the primary drivers of the pacing of sequential growth through the remainder of the year.

With the topic or on the topic of operating expenses, we expect to see a decent pickup, as I mentioned in the script sequentially for the second quarter and then again, for the third quarter, before more flattening out for the fourth quarter as compared to the third.

So two decent size pickups as we invest in the commercial organization to support the significant consoles that we're placing as well as the other initiatives that, Leslie and I have referred to in the scripted comments..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Okay. Maybe I'll address the first question. You mentioned around - a little bit more color around the cost reduction results. So what I would say is yes, it's certainly the case that some customers, some hospitals and health systems are seeing more than a $300 to $500 per treatment savings.

I guess, look, we try to be very conservative and err on the side of conservatism when we talk about the type of impacts that Tablo is having in the marketplace. So what would account for kind of a $300 versus a $500 or even higher than $500 is really the difference between the components of cost reduction.

So probably on the lower end of that estimate would be a hospital that is just enjoying lower supply costs through use of Tablo in contrast to a hospital on the higher end, maybe the $500, $550, et cetera, would be a hospital that is not only benefiting from lower supply costs, but also benefiting from lower labor cost.

And that's - hopefully, this is helpful. That explains the range. And yes, there certainly our hospitals that are on that high end or maybe even the higher end as we note in this one abstract that was published in Q1 by one of our national customers..

Shagun Singh

Great, thank you for taking the questions..

Leslie Trigg President, Chief Executive Officer & Chairman

Absolutely..

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, I'm not showing any further question at this time. I would now like to turn the call over back to your speaker for any further remarks..

Lynn Lewis

Thank you so much. As a reminder, a replay of this call will be available as a webcast in the Investors section of our website as well as through the dial-in instructions contained in today's earnings release. Thank you for joining us today.

This concludes our call, and we look forward to our next update, following the close of the second fiscal quarter of 2021. Thank you..

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect..

ALL TRANSCRIPTS
2024 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2023 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2022 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2021 Q-4 Q-3 Q-2 Q-1
2020 Q-4 Q-3