NYSEAMERICAN:VNRX VolitionRx Q1 2024 Earnings Report $0.48 -0.01 (-2.56%) As of 05/2/2025 04:10 PM Eastern Earnings History VolitionRx EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.10Consensus EPS -$0.11Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPSN/AVolitionRx Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$0.17 millionExpected Revenue$0.27 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$100.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/AVolitionRx Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date5/13/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateTuesday, May 14, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsVolitionRx's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, May 12, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, May 13, 2025 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by VolitionRx Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 14, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to VolitionRx Limited First Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference Call. During this presentation, all parties are in listen only mode. Following the presentation, the conference call will be opened for questions. This conference call is being recorded today, May 14, 2024. Speaker 100:00:45I would now like to Operator00:00:45turn the conference over to Louise Batchelor, Group's Chief Marketing and Communications Officer. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:00:57Thank you, and welcome, everyone, to today's earnings conference call for VolitionRx Limited. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that some of the information discussed on this conference call will include forward looking statements covered under the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on our beliefs as well as assumptions we have used based upon information currently available to us. Because these statements reflect our current views concerning future events, these statements may involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Actual future results may vary significantly based on a number of factors that may cause the actual results or events to be materially different from future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by these statements. Speaker 200:01:54We have identified various risk factors associated with our operations in our most recent annual report on Form 10 ks, quarterly reports on Form 10 Q and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We do not undertake an obligation to update any forward looking statements made during the course of this call. We will start the call today with Terry Hughes, our Group Chief Financial Officer, who will cover Volition's financial and operating results for the Q1 of 2024, along with a discussion of recent finance activities and the look ahead. Doctor. Andrew Retta, our recently appointed Chief Medical Officer, will provide a commentary about our clinical trial program and then Gael Forteir, our Chief Commercial Officer, will summarize some of the key commercial achievements this quarter with a look ahead to upcoming milestones. Speaker 200:02:49Lastly, Cameron Reynolds, our President and Group Chief Executive Officer, will provide a brief wrap up before we open the conference call to a question and answer session. I'll now turn the call over to Tarek. Speaker 100:03:02Thanks, Lew, and thank you, everyone, for joining Volition's Q1 2024 earnings call today. We do appreciate your time given the busy earnings season. I'll now provide a summary of the key financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2024. We ended the quarter with cash or cash equivalents of approximately $11,800,000 Throughout this quarter, we have continued to work on a number of threads with the aim of ensuring Volition is cash flow neutral in 2025. We are making strong and necessary decisions to preserve capital in the company whilst ensuring we deliver on our vision and mission. Speaker 100:03:43Firstly, from a funding perspective, as you are probably aware, throughout the company's history, we have been successful in securing non dilutive funding on favorable terms and year to date we have targeted a range of government agencies, including in the U. S. To fund or co fund some of our strategic projects up to $25,000,000 In addition, we have applied for or are in the process of applying for an additional $18,000,000 from various European agencies. As a reminder, we have previously received over $20,000,000 in non diluted funding support from various Belgian and European agencies. We will provide further updates on this in the coming months. Speaker 100:04:28Secondly, as Andy and Gail will cover later, we are working hard to complete the materials for our data rooms during this Q2 for Nu. Q NET and CAPTCHA PCR to enable licensing negotiations to move forward. If successful, we believe that this strategy like the approach we took with Nu. Q Vet could provide us with ongoing royalties and very meaningful milestone payments in the next 12 months. Thirdly, now that we expect that we are very close to receiving large amounts of data for both Nu. Speaker 100:05:00Q nets and capture PCR, Subsequent to quarter end, we took some necessary actions in order to significantly reduce expenditures and cash burn as we focus on commercialization. We have and will continue to undertake a thorough review of all projects with the aim of streamlining our R and D, innovation, scientific and sales and marketing activities to help ensure that we deliver on our focused action plans and monetize our exciting technologies and intellectual property. Our goal is to reduce expenditures by $10,000,000,000 on an annualized basis. Additionally, to demonstrate their continued commitment and belief in the long term potential of the company, the Board of Directors intends to take 50% of their fees in equity for a minimum of 6 months and the leadership team intends to take a percentage of their salaries in equity for a minimum of 6 months, ranging from 10% to 50%, with our Group Chief Executive Officer, Cameron Reynolds, taking 50%. We have also postponed the payments of any cash bonuses indefinitely. Speaker 100:06:08We have invested significantly over the recent years to build out our product pillars and to ensure we have robust scientific and clinical evidence to support our potential breakthrough technologies. Following our anticipated receipt by the end of June of a substantial amount of clinical data, we intend to have a laser focus on commercializing our our approximately $170,000 for the quarter, approximately 15% higher than the same period last year. About 75% of the revenue was from Nu. Q Vet and the remainder from Nu. Q Discover. Speaker 100:06:51The initial phase of a product launch can take adjustments are made to the product workflow, marketing, price, etcetera. And so whilst the revenue ramp from NewQ Vets has taken longer than anticipated, we do expect revenues to accelerate in the second half of twenty twenty four due to 2 very important recent product launches. We are delighted that 2 additional large distributors have recently come online with our Nu. Q Vet cancer test. HanTek Diagnostics, part of the Mars Pet Care Group, announced the launch of the Nu. Speaker 100:07:24Q Vet test, not only in the U. S, but also in Europe, and have been very active in marketing of the in house test at a very compelling list price of $35 to the vet. It was very heartening to see Antec's press release, including several excellent bet KOL endorsements in both the U. S. And Europe. Speaker 100:07:45And you might remember from our last call that the VET team were out in Japan supporting FUJIFILM VET systems at their launch event at the World Veterinary Cancer Congress. Fuji is also pricing the test to vets at below $40 and will market our test aggressively later during the Q2 after very good initial feedback from vets. So we certainly hope to see revenue accelerate in the second half of the year. To sum up, our aim is to become cash flow neutral in 2025 by increasing revenues, cutting costs to reduce expenditures by €10,000,000 on an annualized basis, getting very meaningful further government non dilutive funding and licensing milestone payments from Nu. Q Net and Capture PCR. Speaker 100:08:33As we have said on previous calls, our commercial strategy is to monetize our intellectual property through licensing. To that end, we are delighted with the progress we have made with Nu. Q Vet and with the progress we are making with Nu. Q NETs, Captured PCR and Nu. Q Lung Cancer. Speaker 100:08:50And to provide more details, I'd now like to hand the call over to Andy and Gael. Andy, over to you. Speaker 300:08:58Thank you very much, Tarek, and good morning, everybody. Thank you for joining us today. I will start by reiterating my conclusions from our last call just a few weeks ago now. I believe that Volition's technologies will not only help with diagnostic enrichment, but also with monitoring a patient's disease progression and response to treatment. And most incredibly, we should be able to accomplish these goals with a relatively low cost, easily available, routine blood test, which can be used widely around the world. Speaker 300:09:28We have certainly made excellent progress towards achieving these emissions in the last year. Starting first with Nu. Q. Nept and sepsis, I wanted to highlight a couple of studies, which we hope will provide strong clinical utility evidence. We have ongoing analysis of 2 large scale retrospective sepsis cohorts in Europe, the German sepsis group and work with a team at UMC Amsterdam. Speaker 300:09:55This will encompass over 2,500 patients with longitudinal samples. We hope to characterize cohorts of patients with sepsis and this should be a really rich and valuable source of insight into the value that H3.1 or NuqNet offers. These samples have now all been run and we're working on the complex process of data analysis. We aim to have this completed by the end of next month, but we'll have data ready to show soon afterwards. We extended the DOCROW study in the U. Speaker 300:10:27S. To include sicker patients and for patients to be initiated from the emergency department rather than simply ITU. This plan is to close out this study in the coming months. In summary, across all the studies to date, we have data covering patients from the emergency room presentation through to intensive care unit admission. We will cover key outcome measures with Nu. Speaker 300:10:49Q nets correlated with the sepsis III diagnostic criteria, disease severity, specifically picking out risk of development of organ failure and types of organ failure intensive care mortality, 28 day mortality, duration of organ supportive therapies and length of stay in hospital and in ITU. We believe that this data will significantly strengthen the contents of our confidential data room to support our ongoing commercial discussions by the midpoint this year. Our project with key opinion leader, Professor Desjardins in France is also progressing well. This is a consortium project of an ongoing prospective study of which Volition is a key member, again, it's longitude in nature and large scale with an anticipated recruitment of about 1500 patients. Finally, the EPIC TETRA study at my own hospital, Guyton St. Speaker 300:11:44Thomas' in London is now underway with our 1st patient recruited in December last year. From a publication perspective, we're making solid progress. Following on from our key opinion leader event last year, I've been working closely with the clinicians on a clinical review article with our intention to submit it for peer review by the end of June and hopefully publication shortly thereafter. We received positive feedback from our publication by one of our colleagues, Kieran Zukas. We have addressed the reviewers' questions and the paper has been resubmitted. Speaker 300:12:17We hope to hear back confirmation that will be published very shortly. Findings of the synthetic sepsis model emphasize the importance of investigating physiology and biology. This is relevant to enable us to have a better understanding of disease pathology of risk factors and factors that trigger neutrophils and lead to an excessive immune response. Ultimately, this will lead to us to identify therapeutic targets to allow to intervene and hopefully change the trajectory and improve outcomes of patients with sepsis. We have a robust scientific pathway, strengthening our evidence as we continue to develop and supplement our clinical data to support our scientific rationale. Speaker 300:13:01We aim to publish more papers over the coming year. We anticipate a number of the clinical studies I mentioned earlier will report out at the European a flagship event in Barcelona in October. We are also proudly sponsoring our 1st satellite symposium and the session will be chaired by Professor Dejali Yinan at the Congress. We expect all of these activities to help us continue to build momentum and generate licensing interest. One final comment on UQ NET before I move on to our cancer technologies. Speaker 300:13:32I would like to reiterate that the sense from the KOL group was that Nu. Q NET potentially represent one of the biggest breakthroughs in sepsis management in the last 30 years, potentially helping us to diagnose, monitor and treat patients more efficiently and hopefully save many lives. We have many more details to follow, but it certainly looks a very busy and exciting year ahead for Nu. Q. NET and TEPTIS. Speaker 300:13:56Cancer, as we all know, is a very serious and deadly disease, causing almost 10,000,000 deaths in 2020. The incidence of cancer is forecast to increase as our population ages with an estimate of around 30,000,000 new cases diagnosed each year by 2,040. Like many diseases, early diagnosis of cancer has a significant impact on outcome. Quite simply, the earlier we can diagnose the disease, the greater chance of survival and a better quality of life for our patients. Early diagnosis is, however, very challenging. Speaker 300:14:31Often, cancer develops silently with few symptoms, and often people are diagnosed only late in the illness when fewer and much more aggressive treatment options are available. Early stage cancer is difficult to detect because the cancer derived circulating tumor DNA is low. It may compromise only 0.01% of the DNA present amongst a background of normal cell free DNA. We're very excited as Volition has developed a novel method of liquid biopsy involving the first ever reported physical isolation of a class of tumor derived ctDNA fragments for blood. These cancer derived tumor DNA fragments are extracted and after removal of the normal background DNA, the cancer DNA is detected and characterized with a low cost PCR test. Speaker 300:15:23We're calling this new technique CAPTCHA PCR. Volition's proof of concept data was presented at the European Society of Medical Oncology Conference in 2023. We demonstrated the isolation of tumors derived DNA fragments from plasma. Volition has tested the new method in a small clinical experiment and detected a range of solid and liquid tumors, including early stage 1 diseases. These early assays were developed using a leukemia model, but to our surprise, we were also able to detect many other cancers, including detecting colorectal cancer in a blood test with an accuracy approaching that of the current fecal immunochemical tests or FIT tests. Speaker 300:16:09Subsequent to our initial poster, Doctor. Jake McAuliffe and team have presented at a number of cancer specific conferences, sharing initial data and developing all important key opinion leader and potential centers of excellence network. The team have continued to identify other potential and the associated PCR tests, especially in solid cancers to conduct initial clinical studies in larger, more diverse patient cohorts. From a publication perspective, again, we are making solid progress. Jacob and the team are working very hard to complete their first manuscript and plan to submit this breakthrough method for peer review by the end of June. Speaker 300:16:47This will be an incredibly important paper for the clinician to add to our data room and support our ongoing commercial discussions. It's surprising to say ESMO 2024 is just around the corner. Until our end, with our census actives, we have submitted several abstracts for consideration. I'm delighted to say these abstracts are not only captured PCR related, but also include some significant and very promising new data related to the use of our Nu. Q technology for lung cancer. Speaker 300:17:15Definitely something to keep an eye out for the Q1 of this year. I will conclude by saying that year to date, we have added supporting materials to our data rooms for Nu. Q NET, CAPTURE PCR and Nu. Q. Cancer. Speaker 300:17:28Whilst not all of this data is published yet, we are able to share it in commercial discussions under non disclosure agreements. With that, I'll hand you over to Gael. Thank you very much for listening and thank you Gael. Speaker 400:17:42Thank you very much Andy and good morning everyone. Before I discuss the data rules and our ongoing commercial discussion, I would like to reflect on our progress so far licensing and commercializing our technology. In relation to the Nu. Q Vet tests, we have received CAD 23 1,000,000 so far, CAD10 1,000,000 upon signing the exclusive agreement for the in house diagnostic test with Heska, no ENTTEC, which is part of the Mars PetCare group. We then subsequently received CHF13 1,000,000 upon the achievements up to milestones in December 2023. Speaker 400:18:16On an ongoing basis, under this agreement, we will also receive payments for the supply of the key component for the Nu. Q Vet Cancer Test on the Elementor Plus in hospital platform. We have also exhibited a number of non exclusive reference lab supply agreements for this test with global and regional veterinary diagnostic companies. This includes IDEXX Laboratories and most recently Fujifilm Vet Systems. It is safe to say that we have made significant progress in making our test accessible to veterinarians in a number of major markets in the U. Speaker 400:18:52S, Japan and many European countries, not only through the Reference Lab network, but also now available in hospital at the point of care to give results to the veterinarian in less than 10 minutes. These countries are home to around 150,000,000 pet dogs, so they represent a significant market opportunity. As Tom has mentioned on previous calls, cancer screening in the veterinary market is a new concept and certainly while there is significant interest, it is taking time to properly launch, educate, convert and scale. Through the recent launches by EnTech and Fuji, not only have we seen significant engagement from their teams and the support of several KOLs, but notably they are both offering the test at a very competitive list price of around $35 to $40 to the veterinarian, which is in line with our desire to keep the test as low cost and therefore as accessible as possible. We look forward to providing a more detailed update regarding this product line on the next call. Speaker 400:19:57But in interest of time today, I would simply want to highlight the experience we have accumulated as a business that we might leverage as we move to commercializing some of our other technologies such as, but not limited to NuqNet and Capture DCR. As Andy discussed, we have been busy preparing our data rooms to support ongoing discussions and negotiations with interested parties. The nature of this potential licensing and our supply agreement is both broad and complex. As you can imagine, there are a range of options we are discussing from exclusive, non exclusive, global versus regional, specific clinical indication or even the components part. We have had an incredible amount of interest in our technology so far and are making strong progress on a number of fronts. Speaker 400:20:45Key to some of the discussion is the data that Andy alluded to, much of which we expect by the end of the month, as well as some important publications following semester. The continued development of the key opinion leader network to champion our technology is also very important, and we look forward to hosting our 2nd sepsis KOL workshop in the Q3 and our 1st capture PCR workshop in the coming months. We are on a very positive trajectory as we work to push our technology up the value curve in order to maximize the monetization of our IP through upfront, Madison payments and ongoing licensing revenue. In the interest of time, I will pass to Cameron in a moment, But I just wanted to highlight that we also have a number of other programs that are generating commercial interest. And with the goal to accelerate our go to market, we might lessen them early, which may reduce upfront, but will also reduce the expenses and for us accelerate revenues. Speaker 400:21:47I look forward to providing further updates later in the year. And with that, I will now pass on to Cameron for a summary. Cameron? Thanks, Gael, Speaker 500:21:55and thanks too to Andy and Tarek for their comprehensive reports. In drawing to a close, before I highlight some key points, I would first like to take a moment to acknowledge the tireless dedication, hard work and encouragement of our retiring Executive Chairman, Doctor. Martin Fawkes. Bill has been with us since the company's very inception 14 years ago. But having recently celebrated his 80th birthday, will now continue to support us as a long term shareholder and mentor. Speaker 500:22:28Thank you, Dil, for your counsel and thanks also to the outgoing board member, Ed Butcher, for his many years of service. We are active in our search for a new chair and indeed direct us as we seek to further strengthen the commercial acumen of our Board. Our focus continues to be on getting each pillar to support itself either through product revenues, milestone payments, out licensing or other non dilutive funding in the coming year, as well as on the company wide cost reduction measures of a further $10,000,000 outlined by Tariq earlier. This is to ensure as little dilution as possible towards being cash flow neutral as early as possible and then drive on to profitability. We expect Nu. Speaker 500:23:13Q Vet revenue to increase in the second half of this year now that Amtech and Fuji have launched the products and as existing partners expand into new territories. We're also focusing on the feline product development to secure the final milestone payment of $5,000,000 from Heska Antec. We are also very actively targeting a range of government agencies and currently going through the process to secure further non dilutive and or government project funding in the range of $25,000,000 in the U. S. And a further $18,000,000 in Europe. Speaker 500:23:49Lastly, as discussed by Gael, there has been a lot of external interest in our Nu. Q Capture PCR and Nu. Q NET technologies. We have made strong progress through the first half of twenty twenty four in getting the data required and our strategy is to monetize our IP through licensing agreements as we did invest. We expect a very large amount of data to be completed by the end of next month in the 2 key areas of Nu. Speaker 500:24:17Q NET and CAPTURE PCR. If successful, we believe this strategy could provide us with ongoing royalties and very meaningful milestone payments within the next 12 months. In drawing this earnings call to a close, I would like to thank you all for joining the call today. We very much appreciate it, given how much there is to digest across all our pillars. I'm now happy to answer Speaker 600:24:42questions. Operator? Operator00:24:57Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question comes from Bruce Jackson of Benchmark Company. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:25:37Hi, good morning. Very thorough job as usual, everybody. The one question I had was about you touched on this is the lung cancer study. Is this the one that's being done in France in Lyon? And maybe you could like give us a few more details Speaker 600:25:54about that? Yes. Actually there's been a lot going on both in Taiwan as you know where it was primarily a test in conjunction with low dose CT scanning. And the results have been very good there and that's been published soon with the aim of putting that as part of the Taiwanese screening program and we'll be updating a lot more on that later. And also the lung cancer work and this is all with our original Nu. Speaker 600:26:17Q platform, not even our new Capture PCR. So it's kind of it's funny everything is kind of working at the same time. A lot of years of only having 1 or 2 products, but and that is a mixture of perhaps deciding who goes to palliative care and who goes to treatment. And that's also worked very well and they're also keen to use that clinically as well. So obviously, with all the work that's going on now with the sepsis side, which as Andy said, is going incredibly well And all aside from all the other things, the focus on the product side has not been there, but it's something which is working very well. Speaker 600:26:54As I said, everything seems to be working at the same time. So we'll put some focus on that and starting with the publications. And both of them could be used clinically in those countries in France sometime later this year or early next year and then Taiwan once it's added to the national screening program. So both of those are various exciting developments. Anyone from our team want to say anything else about the lung cancer? Speaker 600:27:20Nope, that covered it. Okay. Bruce, that copy your question? Yes. Operator00:27:25Yes, that's fabulous. Thank you very much. Speaker 600:27:27Thanks. Have a great day. Operator00:27:31Our next question comes from Tim Woer of EF Hutton. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:27:37Thanks and congratulations on the timing of the launches over the last 6 weeks. I mean, like you said, so many things are coming together at once pretty much since late March. It's really good to see. I know investors have been hanging in there. You're executing very well. Speaker 800:27:52I was wondering maybe if you don't mind giving some color and feedback. I know it's super early, but just what are your thoughts on kind of the feedback and traction at the veterinarians? I know the rollout just pretty much started in the U. S, but vets are probably educating dog owners about it at their annual checkup for the canine test. And just anything you can add on that, any incidental antidotes? Speaker 500:28:17Yes. There's a lot of going Speaker 600:28:19on there. So I think, obviously, our existing partners, there's been some time for them to ramp up. But I think that's understandable. Looking at it so far, there has never been an ecology test in the veterinary space for screening, certainly not something that's routine and easy to run like ours. So there's a vet by vet education process and also how to use the product. Speaker 600:28:41There was also I think a little bit of market confusion. There was another test on the market from our friends at PetDx and that's actually cleared now. They are no longer selling their test. It was something at a very high price point. So it obviously struggled in the market, it's no longer around. Speaker 600:28:59I think we have a clear path. I think one of the very exciting things with the greater access that we are now developing through the in hospital test with Antec and with Fujian Japan, which only just started, so we should see that coming through later in the year, has been the great feedback from key opinion leaders. If you look at the releases from both of the companies, some of the best vets in the planet were extremely excited about our product and going forward. Also, of course, Antec did a large validation study before it put it onto the machine and it's got the machine working very, very well. So I think from the vet perspectives, it's a building process, which is going on in the U. Speaker 600:29:45S. And I think the extra access from now, I said, the 2 biggest vet companies on the planet and also the biggest in Japan and also through Europe is very encouraging. And the feedback we're getting from the vets and through those companies, not just our vets, but also theirs has been excellent. And we also got great feedback most recently from Japan from their first use of the product. But this is a development process. Speaker 600:30:09There is a lot of work. They are going bet by bet to get them to add it to their normal process. So, it is something which is will take some time to get through, but we have a fantastic product. It's very low cost. The new people in the new access through Antec and through Fuji are both less than $40 to the vet. Speaker 600:30:30So we expect a lot of good development throughout the end of this year and next year. Speaker 800:30:34Great, Cameron. And like you mentioned earlier in your remarks, I mean that price point below $40 was definitely very impressive and I'm glad there's buy in on that for initial traction and awareness. It seems like a no brainer for dog owners. The only other quick question I had was on human sepsis. You're working hard on that. Speaker 800:30:52You mentioned the patients and just the studies. Can you just give us a little bit more of a time frame around that as you out over the next year, year and a half? Can you kind of just maybe walk us through the timeline and your plan on that because it's a huge opportunity and everyone thinks I think it's pet testing, but the sepsis could be a huge catalyst. So I'd love to hear more about the timeline. Speaker 600:31:15I think the sepsis is obviously going to be a massive deal because as Andy very well pointed out, this is an absolute potentially a game changer in the diagnosis and treatment of sepsis. And our test, as we discussed, is always going to be low cost, easy to use on a range of platforms. So to get there, this is bigger than Volition. So we So we have a very similar model, which has worked so well in the vet space to license it out. To license it out, we need a large data, which Andy went through very well on the call. Speaker 600:31:55We're expecting a lot of that in the next month or 2 to fill out the data room. We have very strong interest from a range of large companies. And I think the clincher for that is getting large amounts of data. And as Andy said, it's coming up with at least 6 potential endpoints. How do we correlate with the current sepsis III definition, disease severity, intensive care mortality, 28 day mortality, duration of organ support and length of stay. Speaker 600:32:22So it's a huge amount of data. And the trials which we're running, some of them have hundreds of data points per patient. So are very, very large studies with fantastic institutions. 2 of the big ones that run the samples already and we're analyzing them now, as Andy pointed out. So that's something which is coming up quite quickly. Speaker 600:32:43And as of course we're keen to get the information out, so for the potential partners to license the product and we're also aiming to publish where we can in med archive because sometimes, obviously, a large publication can take several months or a few quarters to actually get published. We're keen where we can to publish that early on medRxiv. So and of course, there's also our own prospective study, which we're now calling INCLUDE, which was called the DOCO study, and that should also be reading out over the next 2 months as well. So a very large amount of data, which with a very exciting endpoints, and we're very encouraged with everything we've seen so far. And I think there's a very good chance they'll become the key points for the data room so we can license them as quickly as possible. Speaker 600:33:30And the target is to license the sepsis side within the next 12 months and hopefully the cancer PCR this year. So it's all in the mail now I think. Speaker 800:33:42Great. Well, thanks so much. I'm looking forward to meeting Gail tomorrow at our annual EAPUTTON conference. Thanks. Speaker 600:33:49Yes. I think looking forward to the 2. Thanks for your time. Operator00:33:55Our next question comes from Ilya Zivkov of Freedom Broker. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:34:03Hi, good morning and thank you for taking my question. I have a short one on the capture PCR. Do you see capture PCR test as a potential product for the biopharma R and D market beyond point of care and hospital screening. Could you elaborate on this? Speaker 600:34:22Yes. I think it's a big it's a whole new technology, the 1st group ever to concentrate the as Andy said, the chromatin from the cancer, also the smaller fragments are incredibly important. And as our Chief Scientist points out, it's a whole new array of biomarkers because no one's ever looked at the fragments and concentrated them before. So there's a lot of potential uses. The biggest market of all is screening, of course, for cancer, but also there are tremendous amounts of uses in a wide range of areas. Speaker 600:34:51If you look at our Nu. Q platform, which is currently obviously what is used in the vet space and the lung cancer trials, which we talked about just earlier, There's a lot of work being done in our DISCOVER program. We have over a dozen organizations working with us using our platform and some of those drug efficacy and a whole lot of, as you said, other ways of using it. I'd certainly expect once we have the paper and once we're in the process of licensing, there's a very wide range of uses they could use that platform for as we have had on the Nu. Q platform through Nu. Speaker 600:35:27Q Discover. I don't think it's possible to overstate how important our what we've done is in the human space and the animal space. We've got the only platform which can, as I said, do all the things we've said. So it should have a very important role in a very wide range of other uses beyond screening. Yes. Speaker 900:35:50Great. Thank you. This is from me for now. Speaker 600:35:53Thank you. Take Operator00:35:57care. Our next question comes from Stephen Rolston of Zacks. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:36:04Good morning. Speaker 500:36:06Good morning. Speaker 600:36:07I wonder Speaker 700:36:07if you're giving some thought to the rollout of Nu. Q Vet, especially here in the United States, Europe and Japan, it's imminent or ongoing right now. It seems like a certain percentage of the tests will come back positive. And those obvious will those canines will require a treatment. And that brings you into the monitoring aspect. Speaker 700:36:43Now I know there was a paper back by Doctor. Boesen Robles about monitoring about a year ago. What is the procedure? Would the vets have to use that off label to monitor? And it seems like those tests would be rather sticky and that they would be regular over very relative short timeframes in order to monitor the progress of the treatment. Speaker 400:37:10Could you comment on that? Speaker 600:37:12Yes, absolutely. I'll comment firstly, then ask Gail to comment on where we are on the monitoring side. But yes, so it would be the same test, and whether it's off label or on label depends on obviously if there's a publication showing it. And it would been something which you'd probably do at least once or twice every month or 2, when the animal is in relapse. So it's something which could be 10 or 20 tests per animal instead of just the ones for screening. Speaker 600:37:46So it's something which is a huge potential market. If there's 6,000,000 dogs in the U. S. That get cancer every year, if you do 5 or 10 tests per dog on the monitoring side, that's a huge total addressable market and something which obviously would be a huge market. Someone else on the call comment want to comment exactly where we are with the monitoring? Speaker 400:38:08Yes. I'm happy, Cameron, to add a little bit of color. So yes, we are working on the monitoring claim, if you will. What we wanted to avoid is as we're launching screening to add another indication at the same time. So our key focus has been on screening initially and we started discussion with our partners now to add the additional use. Speaker 400:38:33So it won't be as you mentioned off label. It will be something that we back. We just want to make sure as we're educating the market, we don't create confusion. So we are sticking to screening for now. And next later this year, early next, we'll launch the monitoring. Speaker 500:38:57Does that Speaker 600:38:57answer your question, Steven? Speaker 700:38:59Thank you. Yes, it does. Thank you. If we could just switch over to sepsis. It seems like you have a slew of papers coming forward with all this data coming through, But it seems like the tip of the spear of this expected series of sepsis studies is Doctor. Speaker 700:39:17Ritter's clinical study that he did mention has been submitted. Could you get a little more granular about that? Because that seems like it will be the first taper data point that we'll hear about. Speaker 600:39:33Andy, do you want to discuss what data points are most likely in the timing from what's likely Speaker 300:39:41Yes. Thank you. I can answer that. I think the 2 retrospective studies we'll publish first. I've seen data already from both of those. Speaker 300:39:54We will write them up and submit them to publication. And hopefully, they'll be that data will be in the public by the end of this year, by end of Q4. The study at St. Thomas' will finish recruiting in May, June 2025. So I wouldn't expect we won't publish data from that for a little while afterwards. Speaker 300:40:20But we have we've got 5 studies ongoing at the moment and 2 or 3 should report out before then. I hope that answers your question. We do have data that we are allowed to share in our confidential data room as well, understanding the data analysis and then the analysis as we understand the data better and can provide a richer picture Speaker 100:40:42of the results. I hope that answers your question. Speaker 700:40:46Yes, it does. Thank you. Speaker 600:40:48And Stephen, I think it's probably important to say just at this point as well. So we obviously have invested a lot over the last 6 months, 8 months to get a lot of data. Andy has gone through the trials and they'll be ready in the data room starting from next month hopefully and some very large ones which have already been run and the prospective ones in months for our own internal and sometime next year, but a huge amount of data coming very soon. And that was something very important to us. We wanted to make sure we did the effort to make sure we had the very large amount of data that we think is needed to get a good licensee interested in licensing in one of the big diagnosing companies to really launch as quickly as possible. Speaker 600:41:25And we've backed ourselves to get that done and we're very close to getting that done now. So I think the team I'd like to congratulate everyone in the Volition team that worked tremendously hard over the last few quarters to get all the CAPTCHA PCR data ready, get all the sepsis data ready, work with the teams in Taiwan and Leon on getting all the lung data ready. And there's a huge avalanche of it coming now starting in the next few weeks and it will go all the way through the year. So, and I think that will be crucial in the very large licensing deal as we expect to happen now. Speaker 700:42:00Thank you. Just one last question on the cost cutting. I mentioned that at the last conference call. It was obvious in the Q4 that some of costs had been declining. And I'm just looking at the financial statements now. Speaker 700:42:14And it looks like at least 25% of the $10,000,000 goal has been achieved. But there's always a lag in cost cutting. And I'm just wondering when these things have been implemented, especially the executives taking some of their fees in stock. When was that implemented? And do you have a sort of a guideline of how much you've accomplished in the cost cutting so far? Speaker 600:42:48Derek, do you want to take that? Speaker 100:42:52Yes, sure. So most of the $10,000,000 will come in the balance of the year or rather the run rate will reduce over the balance of the year. So our intention is to get to a point where going into next year, we'll have $10,000,000 less in expenditure from an OpEx point of view. But obviously, that's going to take time to come. And we have already made a good start, but it's from the Q2 rather than the Q1. Speaker 100:43:33Savings that you might see in the Q1 were actually from a previously announced round of savings that we made. If you recall, we mentioned that back in Q3. So you should see a continuation Speaker 300:43:53which Speaker 100:43:58is which is about $10,000,000 less by the end of the year. Does that answer your question, Steve? Speaker 600:44:09And to be clear, Stephen, the run rate to the changes we announced, the last lot of was $2,000,000 or just a little around that. That's this is an addition there's a 10 in addition to that. So it's not 10 in total, but this is a new 10 we're doing now. And the reductions in our salaries to switching to equity will be starting this month and next month and throughout the end of the year or for at least 6 months. So they're starting right now and then it will be a strong process through the end of the year to get to where we need to get to. Speaker 600:44:43But this $10,000,000 is in addition to the ones we announced before, just to be clear. Speaker 700:44:48Yes. Thank you. That's more information than I expected. Thank you very much. Thank you for taking Speaker 600:44:57Excellent. Thanks for your time. Thanks, Tim. Operator00:45:02Our next question comes from Richard Dulich of Sarta Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:45:08Yes. Thank you for taking my call and for doing such important work in what would be 2 very exciting companies if they were separated. Just a question, you're placing your cancer tests in the veterinary offices and in the laboratory. Are there any other venues such as these pet grooming franchises where these tests could be located and produce extra revenue for those businesses? Speaker 600:45:41Gaye, would you like to take that? Speaker 400:45:44Yes. So for now, we are really focusing on the large vet reference labs and point of care. But we have no plan at this stage to expand beyond. As we scale, that's something we might look into, but not for now. Operator00:46:02Okay. Thank you. Speaker 600:46:03And I think that's exactly right. But I'd just like to say what the fantastic thing with our platform is it can be done on a small machine like the Antec machine. It can be done in a lab. It can be done on a lateral flow. It can be done on a very large auto analyzer. Speaker 600:46:20So that's the fantastic thing and the variability of our platform, which gives us tremendous strength. And they each have a very important use, as you said, at different areas and different locations. And we have developed it now on the microtiter plates on the I-ten, which is now part of PerkinElmer, also the Antec machine and also we're working on lateral flow. And so it's and all the large auto analyzers the big companies have when we're doing the licensing deals, for example, in sepsis and coagulation, they should be able to adapt to all their machines as well. So it's amazingly adaptable going forward. Speaker 1000:46:59Thank you. Speaker 600:47:00Thank you. Operator00:47:04Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our question and answer session. I will now hand over to Cameron Reynolds for closing remarks. Speaker 600:47:13Thank you everyone for joining us today. It's obviously a very critical time for us. Now that we have a very wide range of technologies and products we're commercializing and it should be a very interesting back end of the year, particularly with the ongoing data rooms and licensing discussions in both the human cancer and sepsis space and of course with the deals we have just signed in the veterinary space. It should be a very, very important and exciting end of the year. And thank you again for your interest in Volition. Speaker 600:47:43Bye. Operator00:47:45Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's event. Thank you for attending and you may now disconnect your line. Speaker 200:47:53Thanks very much, Judah. Thank you. Speaker 600:47:57Thank you, everyone.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallVolitionRx Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) VolitionRx Earnings HeadlinesVolitionRX Signs New Capital Sales AgreementApril 22, 2025 | tipranks.comVolitionRx Limited (AMEX:VNRX) Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 2, 2025 | insidermonkey.comURGENT: Someone's Moving Gold Out of London...People who don’t understand the gold market are about to lose a lot of money. Unfortunately, most so-called “gold analysts” have it all wrong… They tell you to invest in gold ETFs - because the popular mining ETFs will someday catch fire and close the price gap with spot gold. May 5, 2025 | Golden Portfolio (Ad)VolitionRx Limited (AMEX:VNRX) Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptApril 2, 2025 | msn.comVolitionRX Stock Price, Quotes and ForecastsApril 1, 2025 | benzinga.comVolitionRX Ltd (VNRX) Q4 2024 Earnings Call Highlights: Strong Revenue Growth and Strategic AdvancesApril 1, 2025 | gurufocus.comSee More VolitionRx Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like VolitionRx? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on VolitionRx and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About VolitionRxVolitionRx (NYSEAMERICAN:VNRX), a multi-national epigenetics company, engages in the development of blood tests to help diagnose and monitor a range of cancers, and sepsis and COVID-19 in the United States and internationally. The company offers Nu.Q Vet, a cancer screening test for dogs and other animals; Nu.Q Nets for monitoring the immune system; Nu.Q Cancer for monitoring disease progression, response to treatment and minimal residual disease; Capture-PCR, an isolating and capturing circulating tumor derived DNA from plasma samples for early cancer detection; and Nu.Q Discover, a solution to profiling nucleosomes. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to VolitionRx Limited First Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference Call. During this presentation, all parties are in listen only mode. Following the presentation, the conference call will be opened for questions. This conference call is being recorded today, May 14, 2024. Speaker 100:00:45I would now like to Operator00:00:45turn the conference over to Louise Batchelor, Group's Chief Marketing and Communications Officer. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:00:57Thank you, and welcome, everyone, to today's earnings conference call for VolitionRx Limited. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that some of the information discussed on this conference call will include forward looking statements covered under the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on our beliefs as well as assumptions we have used based upon information currently available to us. Because these statements reflect our current views concerning future events, these statements may involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Actual future results may vary significantly based on a number of factors that may cause the actual results or events to be materially different from future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by these statements. Speaker 200:01:54We have identified various risk factors associated with our operations in our most recent annual report on Form 10 ks, quarterly reports on Form 10 Q and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We do not undertake an obligation to update any forward looking statements made during the course of this call. We will start the call today with Terry Hughes, our Group Chief Financial Officer, who will cover Volition's financial and operating results for the Q1 of 2024, along with a discussion of recent finance activities and the look ahead. Doctor. Andrew Retta, our recently appointed Chief Medical Officer, will provide a commentary about our clinical trial program and then Gael Forteir, our Chief Commercial Officer, will summarize some of the key commercial achievements this quarter with a look ahead to upcoming milestones. Speaker 200:02:49Lastly, Cameron Reynolds, our President and Group Chief Executive Officer, will provide a brief wrap up before we open the conference call to a question and answer session. I'll now turn the call over to Tarek. Speaker 100:03:02Thanks, Lew, and thank you, everyone, for joining Volition's Q1 2024 earnings call today. We do appreciate your time given the busy earnings season. I'll now provide a summary of the key financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2024. We ended the quarter with cash or cash equivalents of approximately $11,800,000 Throughout this quarter, we have continued to work on a number of threads with the aim of ensuring Volition is cash flow neutral in 2025. We are making strong and necessary decisions to preserve capital in the company whilst ensuring we deliver on our vision and mission. Speaker 100:03:43Firstly, from a funding perspective, as you are probably aware, throughout the company's history, we have been successful in securing non dilutive funding on favorable terms and year to date we have targeted a range of government agencies, including in the U. S. To fund or co fund some of our strategic projects up to $25,000,000 In addition, we have applied for or are in the process of applying for an additional $18,000,000 from various European agencies. As a reminder, we have previously received over $20,000,000 in non diluted funding support from various Belgian and European agencies. We will provide further updates on this in the coming months. Speaker 100:04:28Secondly, as Andy and Gail will cover later, we are working hard to complete the materials for our data rooms during this Q2 for Nu. Q NET and CAPTCHA PCR to enable licensing negotiations to move forward. If successful, we believe that this strategy like the approach we took with Nu. Q Vet could provide us with ongoing royalties and very meaningful milestone payments in the next 12 months. Thirdly, now that we expect that we are very close to receiving large amounts of data for both Nu. Speaker 100:05:00Q nets and capture PCR, Subsequent to quarter end, we took some necessary actions in order to significantly reduce expenditures and cash burn as we focus on commercialization. We have and will continue to undertake a thorough review of all projects with the aim of streamlining our R and D, innovation, scientific and sales and marketing activities to help ensure that we deliver on our focused action plans and monetize our exciting technologies and intellectual property. Our goal is to reduce expenditures by $10,000,000,000 on an annualized basis. Additionally, to demonstrate their continued commitment and belief in the long term potential of the company, the Board of Directors intends to take 50% of their fees in equity for a minimum of 6 months and the leadership team intends to take a percentage of their salaries in equity for a minimum of 6 months, ranging from 10% to 50%, with our Group Chief Executive Officer, Cameron Reynolds, taking 50%. We have also postponed the payments of any cash bonuses indefinitely. Speaker 100:06:08We have invested significantly over the recent years to build out our product pillars and to ensure we have robust scientific and clinical evidence to support our potential breakthrough technologies. Following our anticipated receipt by the end of June of a substantial amount of clinical data, we intend to have a laser focus on commercializing our our approximately $170,000 for the quarter, approximately 15% higher than the same period last year. About 75% of the revenue was from Nu. Q Vet and the remainder from Nu. Q Discover. Speaker 100:06:51The initial phase of a product launch can take adjustments are made to the product workflow, marketing, price, etcetera. And so whilst the revenue ramp from NewQ Vets has taken longer than anticipated, we do expect revenues to accelerate in the second half of twenty twenty four due to 2 very important recent product launches. We are delighted that 2 additional large distributors have recently come online with our Nu. Q Vet cancer test. HanTek Diagnostics, part of the Mars Pet Care Group, announced the launch of the Nu. Speaker 100:07:24Q Vet test, not only in the U. S, but also in Europe, and have been very active in marketing of the in house test at a very compelling list price of $35 to the vet. It was very heartening to see Antec's press release, including several excellent bet KOL endorsements in both the U. S. And Europe. Speaker 100:07:45And you might remember from our last call that the VET team were out in Japan supporting FUJIFILM VET systems at their launch event at the World Veterinary Cancer Congress. Fuji is also pricing the test to vets at below $40 and will market our test aggressively later during the Q2 after very good initial feedback from vets. So we certainly hope to see revenue accelerate in the second half of the year. To sum up, our aim is to become cash flow neutral in 2025 by increasing revenues, cutting costs to reduce expenditures by €10,000,000 on an annualized basis, getting very meaningful further government non dilutive funding and licensing milestone payments from Nu. Q Net and Capture PCR. Speaker 100:08:33As we have said on previous calls, our commercial strategy is to monetize our intellectual property through licensing. To that end, we are delighted with the progress we have made with Nu. Q Vet and with the progress we are making with Nu. Q NETs, Captured PCR and Nu. Q Lung Cancer. Speaker 100:08:50And to provide more details, I'd now like to hand the call over to Andy and Gael. Andy, over to you. Speaker 300:08:58Thank you very much, Tarek, and good morning, everybody. Thank you for joining us today. I will start by reiterating my conclusions from our last call just a few weeks ago now. I believe that Volition's technologies will not only help with diagnostic enrichment, but also with monitoring a patient's disease progression and response to treatment. And most incredibly, we should be able to accomplish these goals with a relatively low cost, easily available, routine blood test, which can be used widely around the world. Speaker 300:09:28We have certainly made excellent progress towards achieving these emissions in the last year. Starting first with Nu. Q. Nept and sepsis, I wanted to highlight a couple of studies, which we hope will provide strong clinical utility evidence. We have ongoing analysis of 2 large scale retrospective sepsis cohorts in Europe, the German sepsis group and work with a team at UMC Amsterdam. Speaker 300:09:55This will encompass over 2,500 patients with longitudinal samples. We hope to characterize cohorts of patients with sepsis and this should be a really rich and valuable source of insight into the value that H3.1 or NuqNet offers. These samples have now all been run and we're working on the complex process of data analysis. We aim to have this completed by the end of next month, but we'll have data ready to show soon afterwards. We extended the DOCROW study in the U. Speaker 300:10:27S. To include sicker patients and for patients to be initiated from the emergency department rather than simply ITU. This plan is to close out this study in the coming months. In summary, across all the studies to date, we have data covering patients from the emergency room presentation through to intensive care unit admission. We will cover key outcome measures with Nu. Speaker 300:10:49Q nets correlated with the sepsis III diagnostic criteria, disease severity, specifically picking out risk of development of organ failure and types of organ failure intensive care mortality, 28 day mortality, duration of organ supportive therapies and length of stay in hospital and in ITU. We believe that this data will significantly strengthen the contents of our confidential data room to support our ongoing commercial discussions by the midpoint this year. Our project with key opinion leader, Professor Desjardins in France is also progressing well. This is a consortium project of an ongoing prospective study of which Volition is a key member, again, it's longitude in nature and large scale with an anticipated recruitment of about 1500 patients. Finally, the EPIC TETRA study at my own hospital, Guyton St. Speaker 300:11:44Thomas' in London is now underway with our 1st patient recruited in December last year. From a publication perspective, we're making solid progress. Following on from our key opinion leader event last year, I've been working closely with the clinicians on a clinical review article with our intention to submit it for peer review by the end of June and hopefully publication shortly thereafter. We received positive feedback from our publication by one of our colleagues, Kieran Zukas. We have addressed the reviewers' questions and the paper has been resubmitted. Speaker 300:12:17We hope to hear back confirmation that will be published very shortly. Findings of the synthetic sepsis model emphasize the importance of investigating physiology and biology. This is relevant to enable us to have a better understanding of disease pathology of risk factors and factors that trigger neutrophils and lead to an excessive immune response. Ultimately, this will lead to us to identify therapeutic targets to allow to intervene and hopefully change the trajectory and improve outcomes of patients with sepsis. We have a robust scientific pathway, strengthening our evidence as we continue to develop and supplement our clinical data to support our scientific rationale. Speaker 300:13:01We aim to publish more papers over the coming year. We anticipate a number of the clinical studies I mentioned earlier will report out at the European a flagship event in Barcelona in October. We are also proudly sponsoring our 1st satellite symposium and the session will be chaired by Professor Dejali Yinan at the Congress. We expect all of these activities to help us continue to build momentum and generate licensing interest. One final comment on UQ NET before I move on to our cancer technologies. Speaker 300:13:32I would like to reiterate that the sense from the KOL group was that Nu. Q NET potentially represent one of the biggest breakthroughs in sepsis management in the last 30 years, potentially helping us to diagnose, monitor and treat patients more efficiently and hopefully save many lives. We have many more details to follow, but it certainly looks a very busy and exciting year ahead for Nu. Q. NET and TEPTIS. Speaker 300:13:56Cancer, as we all know, is a very serious and deadly disease, causing almost 10,000,000 deaths in 2020. The incidence of cancer is forecast to increase as our population ages with an estimate of around 30,000,000 new cases diagnosed each year by 2,040. Like many diseases, early diagnosis of cancer has a significant impact on outcome. Quite simply, the earlier we can diagnose the disease, the greater chance of survival and a better quality of life for our patients. Early diagnosis is, however, very challenging. Speaker 300:14:31Often, cancer develops silently with few symptoms, and often people are diagnosed only late in the illness when fewer and much more aggressive treatment options are available. Early stage cancer is difficult to detect because the cancer derived circulating tumor DNA is low. It may compromise only 0.01% of the DNA present amongst a background of normal cell free DNA. We're very excited as Volition has developed a novel method of liquid biopsy involving the first ever reported physical isolation of a class of tumor derived ctDNA fragments for blood. These cancer derived tumor DNA fragments are extracted and after removal of the normal background DNA, the cancer DNA is detected and characterized with a low cost PCR test. Speaker 300:15:23We're calling this new technique CAPTCHA PCR. Volition's proof of concept data was presented at the European Society of Medical Oncology Conference in 2023. We demonstrated the isolation of tumors derived DNA fragments from plasma. Volition has tested the new method in a small clinical experiment and detected a range of solid and liquid tumors, including early stage 1 diseases. These early assays were developed using a leukemia model, but to our surprise, we were also able to detect many other cancers, including detecting colorectal cancer in a blood test with an accuracy approaching that of the current fecal immunochemical tests or FIT tests. Speaker 300:16:09Subsequent to our initial poster, Doctor. Jake McAuliffe and team have presented at a number of cancer specific conferences, sharing initial data and developing all important key opinion leader and potential centers of excellence network. The team have continued to identify other potential and the associated PCR tests, especially in solid cancers to conduct initial clinical studies in larger, more diverse patient cohorts. From a publication perspective, again, we are making solid progress. Jacob and the team are working very hard to complete their first manuscript and plan to submit this breakthrough method for peer review by the end of June. Speaker 300:16:47This will be an incredibly important paper for the clinician to add to our data room and support our ongoing commercial discussions. It's surprising to say ESMO 2024 is just around the corner. Until our end, with our census actives, we have submitted several abstracts for consideration. I'm delighted to say these abstracts are not only captured PCR related, but also include some significant and very promising new data related to the use of our Nu. Q technology for lung cancer. Speaker 300:17:15Definitely something to keep an eye out for the Q1 of this year. I will conclude by saying that year to date, we have added supporting materials to our data rooms for Nu. Q NET, CAPTURE PCR and Nu. Q. Cancer. Speaker 300:17:28Whilst not all of this data is published yet, we are able to share it in commercial discussions under non disclosure agreements. With that, I'll hand you over to Gael. Thank you very much for listening and thank you Gael. Speaker 400:17:42Thank you very much Andy and good morning everyone. Before I discuss the data rules and our ongoing commercial discussion, I would like to reflect on our progress so far licensing and commercializing our technology. In relation to the Nu. Q Vet tests, we have received CAD 23 1,000,000 so far, CAD10 1,000,000 upon signing the exclusive agreement for the in house diagnostic test with Heska, no ENTTEC, which is part of the Mars PetCare group. We then subsequently received CHF13 1,000,000 upon the achievements up to milestones in December 2023. Speaker 400:18:16On an ongoing basis, under this agreement, we will also receive payments for the supply of the key component for the Nu. Q Vet Cancer Test on the Elementor Plus in hospital platform. We have also exhibited a number of non exclusive reference lab supply agreements for this test with global and regional veterinary diagnostic companies. This includes IDEXX Laboratories and most recently Fujifilm Vet Systems. It is safe to say that we have made significant progress in making our test accessible to veterinarians in a number of major markets in the U. Speaker 400:18:52S, Japan and many European countries, not only through the Reference Lab network, but also now available in hospital at the point of care to give results to the veterinarian in less than 10 minutes. These countries are home to around 150,000,000 pet dogs, so they represent a significant market opportunity. As Tom has mentioned on previous calls, cancer screening in the veterinary market is a new concept and certainly while there is significant interest, it is taking time to properly launch, educate, convert and scale. Through the recent launches by EnTech and Fuji, not only have we seen significant engagement from their teams and the support of several KOLs, but notably they are both offering the test at a very competitive list price of around $35 to $40 to the veterinarian, which is in line with our desire to keep the test as low cost and therefore as accessible as possible. We look forward to providing a more detailed update regarding this product line on the next call. Speaker 400:19:57But in interest of time today, I would simply want to highlight the experience we have accumulated as a business that we might leverage as we move to commercializing some of our other technologies such as, but not limited to NuqNet and Capture DCR. As Andy discussed, we have been busy preparing our data rooms to support ongoing discussions and negotiations with interested parties. The nature of this potential licensing and our supply agreement is both broad and complex. As you can imagine, there are a range of options we are discussing from exclusive, non exclusive, global versus regional, specific clinical indication or even the components part. We have had an incredible amount of interest in our technology so far and are making strong progress on a number of fronts. Speaker 400:20:45Key to some of the discussion is the data that Andy alluded to, much of which we expect by the end of the month, as well as some important publications following semester. The continued development of the key opinion leader network to champion our technology is also very important, and we look forward to hosting our 2nd sepsis KOL workshop in the Q3 and our 1st capture PCR workshop in the coming months. We are on a very positive trajectory as we work to push our technology up the value curve in order to maximize the monetization of our IP through upfront, Madison payments and ongoing licensing revenue. In the interest of time, I will pass to Cameron in a moment, But I just wanted to highlight that we also have a number of other programs that are generating commercial interest. And with the goal to accelerate our go to market, we might lessen them early, which may reduce upfront, but will also reduce the expenses and for us accelerate revenues. Speaker 400:21:47I look forward to providing further updates later in the year. And with that, I will now pass on to Cameron for a summary. Cameron? Thanks, Gael, Speaker 500:21:55and thanks too to Andy and Tarek for their comprehensive reports. In drawing to a close, before I highlight some key points, I would first like to take a moment to acknowledge the tireless dedication, hard work and encouragement of our retiring Executive Chairman, Doctor. Martin Fawkes. Bill has been with us since the company's very inception 14 years ago. But having recently celebrated his 80th birthday, will now continue to support us as a long term shareholder and mentor. Speaker 500:22:28Thank you, Dil, for your counsel and thanks also to the outgoing board member, Ed Butcher, for his many years of service. We are active in our search for a new chair and indeed direct us as we seek to further strengthen the commercial acumen of our Board. Our focus continues to be on getting each pillar to support itself either through product revenues, milestone payments, out licensing or other non dilutive funding in the coming year, as well as on the company wide cost reduction measures of a further $10,000,000 outlined by Tariq earlier. This is to ensure as little dilution as possible towards being cash flow neutral as early as possible and then drive on to profitability. We expect Nu. Speaker 500:23:13Q Vet revenue to increase in the second half of this year now that Amtech and Fuji have launched the products and as existing partners expand into new territories. We're also focusing on the feline product development to secure the final milestone payment of $5,000,000 from Heska Antec. We are also very actively targeting a range of government agencies and currently going through the process to secure further non dilutive and or government project funding in the range of $25,000,000 in the U. S. And a further $18,000,000 in Europe. Speaker 500:23:49Lastly, as discussed by Gael, there has been a lot of external interest in our Nu. Q Capture PCR and Nu. Q NET technologies. We have made strong progress through the first half of twenty twenty four in getting the data required and our strategy is to monetize our IP through licensing agreements as we did invest. We expect a very large amount of data to be completed by the end of next month in the 2 key areas of Nu. Speaker 500:24:17Q NET and CAPTURE PCR. If successful, we believe this strategy could provide us with ongoing royalties and very meaningful milestone payments within the next 12 months. In drawing this earnings call to a close, I would like to thank you all for joining the call today. We very much appreciate it, given how much there is to digest across all our pillars. I'm now happy to answer Speaker 600:24:42questions. Operator? Operator00:24:57Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question comes from Bruce Jackson of Benchmark Company. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:25:37Hi, good morning. Very thorough job as usual, everybody. The one question I had was about you touched on this is the lung cancer study. Is this the one that's being done in France in Lyon? And maybe you could like give us a few more details Speaker 600:25:54about that? Yes. Actually there's been a lot going on both in Taiwan as you know where it was primarily a test in conjunction with low dose CT scanning. And the results have been very good there and that's been published soon with the aim of putting that as part of the Taiwanese screening program and we'll be updating a lot more on that later. And also the lung cancer work and this is all with our original Nu. Speaker 600:26:17Q platform, not even our new Capture PCR. So it's kind of it's funny everything is kind of working at the same time. A lot of years of only having 1 or 2 products, but and that is a mixture of perhaps deciding who goes to palliative care and who goes to treatment. And that's also worked very well and they're also keen to use that clinically as well. So obviously, with all the work that's going on now with the sepsis side, which as Andy said, is going incredibly well And all aside from all the other things, the focus on the product side has not been there, but it's something which is working very well. Speaker 600:26:54As I said, everything seems to be working at the same time. So we'll put some focus on that and starting with the publications. And both of them could be used clinically in those countries in France sometime later this year or early next year and then Taiwan once it's added to the national screening program. So both of those are various exciting developments. Anyone from our team want to say anything else about the lung cancer? Speaker 600:27:20Nope, that covered it. Okay. Bruce, that copy your question? Yes. Operator00:27:25Yes, that's fabulous. Thank you very much. Speaker 600:27:27Thanks. Have a great day. Operator00:27:31Our next question comes from Tim Woer of EF Hutton. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:27:37Thanks and congratulations on the timing of the launches over the last 6 weeks. I mean, like you said, so many things are coming together at once pretty much since late March. It's really good to see. I know investors have been hanging in there. You're executing very well. Speaker 800:27:52I was wondering maybe if you don't mind giving some color and feedback. I know it's super early, but just what are your thoughts on kind of the feedback and traction at the veterinarians? I know the rollout just pretty much started in the U. S, but vets are probably educating dog owners about it at their annual checkup for the canine test. And just anything you can add on that, any incidental antidotes? Speaker 500:28:17Yes. There's a lot of going Speaker 600:28:19on there. So I think, obviously, our existing partners, there's been some time for them to ramp up. But I think that's understandable. Looking at it so far, there has never been an ecology test in the veterinary space for screening, certainly not something that's routine and easy to run like ours. So there's a vet by vet education process and also how to use the product. Speaker 600:28:41There was also I think a little bit of market confusion. There was another test on the market from our friends at PetDx and that's actually cleared now. They are no longer selling their test. It was something at a very high price point. So it obviously struggled in the market, it's no longer around. Speaker 600:28:59I think we have a clear path. I think one of the very exciting things with the greater access that we are now developing through the in hospital test with Antec and with Fujian Japan, which only just started, so we should see that coming through later in the year, has been the great feedback from key opinion leaders. If you look at the releases from both of the companies, some of the best vets in the planet were extremely excited about our product and going forward. Also, of course, Antec did a large validation study before it put it onto the machine and it's got the machine working very, very well. So I think from the vet perspectives, it's a building process, which is going on in the U. Speaker 600:29:45S. And I think the extra access from now, I said, the 2 biggest vet companies on the planet and also the biggest in Japan and also through Europe is very encouraging. And the feedback we're getting from the vets and through those companies, not just our vets, but also theirs has been excellent. And we also got great feedback most recently from Japan from their first use of the product. But this is a development process. Speaker 600:30:09There is a lot of work. They are going bet by bet to get them to add it to their normal process. So, it is something which is will take some time to get through, but we have a fantastic product. It's very low cost. The new people in the new access through Antec and through Fuji are both less than $40 to the vet. Speaker 600:30:30So we expect a lot of good development throughout the end of this year and next year. Speaker 800:30:34Great, Cameron. And like you mentioned earlier in your remarks, I mean that price point below $40 was definitely very impressive and I'm glad there's buy in on that for initial traction and awareness. It seems like a no brainer for dog owners. The only other quick question I had was on human sepsis. You're working hard on that. Speaker 800:30:52You mentioned the patients and just the studies. Can you just give us a little bit more of a time frame around that as you out over the next year, year and a half? Can you kind of just maybe walk us through the timeline and your plan on that because it's a huge opportunity and everyone thinks I think it's pet testing, but the sepsis could be a huge catalyst. So I'd love to hear more about the timeline. Speaker 600:31:15I think the sepsis is obviously going to be a massive deal because as Andy very well pointed out, this is an absolute potentially a game changer in the diagnosis and treatment of sepsis. And our test, as we discussed, is always going to be low cost, easy to use on a range of platforms. So to get there, this is bigger than Volition. So we So we have a very similar model, which has worked so well in the vet space to license it out. To license it out, we need a large data, which Andy went through very well on the call. Speaker 600:31:55We're expecting a lot of that in the next month or 2 to fill out the data room. We have very strong interest from a range of large companies. And I think the clincher for that is getting large amounts of data. And as Andy said, it's coming up with at least 6 potential endpoints. How do we correlate with the current sepsis III definition, disease severity, intensive care mortality, 28 day mortality, duration of organ support and length of stay. Speaker 600:32:22So it's a huge amount of data. And the trials which we're running, some of them have hundreds of data points per patient. So are very, very large studies with fantastic institutions. 2 of the big ones that run the samples already and we're analyzing them now, as Andy pointed out. So that's something which is coming up quite quickly. Speaker 600:32:43And as of course we're keen to get the information out, so for the potential partners to license the product and we're also aiming to publish where we can in med archive because sometimes, obviously, a large publication can take several months or a few quarters to actually get published. We're keen where we can to publish that early on medRxiv. So and of course, there's also our own prospective study, which we're now calling INCLUDE, which was called the DOCO study, and that should also be reading out over the next 2 months as well. So a very large amount of data, which with a very exciting endpoints, and we're very encouraged with everything we've seen so far. And I think there's a very good chance they'll become the key points for the data room so we can license them as quickly as possible. Speaker 600:33:30And the target is to license the sepsis side within the next 12 months and hopefully the cancer PCR this year. So it's all in the mail now I think. Speaker 800:33:42Great. Well, thanks so much. I'm looking forward to meeting Gail tomorrow at our annual EAPUTTON conference. Thanks. Speaker 600:33:49Yes. I think looking forward to the 2. Thanks for your time. Operator00:33:55Our next question comes from Ilya Zivkov of Freedom Broker. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:34:03Hi, good morning and thank you for taking my question. I have a short one on the capture PCR. Do you see capture PCR test as a potential product for the biopharma R and D market beyond point of care and hospital screening. Could you elaborate on this? Speaker 600:34:22Yes. I think it's a big it's a whole new technology, the 1st group ever to concentrate the as Andy said, the chromatin from the cancer, also the smaller fragments are incredibly important. And as our Chief Scientist points out, it's a whole new array of biomarkers because no one's ever looked at the fragments and concentrated them before. So there's a lot of potential uses. The biggest market of all is screening, of course, for cancer, but also there are tremendous amounts of uses in a wide range of areas. Speaker 600:34:51If you look at our Nu. Q platform, which is currently obviously what is used in the vet space and the lung cancer trials, which we talked about just earlier, There's a lot of work being done in our DISCOVER program. We have over a dozen organizations working with us using our platform and some of those drug efficacy and a whole lot of, as you said, other ways of using it. I'd certainly expect once we have the paper and once we're in the process of licensing, there's a very wide range of uses they could use that platform for as we have had on the Nu. Q platform through Nu. Speaker 600:35:27Q Discover. I don't think it's possible to overstate how important our what we've done is in the human space and the animal space. We've got the only platform which can, as I said, do all the things we've said. So it should have a very important role in a very wide range of other uses beyond screening. Yes. Speaker 900:35:50Great. Thank you. This is from me for now. Speaker 600:35:53Thank you. Take Operator00:35:57care. Our next question comes from Stephen Rolston of Zacks. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:36:04Good morning. Speaker 500:36:06Good morning. Speaker 600:36:07I wonder Speaker 700:36:07if you're giving some thought to the rollout of Nu. Q Vet, especially here in the United States, Europe and Japan, it's imminent or ongoing right now. It seems like a certain percentage of the tests will come back positive. And those obvious will those canines will require a treatment. And that brings you into the monitoring aspect. Speaker 700:36:43Now I know there was a paper back by Doctor. Boesen Robles about monitoring about a year ago. What is the procedure? Would the vets have to use that off label to monitor? And it seems like those tests would be rather sticky and that they would be regular over very relative short timeframes in order to monitor the progress of the treatment. Speaker 400:37:10Could you comment on that? Speaker 600:37:12Yes, absolutely. I'll comment firstly, then ask Gail to comment on where we are on the monitoring side. But yes, so it would be the same test, and whether it's off label or on label depends on obviously if there's a publication showing it. And it would been something which you'd probably do at least once or twice every month or 2, when the animal is in relapse. So it's something which could be 10 or 20 tests per animal instead of just the ones for screening. Speaker 600:37:46So it's something which is a huge potential market. If there's 6,000,000 dogs in the U. S. That get cancer every year, if you do 5 or 10 tests per dog on the monitoring side, that's a huge total addressable market and something which obviously would be a huge market. Someone else on the call comment want to comment exactly where we are with the monitoring? Speaker 400:38:08Yes. I'm happy, Cameron, to add a little bit of color. So yes, we are working on the monitoring claim, if you will. What we wanted to avoid is as we're launching screening to add another indication at the same time. So our key focus has been on screening initially and we started discussion with our partners now to add the additional use. Speaker 400:38:33So it won't be as you mentioned off label. It will be something that we back. We just want to make sure as we're educating the market, we don't create confusion. So we are sticking to screening for now. And next later this year, early next, we'll launch the monitoring. Speaker 500:38:57Does that Speaker 600:38:57answer your question, Steven? Speaker 700:38:59Thank you. Yes, it does. Thank you. If we could just switch over to sepsis. It seems like you have a slew of papers coming forward with all this data coming through, But it seems like the tip of the spear of this expected series of sepsis studies is Doctor. Speaker 700:39:17Ritter's clinical study that he did mention has been submitted. Could you get a little more granular about that? Because that seems like it will be the first taper data point that we'll hear about. Speaker 600:39:33Andy, do you want to discuss what data points are most likely in the timing from what's likely Speaker 300:39:41Yes. Thank you. I can answer that. I think the 2 retrospective studies we'll publish first. I've seen data already from both of those. Speaker 300:39:54We will write them up and submit them to publication. And hopefully, they'll be that data will be in the public by the end of this year, by end of Q4. The study at St. Thomas' will finish recruiting in May, June 2025. So I wouldn't expect we won't publish data from that for a little while afterwards. Speaker 300:40:20But we have we've got 5 studies ongoing at the moment and 2 or 3 should report out before then. I hope that answers your question. We do have data that we are allowed to share in our confidential data room as well, understanding the data analysis and then the analysis as we understand the data better and can provide a richer picture Speaker 100:40:42of the results. I hope that answers your question. Speaker 700:40:46Yes, it does. Thank you. Speaker 600:40:48And Stephen, I think it's probably important to say just at this point as well. So we obviously have invested a lot over the last 6 months, 8 months to get a lot of data. Andy has gone through the trials and they'll be ready in the data room starting from next month hopefully and some very large ones which have already been run and the prospective ones in months for our own internal and sometime next year, but a huge amount of data coming very soon. And that was something very important to us. We wanted to make sure we did the effort to make sure we had the very large amount of data that we think is needed to get a good licensee interested in licensing in one of the big diagnosing companies to really launch as quickly as possible. Speaker 600:41:25And we've backed ourselves to get that done and we're very close to getting that done now. So I think the team I'd like to congratulate everyone in the Volition team that worked tremendously hard over the last few quarters to get all the CAPTCHA PCR data ready, get all the sepsis data ready, work with the teams in Taiwan and Leon on getting all the lung data ready. And there's a huge avalanche of it coming now starting in the next few weeks and it will go all the way through the year. So, and I think that will be crucial in the very large licensing deal as we expect to happen now. Speaker 700:42:00Thank you. Just one last question on the cost cutting. I mentioned that at the last conference call. It was obvious in the Q4 that some of costs had been declining. And I'm just looking at the financial statements now. Speaker 700:42:14And it looks like at least 25% of the $10,000,000 goal has been achieved. But there's always a lag in cost cutting. And I'm just wondering when these things have been implemented, especially the executives taking some of their fees in stock. When was that implemented? And do you have a sort of a guideline of how much you've accomplished in the cost cutting so far? Speaker 600:42:48Derek, do you want to take that? Speaker 100:42:52Yes, sure. So most of the $10,000,000 will come in the balance of the year or rather the run rate will reduce over the balance of the year. So our intention is to get to a point where going into next year, we'll have $10,000,000 less in expenditure from an OpEx point of view. But obviously, that's going to take time to come. And we have already made a good start, but it's from the Q2 rather than the Q1. Speaker 100:43:33Savings that you might see in the Q1 were actually from a previously announced round of savings that we made. If you recall, we mentioned that back in Q3. So you should see a continuation Speaker 300:43:53which Speaker 100:43:58is which is about $10,000,000 less by the end of the year. Does that answer your question, Steve? Speaker 600:44:09And to be clear, Stephen, the run rate to the changes we announced, the last lot of was $2,000,000 or just a little around that. That's this is an addition there's a 10 in addition to that. So it's not 10 in total, but this is a new 10 we're doing now. And the reductions in our salaries to switching to equity will be starting this month and next month and throughout the end of the year or for at least 6 months. So they're starting right now and then it will be a strong process through the end of the year to get to where we need to get to. Speaker 600:44:43But this $10,000,000 is in addition to the ones we announced before, just to be clear. Speaker 700:44:48Yes. Thank you. That's more information than I expected. Thank you very much. Thank you for taking Speaker 600:44:57Excellent. Thanks for your time. Thanks, Tim. Operator00:45:02Our next question comes from Richard Dulich of Sarta Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:45:08Yes. Thank you for taking my call and for doing such important work in what would be 2 very exciting companies if they were separated. Just a question, you're placing your cancer tests in the veterinary offices and in the laboratory. Are there any other venues such as these pet grooming franchises where these tests could be located and produce extra revenue for those businesses? Speaker 600:45:41Gaye, would you like to take that? Speaker 400:45:44Yes. So for now, we are really focusing on the large vet reference labs and point of care. But we have no plan at this stage to expand beyond. As we scale, that's something we might look into, but not for now. Operator00:46:02Okay. Thank you. Speaker 600:46:03And I think that's exactly right. But I'd just like to say what the fantastic thing with our platform is it can be done on a small machine like the Antec machine. It can be done in a lab. It can be done on a lateral flow. It can be done on a very large auto analyzer. Speaker 600:46:20So that's the fantastic thing and the variability of our platform, which gives us tremendous strength. And they each have a very important use, as you said, at different areas and different locations. And we have developed it now on the microtiter plates on the I-ten, which is now part of PerkinElmer, also the Antec machine and also we're working on lateral flow. And so it's and all the large auto analyzers the big companies have when we're doing the licensing deals, for example, in sepsis and coagulation, they should be able to adapt to all their machines as well. So it's amazingly adaptable going forward. Speaker 1000:46:59Thank you. Speaker 600:47:00Thank you. Operator00:47:04Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our question and answer session. I will now hand over to Cameron Reynolds for closing remarks. Speaker 600:47:13Thank you everyone for joining us today. It's obviously a very critical time for us. Now that we have a very wide range of technologies and products we're commercializing and it should be a very interesting back end of the year, particularly with the ongoing data rooms and licensing discussions in both the human cancer and sepsis space and of course with the deals we have just signed in the veterinary space. It should be a very, very important and exciting end of the year. And thank you again for your interest in Volition. Speaker 600:47:43Bye. Operator00:47:45Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's event. Thank you for attending and you may now disconnect your line. Speaker 200:47:53Thanks very much, Judah. Thank you. Speaker 600:47:57Thank you, everyone.Read morePowered by