NASDAQ:VTGN VistaGen Therapeutics Q3 2026 Earnings Report $0.59 -0.02 (-3.69%) As of 12:33 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast VistaGen Therapeutics EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.45Consensus EPS -$0.51Beat/MissBeat by +$0.06One Year Ago EPSN/AVistaGen Therapeutics Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$0.30 millionExpected Revenue$0.14 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$163.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/AVistaGen Therapeutics Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2026Date2/12/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, February 12, 2026Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsVistaGen Therapeutics' Q4 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, June 16, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, June 11, 2026 at 4:00 PM 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 VistaGen Therapeutics Q3 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 12, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Negative Sentiment: The company completed the randomized portion of PALISADE‑3 and found a higher placebo response versus earlier studies, prompting further analysis and adjustments. Positive Sentiment: Enrollment for PALISADE‑4 remains on track and the company has implemented site retraining, site rationalization, centralized recruitment and operational controls (including audio monitoring) to mitigate placebo effects. Neutral Sentiment: Vistagen is partnering with third‑party AI/ML collaborators to analyze PALISADE data for covariates and predictors of response and may seek to modify the statistical analysis plan if justified—any SAP change would require FDA resubmission and alignment. Positive Sentiment: In women’s health, PH80 received the USAN name rafisolone and Vistagen plans to file a US IND in the first half of 2026 to support potential Phase 2 development for vasomotor symptoms, building on a prior Phase 2A signal. Positive Sentiment: Financially, Vistagen reported approximately $61.8 million in cash and has implemented companywide cash‑preservation measures, which management says positions them to complete PALISADE‑4 and advance pipeline planning. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallVistaGen Therapeutics Q3 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, everyone. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Vistagen Therapeutics Fiscal Year 2026, third quarter corporate update conference call and webcast. Please note that today's call is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to your host, Mark McPartland, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at Vistagen. Mark? Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:00:25Thank you, Lisa, and good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our conference call and webcast. Earlier this afternoon, we filed our quarterly report on Form 10-Q and issued a press release for our fiscal year 2026, third quarter, which ended December 31, 2025, and provided an update of our progress across our clinical stage neuroscience program. We encourage you to review the PR and 10-Q, which are both available in the Investors section of our website. Before we begin, please note that we'll be making forward-looking statements regarding our business during today's call based on current expectations and information. These forward-looking statements speak only as of today. Except as law requires, we do not assume any duty to update any forward-looking statements made today or in the future. Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:01:19Of course, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and our actual results could differ materially from those anticipated by any forward-looking statements we make today. Additional information concerning risks and factors that could affect our business and our financial results are included in our fiscal year 2026, third quarter Form 10-Q for a period ending December 31, 2025, and in future filings that we make with the SEC from time to time. Again, all of which are available in the Investors section of our website or, of course, on the SEC's website. With the formalities completed, we warmly welcome our stockholders, sell-side analysts, and others interested in our programs and progress. I'm joined on our call today by Shawn Singh, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Josh Prince, our Chief Operating Officer, and Nick Tressler, our Chief Financial Officer. Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:02:20Shawn will provide a brief business and clinical update, and Josh and Nick will be available to provide additional feedback during the Q&A portion of our call. After our remarks, we'll take questions from the sell-side analysts participating on the call. A replay of the webcast will be available in the Events section of the Investor page of our website. With that taken care of, I'd now like to turn the call over to our President and CEO, Shawn Singh. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:02:48Thank you, Mark, and good afternoon, everyone. It's been an important quarter for our team with the completion of the randomized portion of our PALISADE-3, phase 3 trial in social anxiety disorder, as guided, and focused efforts to learn from the study's results and drive high quality and efficient execution of our ongoing PALISADE-4, phase 3 trial. We have reviewed available data from PALISADE-3 and implemented moderate refinements, including retraining, site rationalization, and operational enhancements to PALISADE-4. We've also been working with third-party collaborators on the implementation of innovative approaches to analyze the available data sets, not only from PALISADE-3, but also from the fasedienol studies across the PALISADE program, including both the randomized and the open-label trials. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:03:44Our objective is to better understand the drivers of both fasedienol and placebo response using the substantial data collected from these studies to potentially inform optimized statistical models that consistently incorporate covariates and explanatory variables across all PALISADE studies, which could anchor future weight of evidence discussions with the FDA. The analyses are ongoing with our collaborators and involve the use of their proprietary artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies to identify nonspecific responses and understand and predict susceptibility to placebo response and likelihood of response to active drug in the context of the public speaking challenge study design. Overall, the full complement of ongoing work is focused on delivering practical, operational understanding, predictors of response, and enhanced statistical models with the potential to impact both PALISADE-4 and our regulatory strategy based on the totality of data from the PALISADE program. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:04:56The open-label extension portion of PALISADE-3 and PALISADE-4 remains ongoing and is designed to evaluate the safety and tolerability of repeated as-needed intranasal administration of fasedienol in adults with social anxiety disorder, but in real-world, daily life situations. In addition to safety assessments, the study includes exploratory longitudinal measures using validated instruments such as the clinician-administered Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale, or LSAS, and the patient-reported Social Phobia Inventory, or SPIN. While open label data are inherently uncontrolled and exploratory, the OLE portion of the PALISADE-3 Phase 3 study could provide important context on patient experience with repeated use over time in real-world, anxiety-provoking situations the patients encounter. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:05:52Together with our broader analytical work across the PALISADE program, insights from open-label studies should contribute to our enhanced understanding of fasedienol's drug effect and usage patterns. Once again, we'd like to thank the patients who participated in our PALISADE studies, as well as the clinical investigators, the site staff, and our contract research organization, for their ongoing dedication and professionalism as we complete PALISADE-4 and advance our broader analytical efforts. As we've previously stated, if PALISADE-4 is successful, together with PALISADE-2 and the broader body of evidence generated across the PALISADE program, these data may support a potential new drug application submission to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the acute treatment of social anxiety disorder in adults. The significant unmet need in social anxiety disorder, where effective treatments are very limited, continues to guide our work and our long-term focus. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:06:57Turning to our women's health program, we received an official USAN adoption statement designating PH80 as rafisolone. Rafisolone is our hormone-free, nonsystemic, intranasal product candidate with potential for the treatment of moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms, commonly referred to as hot flashes, due to menopause. We believe rafisolone may also have therapeutic potential across other women's health indications. We are currently preparing to submit our US investigational new drug application, or IND, for rafisolone to the US FDA, with a planned submission in the first half of 2026. This IND is intended to support further potential phase 2 clinical development of rafisolone in the US for the treatment of moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms due to menopause. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:07:50Building on a previously completed placebo-controlled exploratory Phase 2A clinical trial conducted in Mexico by Pherin Pharmaceuticals, which is now our wholly owned subsidiary, and that trial demonstrated clinical benefit in the vasomotor symptoms indication. We believe that indication in women's health represents a significant area of unmet need, and we remain committed to advancing rafisolone as a nonsystemic, hormone-free product candidate with a disciplined, data-driven approach as we prepare for the potential next phase of clinical development. Turning briefly to our financial position. As of December 31st, 2025, we had $61.2 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities. During the quarter, we implemented company-wide cash preservation measures intended to enhance our operational efficiency, extend our runway, and maintain strategic flexibility across our varying pipeline. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:08:48We believe we are well positioned to complete PALISADE four and to advance preparations and planning for our varying pipeline. In closing, our mission remains unchanged: to deliver transformative treatments and improve lives. The path forward requires discipline, rigor, and thoughtful analysis, and we believe the steps we have taken and are taking position Vistagen to make informed decisions and responsibly advance programs with the potential to deliver meaningful value to patients and to shareholders. So I want to thank you for your continued interest in the company and your support, and we look forward to updating you on our progress in the quarters ahead. Thank you, Sean. Operator, we would now like to open up the call for questions from the sell-side analysts joining us today. Operator00:09:42Thank you. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. If you would like to remove yourself from the queue, press star one one again. We also ask that you please wait for your name and company to be announced before proceeding with your question. One moment while we compile the Q&A roster. The first question today is coming from the line of Andrew Fein of Jefferies. Your line is open. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:10:12Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for the updates. So, maybe in the PALISADE-3 data, you had a chance to look at it. Maybe descriptively, how did the individual curves look at every interval out to five minutes? Was there a separation at all across any of those time points with fasedienol versus placebo? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:10:36Thanks for the question, Andrew. Josh? Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:10:41Hi, Andrew. At this point, you know, what we've released publicly is the top-line results, so we're still looking into a lot of that data. We haven't released the individual curves publicly. We do know that there's... What really, where we find information is looking into individual respondents and subgroups of respondents. And again, that analysis continues. So that's where we do see definite differences. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:11:13Okay, thanks. And it sounds like you're looking at ways for PALISADE-4 to tweak around the SAP plan, and let's just say you did. Would you need to notify and then talk to the FDA to potentially get an official buy-in from them that the changes can be done? Is there a risk to modifying the SAP plan, basically? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:37Yeah, thank you. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:37We would- Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:38Great question. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:39Oh, go ahead, Shawn. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:40No, you go ahead, Josh. Sorry. It's you. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:42Yeah, it's a great question, and, you know, the SAP, just like with PALISADE three, you know, already been submitted and approved for no feedback from FDA. So that's set. So any future changes, to your point, would absolutely require a resubmission and alignment with the FDA before we lock the database and got the top-line results. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:12:06 Understood. And then my last question, thank you, is, should you modify the plan, would you need to backfill to the original enrollment target of around 236 or 238, or are there no changes to the enrollment? Thank you. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:12:27Yeah, a change to the SAP would not change the enrollment or the planned enrollment for the study. You know, it's the key there is that it's whatever that SAP is locked in before you get to database lock, and then applied to the total population for the study. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:12:48Understood. Okay. Thank you, guys. Operator00:12:52Thank you. One moment for the next question. Next question is coming from the line of Emily Chetty of Stifel. Your line is open. Emily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at Stifel00:13:01Hi, this is Emily on for Paul Matteis at Stifel. We just had a quick question. Maybe could you remind us where you guys are in terms of enrollment for PALISADE four? And if you like plan on telling, or plan on PRing when that has completed or like dosing has completed. And then also, could you maybe share, like, what details you saw on PALISADE three that kind of led you to refine to the refinements that you outlined in the PR? Thank you. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:13:33Thanks, Emily. Appreciate the question. So it'll be consistent with the pattern for PALISADE three. Once we hit the last patient's last visit and, and then proceed towards top line. So that'll be... We're on track with guidance that we've previously given, with respect to PALISADE four TLR, the randomized portion of PALISADE four. Josh, you can address the second part. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:14:01I'm sorry, I missed the second part. Can you rephrase that? Emily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at Stifel00:14:07You guys discussed, like, refinements including, like, retraining of some sites. Could you maybe provide any color on what details you saw from PALISADE-3 that kind of led to that decision? Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:14:20Yeah, I don't think we can go into too much detail, given PALISADE-4 is ongoing. But, you know, at a high level, you know, one of the things that made PALISADE-3 different than PALISADE-2 was a higher placebo response. So, you know, as one example, making sure that our training is reinforced and up to date with sites in terms of potential ways to minimize that, in particular, kind of how the protocol is followed, the script is followed to the letter. Making sure that there's no, you know, chatting with the subjects as they come in. You know, anything that could potentially lend to, you know, a comfort for a subject or that could drive a higher placebo effect. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:15:05So it's those types of things that we're able to implement quickly based on what we see from PALISADE-3, and also because we're listening to what's happening at each site through the audio recordings that we've talked about previously, gives us the opportunity, again, to be hyper-focused on feedback and any intervention where we see something deviating from the pre-script that we've put in place. Emily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at Stifel00:15:35Great. Thank you guys so much. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:15:37In addition to that, a focus on centralized recruitment and making sure that gets and stays completely tight and rationalized. So the kinds of things that can impact in-stream execution, especially as Josh noted, with high focus on placebo mitigation strategies and best practices across, especially from the really experienced sites. Operator00:16:04Thank you. One moment for the next question. Our next question is coming from the lines of Miles Minter of William Blair. Your line is open. Analyst at William Blair00:16:16Hi, team. This is John on for Miles. Thanks so much for taking our question. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more through your regulatory path forward and your confidence in it in the event that PALISADE-4 hits and you have a 50% program success? Alternatively, if PALISADE-4 misses, do you see any regulatory path forward with PALISADE-2 alone? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:16:40Thanks, John. Appreciate the question. So look, fundamentally, we believe that the regulatory outcomes always depend not only on FDA regulations and guidance, but the totality of data, the weight of evidence, the risk-benefit, the nature of the in-need population. So these kinds of assessments, this is what we align our regulatory strategies to accordingly. So we're not really in a position to speculate on any approval scenarios, but what we can tell you, of course, is we're very mindful not only of the evolving, the way that AI is evolving within the agency and how that is emerging as part of and factoring into the regulatory decision making. We on top of that and very closely focused on that. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:17:30But also just, again, the weight of evidence, once we see where we are with the randomized portion of PALISADE four, we'll be able to look across the totality of the program. And the primary objective and the primary regulatory strategy remains, as we've said, which is complementing, if PAL four is successful, complementing PALISADE two with a broader base of information from the totality of the program for the acute treatment of social anxiety disorder. If PALISADE four doesn't hit and separate from placebo, it's still the same. It's a totality of evidence focus. It's a weight of evidence focus across the program and what we see from all data we can possibly see and analyze relating to the drug. Analyst at William Blair00:18:23Helpful. Thanks. And a quick follow-up: Is there anything that you're seeing in the blinded data of PALISADE-4 that gives you a little bit more confidence in that study over PALISADE-3? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:18:34We don't comment on the blinded data, John. Analyst at William Blair00:18:37All right. Thank you. Operator00:18:42Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. One moment for the next question. And the next question is coming from the line of Elemer Piros of Lucid. Your line is open. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:19:04Yes. Hi. Good afternoon. Shawn, have you noticed any impact on enrollment since the announcement on December seventeenth, enrollment patterns? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:19:19Josh, you can address that. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:19:21Sure. The quick answer is no, definitely have not. Enrollment has continued as planned and projected for PALISADE-4. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:19:33Okay. So what I'm trying to understand is, how could the PALISADE-3 outcome and potentially PALISADE-4 be different by amending the SAP? Would that mean that you would include some covariates that may influence the separation between the two arms? If you could just help me conceptually understand this a little bit better. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:20:03Sure. Sure. I mean, part of what we're doing with AI and machine learning, it's potential. It's not certainly not guaranteed. What you're looking for is, are there any covariates that may have a potential fixed effect on the ANCOVA? And that may or may not evolve and emerge from the work that we're doing with our collaborators, with their proprietary AI and ML. But it would be those kinds of things. Are there covariates that you notice when you look through the patient populations in each arm in prior studies, in PAL three in particular, that may give you some sort of signal? So the answer is we don't know yet. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:20:51And as noted earlier, if we do make a modification to the SAP that's already been signed off by the agency, then we'd have to go back to them and socialize it with them. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:21:02Mm-hmm. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:03So, that's part of what we're trying to find out. If there isn't, then again, we've got operational, efficiencies and, and observations based on what we've seen across the studies that are being, implemented into the PALISADE-3 or PALISADE-4 execution. Josh, anything you want to add on that from the teams? Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:24No, I think that, that captures it. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:21:27So just to summarize, you're looking at PALISADE-3 and maybe even PALISADE-2 for some covariates. If you find them, then you modify the SAP, take it to the FDA before you were to analyze PALISADE-4, hypothesizing that those same covariates will be applicable to PALISADE-4. Am I understanding it correctly? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:56Yeah. It has to be whether- Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:57Correct. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:58Not only whether it's timely, it's obviously got to be timely before you lock the database, but it's also got to be appropriate. There may also be potential changes that wouldn't be FDA regulatory appropriate. It's got to be something that could be impactful, at the same time, something that is reasonable with rigor and review from the FDA. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:23I understand. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:22:23Shawn, I would just add that we're actually, you know, we're looking across all the PALISADE studies, so PALISADE 1, two, and three- Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:30Mm-hmm Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:22:31to see what we can learn. You know, we've built... Now that we've had a third study complete, we've built, you know, continued size of data to examine, which gives you more power when you're digging into different things. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:43Mm-hmm. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:22:43But you're 100% correct, that it's essentially the covariates or the correction factors that you would apply in your statistical model. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:51I understand. And just a silly housekeeping question, if you may, if I may. At the end of December, you had 39.7 million shares outstanding, but the weighted average for the quarter was 42. Can you help me to understand that? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:11Nick, are you on? Nick TresslerCFO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:13Hi. Yes, I am. Yeah. So, it's the shares outstanding at the end of the quarter, it's how we measure our earnings per share. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:24Okay. So, but there are higher number of shares outstanding, because- Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:39They- Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:39The average is $42 million. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:41It's that includes the pre-funded warrants, Elemer. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:44Yeah. I got it. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:45Okay. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:46Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yep. Thank you so much for clarifying that. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:51Not a silly question. Operator, I believe that's all the time we have for today. We can wrap up the call. So, thank you, everyone, for joining today and for your continued interest and support in Vistagen. Again, with our diverse innovative pipeline, we are encouraged about the future prospects of the company. If you have any additional questions, please don't hesitate to reach out to us via email at ir@vistagen.com, or through the Contact Us section of our website. We also encourage you to register for email updates and stay informed about the latest news and developments from Vistagen via our regular updates. We appreciate your time, engagement, and ongoing support, and we look forward to keeping you updated on our continued progress. This concludes our call today. Mark, one more thing, real quick. I just want to clarify. I think I misspoke. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:24:53It's, I think I said $61.2 million at the end of 12/31/2015 was $61.8 million, is reflected in our Q. Nick TresslerCFO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:25:01Understood. Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:25:04Thanks, Sean. Nick TresslerCFO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:25:06Thank you. Operator00:25:07This concludes today's program. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesJoshua PrinceCOOMark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor RelationsNick TresslerCFOShawn K. SinghPresident and CEOAnalystsAndrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at JefferiesElemer PirosManaging Director at LucidEmily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at StifelAnalyst at William BlairPowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) VistaGen Therapeutics Earnings HeadlinesVistaGen Therapeutics (NASDAQ:VTGN) versus Alto Neuroscience (NYSE:ANRO) Head to Head ContrastMay 1, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comKuehn Law Encourages Investors of Vistagen Therapeutics, Inc. to Contact Law FirmApril 29, 2026 | globenewswire.comSpaceX eyes a 1.75 trillion valuation - here's what to knowElon Musk's team has quietly filed confidential paperwork with the SEC for what Bloomberg estimates could be a $1.75 trillion IPO - larger than Saudi Aramco and any tech offering in history. CNBC calls it 'the big market event of 2026.' According to former tech executive and angel investor Jeff Brown, there's a way to claim a stake before the public filing drops, starting with as little as $500.May 7 at 1:00 AM | Brownstone Research (Ad)Vistagen Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: VTGN) Investor Alert: Schubert Jonckheer Investigating Possible False Claims Regarding Drug Candidate Following 80% Stock DropApril 28, 2026 | prnewswire.comVistagen Receives FDA “Study May Proceed” Letter Under its Refisolone IND Application, Enabling Further Phase 2 Clinical Development for the Treatment of Vasomotor Symptoms (Hot Flashes) due to MenopauseApril 22, 2026 | businesswire.comVistaGen Faces Nasdaq Audit Committee Compliance SetbackApril 2, 2026 | tipranks.comSee More VistaGen Therapeutics Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like VistaGen Therapeutics? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on VistaGen Therapeutics and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About VistaGen TherapeuticsVistaGen Therapeutics (NASDAQ:VTGN) (NASDAQ:VTGN) is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to the discovery and development of next-generation medicines for central nervous system disorders. Incorporated in Delaware in 1998 and headquartered in South San Francisco, California, VistaGen applies advanced human pluripotent stem cell technologies to accelerate drug candidate validation and optimization. The company’s core focus is on addressing unmet medical needs in major depressive disorder, neuropathic pain and dermatological conditions. The company’s lead candidate, AV-101, is an oral prodrug designed to modulate glutamatergic neurotransmission via the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor pathway, with clinical programs targeting major depressive disorder and neuropathic pain. VistaGen also develops PH-10, a topical neuroactive small molecule in clinical development for psoriasis and atopic dermatitis. To broaden its development reach, VistaGen has entered strategic partnerships, including a licensing agreement with Yuhan Corporation for AV-101 in South Korea, and continues to advance its clinical and regulatory strategy primarily in North America and Asia. VistaGen’s proprietary Human Clinical Drug Rescue and ReRationalization platform employs patient-derived pluripotent stem cell–derived neural and cardiac cells to predict clinical efficacy and safety, reduce late-stage development risk and complement traditional preclinical models. This platform supports both in-house pipeline programs and collaborative research initiatives. Leading the company is President and Chief Executive Officer Shawn K. Singh, who has overseen VistaGen’s research and corporate development efforts since joining in 2014 and remains committed to translating innovative science into new therapeutic options for underserved patient populations.View VistaGen Therapeutics ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Amprius Technologies Ups the Voltage on Forward OutlookWhy Lam Research Still Looks Like a Buy After a 300% RallySuper Micro Surges Over 20% as Margins Soar, Sales Fall ShortNuts and Bolts AI Play Gains Momentum: Astera Labs Targets RaisedAnheuser-Busch Stock Jumps as Volume Growth Signals TurnaroundLight Speed Returns: Corning Cashes In on NVIDIA GrowthBoarding Passes Now Being Issued for the Ultimate eVTOL Arbitrage Upcoming Earnings AngloGold Ashanti (5/8/2026)Brookfield Asset Management (5/8/2026)Enbridge (5/8/2026)Toyota Motor (5/8/2026)Ubiquiti (5/8/2026)Constellation Energy (5/11/2026)Barrick Mining (5/11/2026)Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.- Petrobras (5/11/2026)Simon Property Group (5/11/2026)SEA (5/12/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, everyone. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Vistagen Therapeutics Fiscal Year 2026, third quarter corporate update conference call and webcast. Please note that today's call is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to your host, Mark McPartland, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations at Vistagen. Mark? Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:00:25Thank you, Lisa, and good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our conference call and webcast. Earlier this afternoon, we filed our quarterly report on Form 10-Q and issued a press release for our fiscal year 2026, third quarter, which ended December 31, 2025, and provided an update of our progress across our clinical stage neuroscience program. We encourage you to review the PR and 10-Q, which are both available in the Investors section of our website. Before we begin, please note that we'll be making forward-looking statements regarding our business during today's call based on current expectations and information. These forward-looking statements speak only as of today. Except as law requires, we do not assume any duty to update any forward-looking statements made today or in the future. Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:01:19Of course, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and our actual results could differ materially from those anticipated by any forward-looking statements we make today. Additional information concerning risks and factors that could affect our business and our financial results are included in our fiscal year 2026, third quarter Form 10-Q for a period ending December 31, 2025, and in future filings that we make with the SEC from time to time. Again, all of which are available in the Investors section of our website or, of course, on the SEC's website. With the formalities completed, we warmly welcome our stockholders, sell-side analysts, and others interested in our programs and progress. I'm joined on our call today by Shawn Singh, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Josh Prince, our Chief Operating Officer, and Nick Tressler, our Chief Financial Officer. Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:02:20Shawn will provide a brief business and clinical update, and Josh and Nick will be available to provide additional feedback during the Q&A portion of our call. After our remarks, we'll take questions from the sell-side analysts participating on the call. A replay of the webcast will be available in the Events section of the Investor page of our website. With that taken care of, I'd now like to turn the call over to our President and CEO, Shawn Singh. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:02:48Thank you, Mark, and good afternoon, everyone. It's been an important quarter for our team with the completion of the randomized portion of our PALISADE-3, phase 3 trial in social anxiety disorder, as guided, and focused efforts to learn from the study's results and drive high quality and efficient execution of our ongoing PALISADE-4, phase 3 trial. We have reviewed available data from PALISADE-3 and implemented moderate refinements, including retraining, site rationalization, and operational enhancements to PALISADE-4. We've also been working with third-party collaborators on the implementation of innovative approaches to analyze the available data sets, not only from PALISADE-3, but also from the fasedienol studies across the PALISADE program, including both the randomized and the open-label trials. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:03:44Our objective is to better understand the drivers of both fasedienol and placebo response using the substantial data collected from these studies to potentially inform optimized statistical models that consistently incorporate covariates and explanatory variables across all PALISADE studies, which could anchor future weight of evidence discussions with the FDA. The analyses are ongoing with our collaborators and involve the use of their proprietary artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies to identify nonspecific responses and understand and predict susceptibility to placebo response and likelihood of response to active drug in the context of the public speaking challenge study design. Overall, the full complement of ongoing work is focused on delivering practical, operational understanding, predictors of response, and enhanced statistical models with the potential to impact both PALISADE-4 and our regulatory strategy based on the totality of data from the PALISADE program. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:04:56The open-label extension portion of PALISADE-3 and PALISADE-4 remains ongoing and is designed to evaluate the safety and tolerability of repeated as-needed intranasal administration of fasedienol in adults with social anxiety disorder, but in real-world, daily life situations. In addition to safety assessments, the study includes exploratory longitudinal measures using validated instruments such as the clinician-administered Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale, or LSAS, and the patient-reported Social Phobia Inventory, or SPIN. While open label data are inherently uncontrolled and exploratory, the OLE portion of the PALISADE-3 Phase 3 study could provide important context on patient experience with repeated use over time in real-world, anxiety-provoking situations the patients encounter. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:05:52Together with our broader analytical work across the PALISADE program, insights from open-label studies should contribute to our enhanced understanding of fasedienol's drug effect and usage patterns. Once again, we'd like to thank the patients who participated in our PALISADE studies, as well as the clinical investigators, the site staff, and our contract research organization, for their ongoing dedication and professionalism as we complete PALISADE-4 and advance our broader analytical efforts. As we've previously stated, if PALISADE-4 is successful, together with PALISADE-2 and the broader body of evidence generated across the PALISADE program, these data may support a potential new drug application submission to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the acute treatment of social anxiety disorder in adults. The significant unmet need in social anxiety disorder, where effective treatments are very limited, continues to guide our work and our long-term focus. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:06:57Turning to our women's health program, we received an official USAN adoption statement designating PH80 as rafisolone. Rafisolone is our hormone-free, nonsystemic, intranasal product candidate with potential for the treatment of moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms, commonly referred to as hot flashes, due to menopause. We believe rafisolone may also have therapeutic potential across other women's health indications. We are currently preparing to submit our US investigational new drug application, or IND, for rafisolone to the US FDA, with a planned submission in the first half of 2026. This IND is intended to support further potential phase 2 clinical development of rafisolone in the US for the treatment of moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms due to menopause. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:07:50Building on a previously completed placebo-controlled exploratory Phase 2A clinical trial conducted in Mexico by Pherin Pharmaceuticals, which is now our wholly owned subsidiary, and that trial demonstrated clinical benefit in the vasomotor symptoms indication. We believe that indication in women's health represents a significant area of unmet need, and we remain committed to advancing rafisolone as a nonsystemic, hormone-free product candidate with a disciplined, data-driven approach as we prepare for the potential next phase of clinical development. Turning briefly to our financial position. As of December 31st, 2025, we had $61.2 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities. During the quarter, we implemented company-wide cash preservation measures intended to enhance our operational efficiency, extend our runway, and maintain strategic flexibility across our varying pipeline. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:08:48We believe we are well positioned to complete PALISADE four and to advance preparations and planning for our varying pipeline. In closing, our mission remains unchanged: to deliver transformative treatments and improve lives. The path forward requires discipline, rigor, and thoughtful analysis, and we believe the steps we have taken and are taking position Vistagen to make informed decisions and responsibly advance programs with the potential to deliver meaningful value to patients and to shareholders. So I want to thank you for your continued interest in the company and your support, and we look forward to updating you on our progress in the quarters ahead. Thank you, Sean. Operator, we would now like to open up the call for questions from the sell-side analysts joining us today. Operator00:09:42Thank you. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. If you would like to remove yourself from the queue, press star one one again. We also ask that you please wait for your name and company to be announced before proceeding with your question. One moment while we compile the Q&A roster. The first question today is coming from the line of Andrew Fein of Jefferies. Your line is open. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:10:12Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for the updates. So, maybe in the PALISADE-3 data, you had a chance to look at it. Maybe descriptively, how did the individual curves look at every interval out to five minutes? Was there a separation at all across any of those time points with fasedienol versus placebo? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:10:36Thanks for the question, Andrew. Josh? Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:10:41Hi, Andrew. At this point, you know, what we've released publicly is the top-line results, so we're still looking into a lot of that data. We haven't released the individual curves publicly. We do know that there's... What really, where we find information is looking into individual respondents and subgroups of respondents. And again, that analysis continues. So that's where we do see definite differences. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:11:13Okay, thanks. And it sounds like you're looking at ways for PALISADE-4 to tweak around the SAP plan, and let's just say you did. Would you need to notify and then talk to the FDA to potentially get an official buy-in from them that the changes can be done? Is there a risk to modifying the SAP plan, basically? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:37Yeah, thank you. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:37We would- Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:38Great question. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:39Oh, go ahead, Shawn. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:40No, you go ahead, Josh. Sorry. It's you. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:11:42Yeah, it's a great question, and, you know, the SAP, just like with PALISADE three, you know, already been submitted and approved for no feedback from FDA. So that's set. So any future changes, to your point, would absolutely require a resubmission and alignment with the FDA before we lock the database and got the top-line results. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:12:06 Understood. And then my last question, thank you, is, should you modify the plan, would you need to backfill to the original enrollment target of around 236 or 238, or are there no changes to the enrollment? Thank you. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:12:27Yeah, a change to the SAP would not change the enrollment or the planned enrollment for the study. You know, it's the key there is that it's whatever that SAP is locked in before you get to database lock, and then applied to the total population for the study. Andrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at Jefferies00:12:48Understood. Okay. Thank you, guys. Operator00:12:52Thank you. One moment for the next question. Next question is coming from the line of Emily Chetty of Stifel. Your line is open. Emily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at Stifel00:13:01Hi, this is Emily on for Paul Matteis at Stifel. We just had a quick question. Maybe could you remind us where you guys are in terms of enrollment for PALISADE four? And if you like plan on telling, or plan on PRing when that has completed or like dosing has completed. And then also, could you maybe share, like, what details you saw on PALISADE three that kind of led you to refine to the refinements that you outlined in the PR? Thank you. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:13:33Thanks, Emily. Appreciate the question. So it'll be consistent with the pattern for PALISADE three. Once we hit the last patient's last visit and, and then proceed towards top line. So that'll be... We're on track with guidance that we've previously given, with respect to PALISADE four TLR, the randomized portion of PALISADE four. Josh, you can address the second part. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:14:01I'm sorry, I missed the second part. Can you rephrase that? Emily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at Stifel00:14:07You guys discussed, like, refinements including, like, retraining of some sites. Could you maybe provide any color on what details you saw from PALISADE-3 that kind of led to that decision? Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:14:20Yeah, I don't think we can go into too much detail, given PALISADE-4 is ongoing. But, you know, at a high level, you know, one of the things that made PALISADE-3 different than PALISADE-2 was a higher placebo response. So, you know, as one example, making sure that our training is reinforced and up to date with sites in terms of potential ways to minimize that, in particular, kind of how the protocol is followed, the script is followed to the letter. Making sure that there's no, you know, chatting with the subjects as they come in. You know, anything that could potentially lend to, you know, a comfort for a subject or that could drive a higher placebo effect. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:15:05So it's those types of things that we're able to implement quickly based on what we see from PALISADE-3, and also because we're listening to what's happening at each site through the audio recordings that we've talked about previously, gives us the opportunity, again, to be hyper-focused on feedback and any intervention where we see something deviating from the pre-script that we've put in place. Emily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at Stifel00:15:35Great. Thank you guys so much. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:15:37In addition to that, a focus on centralized recruitment and making sure that gets and stays completely tight and rationalized. So the kinds of things that can impact in-stream execution, especially as Josh noted, with high focus on placebo mitigation strategies and best practices across, especially from the really experienced sites. Operator00:16:04Thank you. One moment for the next question. Our next question is coming from the lines of Miles Minter of William Blair. Your line is open. Analyst at William Blair00:16:16Hi, team. This is John on for Miles. Thanks so much for taking our question. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more through your regulatory path forward and your confidence in it in the event that PALISADE-4 hits and you have a 50% program success? Alternatively, if PALISADE-4 misses, do you see any regulatory path forward with PALISADE-2 alone? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:16:40Thanks, John. Appreciate the question. So look, fundamentally, we believe that the regulatory outcomes always depend not only on FDA regulations and guidance, but the totality of data, the weight of evidence, the risk-benefit, the nature of the in-need population. So these kinds of assessments, this is what we align our regulatory strategies to accordingly. So we're not really in a position to speculate on any approval scenarios, but what we can tell you, of course, is we're very mindful not only of the evolving, the way that AI is evolving within the agency and how that is emerging as part of and factoring into the regulatory decision making. We on top of that and very closely focused on that. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:17:30But also just, again, the weight of evidence, once we see where we are with the randomized portion of PALISADE four, we'll be able to look across the totality of the program. And the primary objective and the primary regulatory strategy remains, as we've said, which is complementing, if PAL four is successful, complementing PALISADE two with a broader base of information from the totality of the program for the acute treatment of social anxiety disorder. If PALISADE four doesn't hit and separate from placebo, it's still the same. It's a totality of evidence focus. It's a weight of evidence focus across the program and what we see from all data we can possibly see and analyze relating to the drug. Analyst at William Blair00:18:23Helpful. Thanks. And a quick follow-up: Is there anything that you're seeing in the blinded data of PALISADE-4 that gives you a little bit more confidence in that study over PALISADE-3? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:18:34We don't comment on the blinded data, John. Analyst at William Blair00:18:37All right. Thank you. Operator00:18:42Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. One moment for the next question. And the next question is coming from the line of Elemer Piros of Lucid. Your line is open. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:19:04Yes. Hi. Good afternoon. Shawn, have you noticed any impact on enrollment since the announcement on December seventeenth, enrollment patterns? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:19:19Josh, you can address that. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:19:21Sure. The quick answer is no, definitely have not. Enrollment has continued as planned and projected for PALISADE-4. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:19:33Okay. So what I'm trying to understand is, how could the PALISADE-3 outcome and potentially PALISADE-4 be different by amending the SAP? Would that mean that you would include some covariates that may influence the separation between the two arms? If you could just help me conceptually understand this a little bit better. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:20:03Sure. Sure. I mean, part of what we're doing with AI and machine learning, it's potential. It's not certainly not guaranteed. What you're looking for is, are there any covariates that may have a potential fixed effect on the ANCOVA? And that may or may not evolve and emerge from the work that we're doing with our collaborators, with their proprietary AI and ML. But it would be those kinds of things. Are there covariates that you notice when you look through the patient populations in each arm in prior studies, in PAL three in particular, that may give you some sort of signal? So the answer is we don't know yet. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:20:51And as noted earlier, if we do make a modification to the SAP that's already been signed off by the agency, then we'd have to go back to them and socialize it with them. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:21:02Mm-hmm. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:03So, that's part of what we're trying to find out. If there isn't, then again, we've got operational, efficiencies and, and observations based on what we've seen across the studies that are being, implemented into the PALISADE-3 or PALISADE-4 execution. Josh, anything you want to add on that from the teams? Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:24No, I think that, that captures it. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:21:27So just to summarize, you're looking at PALISADE-3 and maybe even PALISADE-2 for some covariates. If you find them, then you modify the SAP, take it to the FDA before you were to analyze PALISADE-4, hypothesizing that those same covariates will be applicable to PALISADE-4. Am I understanding it correctly? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:56Yeah. It has to be whether- Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:57Correct. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:21:58Not only whether it's timely, it's obviously got to be timely before you lock the database, but it's also got to be appropriate. There may also be potential changes that wouldn't be FDA regulatory appropriate. It's got to be something that could be impactful, at the same time, something that is reasonable with rigor and review from the FDA. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:23I understand. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:22:23Shawn, I would just add that we're actually, you know, we're looking across all the PALISADE studies, so PALISADE 1, two, and three- Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:30Mm-hmm Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:22:31to see what we can learn. You know, we've built... Now that we've had a third study complete, we've built, you know, continued size of data to examine, which gives you more power when you're digging into different things. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:43Mm-hmm. Joshua PrinceCOO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:22:43But you're 100% correct, that it's essentially the covariates or the correction factors that you would apply in your statistical model. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:22:51I understand. And just a silly housekeeping question, if you may, if I may. At the end of December, you had 39.7 million shares outstanding, but the weighted average for the quarter was 42. Can you help me to understand that? Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:11Nick, are you on? Nick TresslerCFO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:13Hi. Yes, I am. Yeah. So, it's the shares outstanding at the end of the quarter, it's how we measure our earnings per share. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:24Okay. So, but there are higher number of shares outstanding, because- Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:39They- Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:39The average is $42 million. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:41It's that includes the pre-funded warrants, Elemer. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:44Yeah. I got it. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:45Okay. Elemer PirosManaging Director at Lucid00:23:46Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yep. Thank you so much for clarifying that. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:23:51Not a silly question. Operator, I believe that's all the time we have for today. We can wrap up the call. So, thank you, everyone, for joining today and for your continued interest and support in Vistagen. Again, with our diverse innovative pipeline, we are encouraged about the future prospects of the company. If you have any additional questions, please don't hesitate to reach out to us via email at ir@vistagen.com, or through the Contact Us section of our website. We also encourage you to register for email updates and stay informed about the latest news and developments from Vistagen via our regular updates. We appreciate your time, engagement, and ongoing support, and we look forward to keeping you updated on our continued progress. This concludes our call today. Mark, one more thing, real quick. I just want to clarify. I think I misspoke. Shawn K. SinghPresident and CEO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:24:53It's, I think I said $61.2 million at the end of 12/31/2015 was $61.8 million, is reflected in our Q. Nick TresslerCFO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:25:01Understood. Mark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor Relations at VistaGen Therapeutics00:25:04Thanks, Sean. Nick TresslerCFO at VistaGen Therapeutics00:25:06Thank you. Operator00:25:07This concludes today's program. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesJoshua PrinceCOOMark McPartlandSenior Vice President, Investor RelationsNick TresslerCFOShawn K. SinghPresident and CEOAnalystsAndrew FeinManaging Director and Senior Biotechnology Analyst at JefferiesElemer PirosManaging Director at LucidEmily ChudyBiotech Equity Research Associate at StifelAnalyst at William BlairPowered by