Omeros Corp Q1 FY2026 Earnings Call
Omeros Corp (OMER)
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Auto-generated speakers · tap a word to jump the audioGood afternoon and welcome to today's earnings call for Omeros Corporation. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the company's remarks, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please raise your hand. If you have dialed into today's call, please press star 9 to raise your hand and star 6 to unmute. Please be advised that this call is being recorded at the company's request and a replay will be available on the company's website. I'll now turn the call over to Jennifer Williams, Investor Relations for Omeros. Please go ahead.
Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. Before we begin, please note that today's discussion will include forward-looking statements. These statements reflect management's current expectations and beliefs as of today and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. For a detailed discussion of these risks and uncertainties, please refer to the special note regarding forward-looking statements and the risk factors sections in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q filed today with the SEC, as well as our most recent annual report on Form 10-K. Today's call will include a discussion of certain non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the corresponding GAAP measures is included with Omeros' earnings press release issued earlier today, which is available on the Investor Relations page of our website and has been furnished with the Form 8K we filed with the SEC earlier today. With that, I'll turn the call over to Dr. Greg Dimopoulos, Chairman and CEO of Omeros.
Thank you, Jennifer, and good afternoon, everyone. Joining me today are David Borges, our Chief Accounting Officer, Dr. Kathy Melfi, our Chief Regulatory Officer, and Dr. Steve Whitaker, Vice President of Clinical. I'll start with an overview of our first quarter 2026 operations and financial results, followed by program updates. After that, David will cover the financials in more detail, and then we'll open the call for questions. We entered 2026 with two catalysts, the closing of our previously announced transaction with Novo Nordisk for Zaltanabar, our lead investigational MASP-3 inhibitor, and the FDA approval of Yartemlia, our lead MASP-2 inhibitor, for the treatment of hematopoietic stem cell transplant and-associated thrombotic microangiopathy, or TATMA. This approval made Yartemlia the first and only approved treatment for this often fatal complication and the first and only approved inhibitor of the lectin pathway of complement. We launched in January with initial shipments to distributors beginning mid-month followed shortly by first sales in the first quarter yard temlia gross revenues were 11.1 million dollars with net revenues of 9.9 million reflecting gross to net adjustments of approximately 11 percent early demand and uptake are strong Yartemlia became cash flow positive in the first quarter despite a mid-January launch and we expect it to drive company-wide positive cash flow within 18 months. Net income for the first quarter was $56.1 million or 78 cents per share, including a $73.1 million non-cash mark-to-market gain on the embedded derivative associated with our 2029 convertible notes. Excluding this non-cash item, adjusted net gross loss was or net loss was 17.1 million dollars or 24 cents per share we ended the quarter with 135.3 million in cash and investments after retiring our remaining 2026 convertible notes. During the first quarter, we repurchased and retired approximately 360,000 shares of our common stock at an average price of $11.70 per share for a total of $4.2 million. We may continue to repurchase shares from time to time, subject to market conditions and other considerations. Our transaction with Novo Nordisk provided substantial, non-dilutive capital to support our growth. At closing, we received $240 million in upfront cash, funding operations, including the Artemlia launch. We are also eligible for another $100 million in near-term milestone payments from Novo. The deal is valued at up to $2.1 billion in upfront and milestone payments, plus royalties in the high single-digit to high teen range. Our early launch has been focused on four priorities. First, educating transplant care teams to drive earlier recognition and treatment of TATMA. Second, securing rapid institutional access through pharmacy and therapeutics or P&T committee approvals and streamlined ordering. Third, ensuring consistent, timely reimbursement. And finally, demonstrating strong economic value through Health Economics and Outcomes Research, or HEOR. Execution is ahead of plan. Our field force is fully deployed, detailing all 175 transplant centers nationwide. nationwide. By March 31, 30 unique accounts had ordered Yartemlia, reflecting accelerated adoption. Despite the typical six- to nine-month timeline for P&T committee approvals, accounts are moving faster than expected. By quarter end, we understand that 60 percent of the top 10 centers, 40% of the top 20, 38% of the top 40, and approximately 30% of the top 80 U.S. centers had received P&T committee approval. Looking at reimbursement, all prior authorization requests submitted to third-party commercial payers to date have been approved and centers have begun receiving full payment. HEOR analyses which support the Artemlia pricing and show compelling quality of life improvements are being finalized and prepared for publication. Early indicators including strong receptivity from transplant centers, formulary momentum, and payer alignment with the label, support our expectation that Yartemlia can become standard of care for TATMA. In April, the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, assigned a permanent healthcare common procedure coding system J-code for Yartemlia. This simplifies billing and reimbursement across payers, reduces administrative burden, supports faster patient access, and improves reimbursement predictability. The J-code becomes effective July 1. Also in April, CMS, in its Inpatient Prospective Payment System proposed rule, recommended approval of the new technology add-on payment, or NTAP, for Yartemlia. NTAP provides additional payments to hospitals for certain high-cost, innovative technologies, helping bridge the gap until standard payment systems incorporate them. The final rule is expected in August, with NTAP effective October 1 of this year. We remain focused on expansion opportunities for Yartemlia and our MASP2 program. Beyond the U.S., our marketing authorization application for Yartemlia in TATMA is under review by the European Medicines Agency. We continue to expect a decision mid-year. We are evaluating potential partnerships, including broad ex-US and regional collaborations to support commercialization outside the U.S. Beyond TATMA, we're assessing opportunities to expand the Artemilia label to other indications involving lectin pathway activation, including acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS, sickle cell disease, acute kidney injury, solid organ transplant-related TMA, and delayed graft function. We're also broadening our MASP-2 inhibitor platform beyond Yartemlia, advancing both our Phase II Ready-Lung-Acting MASP II Antibody OMS-1029 and our Oral MASP II Small Molecule Program. Both are well-suited for chronic indications, including membranous nephropathy, other renal diseases, and neurological disorders such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's. we're finalizing the initial phase two indication for once quarterly oms 1029 we're now also working to advance our small molecule program to ind enabling studies targeting once daily oral delivery let's now turn to development programs beyond our complement inhibitor franchise Our PD-7 inhibitor program evaluating OMS-527 for cocaine use disorder remains fully funded by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, or NIDA. We successfully completed animal-cocaine interaction studies supporting a scheduled inpatient human study evaluating OMS-527 in cocaine users. recently together with NIDA representation we met with FDA to discuss the agency's request for additional non-clinical information before starting the inpatient study the meeting was productive and we are working with FDA to streamline the path to initiate the inpatient clinical trial, which is targeted to start by year end. Based on its mechanism of action and our extensive preclinical data, we believe that OMS 527 could be effective across a wide range of addictions and compulsive disorders. Turning to our targeted complement activating therapy or tcat platform this represents a novel class of recombinant antibodies designed to target and directly kill pathogens including bacteria fungi viruses and parasites our initial focus is on multi-drug resistant organisms or mdros one of the most critical unmet needs in medicine Unlike marketed antimicrobials, TCAT is designed to kill pathogens, regardless of resistance profile, without promoting resistance. Data from our TCAT platform were recently featured in a podium presentation at the Annual Congress of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. and the seminal manuscript describing our TCAT technology was accepted for publication in Science Translational Medicine. Last but not least, we're pleased with the continued progress of Oncotoxx AML, the lead development program in our Oncotoxx oncology platform. Oncotoxx AML is an engineered biologic agent designed to treat acute myeloid leukemia or AML, the most common and deadliest form of adult leukemia. In both human tumor-bearing animal and in vitro human AML cell line studies, Oncatox AML has consistently shown superior efficacy to current standard of care treatments, even at very low doses and across mutations associated with AML, such as TP53 and FLIT3, which have historically been difficult to treat. In a non-human primate study, a single course of Oncotox AML demonstrated the desired pharmacologic response, a marked selective, reversible, and dose-related reduction in myeloid progenitor cells, the cells that can mutate and lead to AML, by up to 99%. Safety was equally strong. The treatment was well-tolerated with no safety signal of concern. IND-enabling studies are underway, and we are preparing for a first in-human trial targeted for late 2027. So that concludes our financial, corporate, and development program update. i'll now turn the call over to david borges our chief accounting officer for a detailed discussion
of our financial results david thanks greg net income for the first quarter of 2026 was 56.1 million dollars or 78 cents per share compared to net income of 86.5 million or a dollar 22 per share in the fourth quarter of 2025. First quarter results include a $73.1 million non-cash gain related to the mark-to-market adjustment on the embedded derivative associated with our 2029 convertible notes. By comparison, fourth quarter results included a net gain of $237.6 million on the sale of Zaltanabar to Novo Nordisk, partially offset by a $136 million non-cash loss related to mark-to-market adjustments on embedded derivatives associated with our 2029 convertible notes and term loan. A clearer view of the company's operating performance excludes the non-cash remeasurements of our embedded derivatives, excluding the 73.1 million dollar embedded derivative adjustment non-GAAP adjusted net loss for the first quarter of 26 was 17.1 million dollars and non-GAAP adjusted net loss per share was 24 cents per share as of march 31st 2026 we had 135.3 million dollars in cash and investments This balance includes the repayment of the remaining $17.1 million principal on our notes, on our 2026 notes at maturity in February of 2026. Following that repayment, our only remaining debt is $70.8 million of principal outstanding on our unsecured 2029 convertible notes, which are due in June 2029. During the first quarter, we repurchased and retired approximately 360,000 shares of our common stock at an average price of $11.70 per share for a total of $4.2 million. As Greg mentioned, Yartemlia launched in mid-January 2026. Gross revenues for the first quarter for 11.1 million dollars all from your tummy of product sales reflecting strong early demand following launch uptake was driven by prescriber adoption and increasing market penetration and we continue to expand access and build awareness net revenues were 9.9 million reflecting gross to net adjustments of approximately 11 percent gross to net adjustments were relatively relatively modest, and consisted of chargebacks and distribution fees. Costs and expenses from continuing operations for the first quarter before interest and other income were $27.3 million, a decrease of $1.8 million from the fourth quarter of 2025. Concurrently with the closing of the sale of Sultanapart to Novo Nordisk, we entered into a transition services agreement to facilitate the transfer of the acquired assets and support the continued operation of relevant studies and program activities cost incurred by ameros under the transition services agreement including third-party expenses and internal full-time employee or fte cost are being reimbursed by nova nordisk interest expense in the first quarter was 5.9 million dollars the primary components of interest expense include the dri royalty obligation and interest on the 2029 convertible notes excluding the dri immediate royalty obligation which represents pass-through interest from rainer to dri and has no economic impact to us and excluding non-cash amortization of debt issuance costs and discounts contractual cash interest expense for the first quarter of 26 was 1.8 million dollars compared to 3.2 million in the prior quarter the decrease was primarily due to the full repayment of our secured term loan in november 2025. interest in other income totaled 1.5 million in the first quarter up from 1.1 million in the fourth quarter of 25 primarily reflecting higher average cash balances as previously mentioned during the first quarter we recorded a 73.1 million dollar non-cash gain from mark to mark market adjustment on the embedded derivative related to our 2029 convertible notes the change in valuation was primarily driven by the decline in our stock price during the quarter which decreased from 17.18 per share at december 31st 2025 to 10.56 per share at march 31st, 2026. An increase in stock price in the second quarter would similarly result in a non-cash loss during the quarter. Conversely, a decrease in our stock price during the second quarter would result in a non-cash gain. This embedded derivative reflects certain features of the notes, including the conversion option and interest make-hole provision available to the note holders. because evaluation of this derivative is influenced by our stock price and other market inputs it can introduce significant volatility in our reported results from quarter to quarter this adjustment is non-cash and does not affect our operating performance or liquidity accordingly we present non-gap adjusted net income and net loss to exclude the non-cash nature of these volatile swings income from discontinued operations in the first quarter was 4.8 million dollars a decrease of 1.8 million from the fourth quarter primarily reflecting lower than forecasted u.s-based midway royalties because u.s-based midway royalties are fully passed through to dri fluctuation in these payments do not affect our cash position now let's look at our expected second quarter 2026 results we anticipate that overall operating expenses from continuing operations will be slightly higher compared to the first quarter of 26. sales and marketing expenses are expected to increase reflecting costs associated with building our commercial infrastructure including marketing expenses and other commercial launch activities for yartemlia as yartemlia is in the early stages of launch we are not providing revenue guidance at this time This is consistent with our approach following a new product launch while market access and physician adoption are still developing and until we are able to estimate revenue with greater accuracy. We remain focused on building physician awareness, expanding disease education, and ensuring continued timely reimbursement. Interests and other income are expected to be higher than in the first quarter. Interest expense is expected to be approximately $7.1 million, reflecting the reduction in our outstanding debt and excludes any potential non-cash adjustments related to the Amidria royalty obligation. Income from discontinued operations is expected to be in the $5 to $6 million range, excluding any non-cash remeasurement adjustment related to the Amidria contract royalty asset. And finally, as a reminder, our reported results will continue to reflect mark-to-market adjustments on the embedded derivative tied to our 2029 convertible notes. These adjustments are non-cash, can be volatile, and are largely driven by changes in our stock price and other market inputs. As a result, we present non-GAAP-adjusted net income and loss measures to provide additional visibility into our underlying operating performance with that turn the call back over
to greg thanks david operator please open the call to questions we will now begin the question and
answer session if you would like to ask a question please raise your hand now the raise hand button can be found in the center of the toolbar at the bottom of your screen on zoom desktop and on the left side of the toolbar on zoom mobile if you have dialed into today's call please press star nine to raise your hand and star six to unmute please stand by while we compile the q and a roster your first question comes from the line of steve brozak with wbb your line is open please go ahead
yeah hi uh thanks for taking the question um i'd like to go into some uh granularity on your Tamlia. First question has to deal with, from the time the clinician requests drug to the time you get it, can you detail how long you get it to the hospital? Can you detail us how long it takes and the process, please?
Sure. Thanks, Steve. The distributors deliver drug to the sites It's within about 24 hours of receipt of the request. So the process is pretty straightforward. The request is made to the distributors. Distributors deliver within 24 hours.
Okay. And can you give us some detail on this? Typically, on stem cell, TA, TMA, on the transplant side, and you're looking at about roughly 15% of the population are peds. How does that reflect in terms of what you've seen so far on the request for your TEMLIA place?
Right, and you're correct about that. The split between adult and pediatric patients in TATMA is roughly 85-15, as you noted. We only have, again, through the first quarter, a little over two months of data, so these data may be skewed, but we are seeing a greater percentage of these patients being pediatric than the 15% that you cited. So it appears that we're having really rapid adoption across both adult and pediatric patients.
Okay. Now, I don't want to put words in your mouth, but typically you would see the pediatric hematological oncologist being the most conservative. So you're saying that they are asking for your Temlia in a greater number than the distribution. And look, I know it's only a partial quarter, but so far you're seeing a trend that these more conservative prescribers are asking for drug at a greater rate than you would expect. Is that what I'm hearing?
Well, I'm not sure that a point would create a trend. But what we're seeing is what I said, which is that there is a larger percentage of pediatric transplanters than is represented by the overall split in TATMA between adults and pediatrics. We are seeing those pediatric transplanters requesting narsoplimab or yartemlia.
Thanks. I thought I was the only person that was mixing narsoplimab and yartemlia. You may have stated this earlier, but how many facilities out of the total targeted have you started to get prescribing or get requests from so far?
We have at the end of March, so by March 31, we had 30 separate accounts requesting Yartemlia. And of that 30, let me just give you a little more color. We went through this in the prepared comments, but we were speaking there in percentages. So I think if I put it in absolute numbers, it may be helpful to everyone. Of the top 10, six of the top 10 sites had ordered by March 31. 24 of the top 80 centers had ordered by March 31.
Okay. Okay. Okay. Last question. I'll get back in the queue. What kind of feedback, even if it's anecdotal, are you getting from the hematological oncologist in prescribing or anyone else on the clinician side? Thank you. I'll jump back in the queue.
Sure. Again, it's early, but the feedback that we have received has been effectively uniformly positive i think that the results that are being seen with the artemlia are impressive and again we're early in the launch but as i said all signs look very encouraging and we do expect that Yartemlia will become standard of care for the treatment of TATMA.
Great. Well, thank you for the granularity and I'm looking forward to the next call to see the trend after one point. How's that? Very good. Thanks. Yep. We look forward to that as well.
Your next question comes from the line of Olivia Saunders with Cantor. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon, guys, and thank you for the question. I know it's early, but Greg, how are you thinking about the split between inventory versus U.S. wholesaler sales versus hospital demand and how that might play out over the course of the year just in terms of how we should think about the proportion of reported sales? And any comments on how many patients are actually on drug as of today?
sorry i lost the second question olivia what was that it was muted on my end maybe yeah it was
just a question about how many patients are actually on drug as of today
sure being treated with your time liam sure first of all with respect to inventory given the short delivery process uh which as i explained in the last response is 24 hours the amount of inventory carried at the distributors and certainly at the centers is relatively small So on the distributor side, we're seeing one, one and a half weeks of inventory on average across those distributors. I think your next question was the number of patients on drug. That's a difficult number to provide because often the centers don't share the specific information about the number of patients or the type of patients or really any patient-specific information. So really what we see is how many vials are going into a center and from which center those vials are being requested. So that is, I'm not trying to dodge the question. I'm trying to give you the best information we have. But we expect that it is a larger number of patients, obviously, than the number of accounts. But with respect to specific number, we just don't have that information.
Okay, fair enough. And can I ask, how are you thinking about the AstraZeneca Ultimeris Phase III study that they're running in TMA? I think they're using disease relapse as an endpoint, and it is a randomized study. So I'm just curious if you have any thoughts on how that might fit into the landscape.
Well, I understand that they've changed their endpoint, their initial endpoint, as I understand it. And again, I want to caveat that this is my understanding. But the initial endpoint, as I understand it, was response. But following the readout of their pediatric open-label trial, which used response as the endpoint, that response was not clearly what AstraZeneca had hoped to see. I think it had a 17% response rate. So I know that subsequently, or as I understand it, subsequently, they revised the endpoint for their adult trial from response to survival. I don't know if they're looking at relapse. Our understanding is that the patients in that controlled adult trial, by definition, would really, our expectation would be need to be less severe than the patients we treated. by virtue of the fact that in the patients we treated, running a controlled trial would really not be possible. So I think there's a difference in the severity of the patients. Don't know if they're looking at relapse. I'll open the question up to Steve and or Kathy if you have any other information about AstraZeneca and their data.
Hi, Greg. This is Steve. We only know what's on clinicaltrials.gov at this point. The primary endpoint is event-free survival, and that is death or clinical worsening. So it's not really relapse, as Greg said. It'd be worsening from their baseline condition. um the uh they do look at duration of response and they relapse but those are lower secondary endpoints and i obviously i don't have the protocol so i don't know how these were ranked hierarchically but those are pretty far down the line if that helps yep that's great thank you guys
appreciate it yeah thank you olivia i i think also that there have been a number of recent publications and and data presentations around the increased infection rates and increased infection related mortality with c5 inhibition i know coming out of an adult study at MSK, Memorial Sloan Kettering, a pediatric study out of Children's Hospital in Atlanta associated with Emory. And I understand that there also has been additional data generated and presented by Dana-Farber and Boston Children's again in the pediatric center. All of those data align quite nicely with each other. So those might be something that would help you as well.
And Greg, you had mentioned the change in the endpoint, and I did confirm that on clinicaltrials.gov. Your understanding was correct. It had been response, and currently it's, as Steve said, event-free survival.
So thank you, Kathy. So, yes, so they had changed from response to survival. Okay. Anything else, Olivia?
Nope, that's perfect.
Thank you, guys. Appreciate it.
Thank you very much.
Your next question comes from the line of Brandon Folks with H.C. Wainwright. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Thanks for taking my questions, and congrats on all the progress. Maybe there's one from you, Greg. Greg, I think I heard you say you're working on efforts to recognize TMA earlier. Can you just elaborate on those efforts and whether you believe once NTAP comes into practice, that may facilitate less friction to earlier intervention? Or what do you think drives earlier intervention?
Hi, Brandon. Thank you. Certainly, we're interested in earlier intervention. we want to save as many patients as possible our our expectation and the data support that the earlier one jumps on this problem the greater the likelihood of success in outcome so i think that there certainly seems to be an increasing awareness of that within the transplant community we are receiving incoming questions about about the temporal uh the temporally upstream administration of yar temlia all of that i think bodes well for patients with respect to will the ntap assists that yes the ntap increases the subsidization so actually subsidizes in good part for medicare patients uh the the payment on the inpatient side and that's where you would expect that earliest treatment to begin so i think your your thought around whether the ntap would help in that respect i i think is insightful so we're waiting to see but we do expect that there will be an increasing move to earlier treatment particularly given that initially a good number of the patients we were treating were eculizumab failures so we were really catching patients and in the first quarter catching patients who were falling knives and yet those patients very many of them responded very well to Narsoplamin or to Yartemlia. So I think that there's a greater understanding and increasing awareness of moving temporarily upstream in the administration process. I think that's a good thing. I think it's good for patients. Does that help?
It does. Thanks so much, Greg.
Okay, thanks, Brandon.
Sorry, just dealing with the mute button.
No, that's fine. Any other questions?
Your next question comes from the line of Serge Bellinger with Needham. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. I guess a few on just to get a little more granularity on the 1Q sales number. Greg, can you disclose what the number of vials that were, I guess, dispersed from your distributor over the quarter? And then secondly, I think you talked about a gross to nets of 11% for the first quarter here. Just curious where you expect that gross to net to go once you have more comprehensive formulary coverage. And then I have a couple of reimbursement questions.
sure in response to your first question no we aren't providing the number of vials we're providing gross and net revenue numbers uh with respect to your second around what is what constitutes the uh that gross to net number uh that really is made up of chargebacks and fees so chargebacks meaning governmental programs so 340 b and fees being largely bona fide fees to distributors so that's that's largely it we would expect that over time to increase as 340B participation increases. With respect to a target, I would not expect that to be reaching the 20 percentile. I would be thinking we're going to remain in the teens on that surge but we'll have to we'll have to see how that plays out we are not planning at all to discount the drug so and I think returns are I don't think we've had any but I think that will be negligible so going forward I would expect the components of the gross to net to be what they were in q1 which is the chargebacks uh and uh and the fees only got it and then regarding pnt
approvals clearly you got some good traction through the the end of the first quarter here with the numbers you gave us yes curious when you expect the the rest of them uh to go through the P&T approval process. Are they already scheduled? And then secondly, you talked that you got approval for a J-code as well as the NTAP for later this year. Curious, since you said that most centers have had some very good access to the product, access hasn't been an issue. um will these j codes and i guess and ntap you know what kind of impact could they have on uh further uptake once they um are in effect yeah uh first of all with respect to p and t
committees there are a number of them that are in process remember we launched this in in mid-January, third week of January. So we are really still very early in the process, and the P&T committee approvals that we've seen, as I mentioned, are quite satisfying in that they are well ahead of what we would have expected in terms of just timeline and number of p and t approvals so clearly there is an urgency i think that's being recognized and manifest across the sites with physicians and pharmacists recognizing the value of yartemlia and moving quickly to make it available there are there are centers obviously that are approving access to the drug absent pnt approvals but additional pnt approvals will certainly help that access, streamline it, make it more quick, more efficient. With respect to when we would expect all of those to have gone through the P&T process, all is an absolute number I would expect that the large majority of them will be coming through in the next few months. um your second question about the j code and the ntap well the j code certainly streamlines the billing process uh and the reimbursement process so certainly having the j code now awarded and going into effect on july 1 i think will be very helpful uh the ntap CMS has in its proposed inpatient prospective payment systems rule has indicated that they support the approval of the NTAP for Yartemlia that we expect will be finalized in the inpatient final rule in August. Assuming that's the case, it will become or should become finalized and available for use on November 1st or sometime very close to November 1st. It runs on CMS's schedule. Both of those, the J-Code and the NTAP, I expect, will obviously help with reimbursement anytime you have secured reimbursement. reimbursement that certainly helps with utilization so i think you know i'm quite uh it's been quite surprising frankly uh how broadly yard temlia has been used in in the absence of the historical reimbursement already in place but once as you know serge once that reimbursement becomes much more standard and much more well recognized that just drives front-end utilization as it should
thank you all right thank you there are no further questions at this time i will now turn the call
back to dr demopoulos for closing remarks all right thank you uh thank you operator and uh thank you all for joining us this afternoon as we've said we're pleased with the strength of the artemalia launch and the continued progress across our pipeline and our platform programs with expanding commercial momentum multiple near-term catalysts and continued execution across the organization, we believe Omeros is well-positioned for continued growth and long-term value creation. As always, we appreciate your continued support and confidence.
Have a good evening. This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.