NASDAQ:TVTX Travere Therapeutics Q4 2024 Earnings Report $14.91 +0.08 (+0.54%) Closing price 04/15/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$14.20 -0.71 (-4.76%) As of 04:05 AM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Travere Therapeutics EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.73Consensus EPS -$0.58Beat/MissMissed by -$0.15One Year Ago EPSN/ATravere Therapeutics Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$74.79 millionExpected Revenue$72.38 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$2.42 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ATravere Therapeutics Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2024Date2/20/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, February 20, 2025Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsTravere Therapeutics' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, May 5, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 4:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Travere Therapeutics Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 20, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 18 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to the Trevir Therapeutics Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Financial Results Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference call over to Victoria Prescod, Manager of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Victoria. Speaker 100:00:21Thank you, Chloe. Good afternoon, and welcome to Travir Therapeutics' first quarter and full year twenty twenty four financial results and corporate update call. Thank you all for joining. Today's call will be led by Doctor. Eric Dube, our President and Chief Executive Officer. Speaker 100:00:38Eric will be joined in the prepared remarks by Doctor. Jule Enrich, our Chief Medical Officer Peter Herma, our Chief Commercial Officer Klein, our Chief Financial Officer. Doctor. Bill Rhodes, Senior Vice President of Research and Development will join us for the Q and A. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that statements made during this call regarding matters that are not historical facts are forward looking statements within the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Speaker 100:01:12Forward looking statements are not guarantees of performance. They involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause actual results, performance and achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by this statements. Please see the forward looking statement disclaimer on the company's press release issued earlier today, as well as the Risk Factors section in our Forms 10 Q and 10 K filed with the SEC. In addition, any forward looking statements represent our views only as of the date such statements are made, 02/20/2025, and Trevir specifically disclaims any obligation to update such statements to reflect future information, events or circumstances. With that, let me now turn the call over to Eric. Speaker 200:02:02Thank you, Victoria, and good afternoon, everyone. We just completed a remarkable year, one marked by execution, innovation and a relentless commitment to patients with rare kidney and metabolic diseases. Our exceptional progress culminated culminated in the full FDA approval of PILSPARRI for IJ nephropathy in September, a major milestone for our company and the patients we serve. In the fourth quarter, net sales at PILSPARRI grew by nearly 40% compared to the third quarter and we saw a meaningful inflection in demand following full approval. This is a testament to our sound commercial execution alongside FilSpari's strong profile with robust long term efficacy including preservation of kidney function and two year safety data. Speaker 200:02:54It also speaks to the ability for physicians to now prescribe PILspari to more of their patients with IgAN with a broader label and supportive draft Codigo guidelines. I'm also excited about the progress we've been making in expanding TILsparis potential beyond IgAN. As we highlighted last week, we recently completed our Type C interactions with the FDA and plan to submit our sNDA for a potential FSGS indication around the end of this quarter. This submission supported by compelling data from our Duplex and DUET studies that we believe are further validated by the findings from the Paracel group could lead to the first ever FDA approved therapy for patients with FSGS by year end. We continue to believe that FSGS represents an even greater potential opportunity to help patients and we look forward to the submission and review process. Speaker 200:03:50In addition, we remain committed to generating further evidence to support VOSPARI's foundational positioning in IgAN and broad use, which Juhua will touch on shortly. Also in the pipeline, we continue to believe in the disease modifying potential for pegdebatinase and the hope it can bring to the HCU community. We are continuing to optimize our manufacturing scale up of our pegdebatinase program and I am pleased with our recent progress. Looking ahead into 2025, our strategic priorities are clear and focused. We will leverage our recent full approval and broader label to further solidify Vilspari's foundational positioning in IgAN as the only non immunosuppressive kidney targeted therapy that has demonstrated superiority over historical standard of care. Speaker 200:04:41With the unique profile and unsurpassed clinical data, we believe that VILspari will be utilized as a new foundational therapy in IgAN now and into the future, replacing the traditional role that RAS inhibitors have played. We will also focus on submitting a high quality SNDA for FSGS, working with the FDA throughout the review process and preparing for a potential launch later this year. And lastly, with peggedivatinase, we aim to maintain the momentum in our CMC efforts to enable reopening enrollment in our Phase III HARMONY study and we are on track to achieve that next year. Following our successful financing near the end of the year, we are well capitalized to execute on these key strategic priorities. Let me now turn the call over to Jula for the clinical update. Speaker 200:05:33Jula? Speaker 300:05:35Thank you, Eric. I'd like to start with hearing some feedback from physicians following FilSpari's full approval in IJ nephropathy. Nephrologists are expressing a greater urgency to get their patients with IgAN into complete proteinuria remission or less than zero point three grams per gram. This is driven by the complete remission data from both PROTECT and SPARTAN studies that demonstrate that SILSpari, particularly if used earlier, can get more patients into complete remission, as well as the updated draft KDIGO guidelines that recommend earlier diagnosis and treatment to lower proteinuria targets. These data also show that patients reaching complete remission can achieve kidney function loss close to that of normal aging. Speaker 300:06:31Additionally, more physicians see PSALsparity as a foundational therapy. When we speak to nephrologists, foundational treatment is defined as non immunosuppressive, kidney targeted and nephrotective that can be used chronically in nearly all patients with IgAN. The foundational role of FILSpari is supported by the fact that it targets directly two pathways causing kidney injury, is non immunosuppressive and can be used safely long term, and has efficacy based on superior kidney function preservation from a head to head comparison over a historical standard of care medicine erbasartan. Also with the removal of the one point five gs per gram threshold from the label following full approval in IgA nephropathy, we're hearing that nephrologists are seeking use in a broader eligible patient population. The new evidence presented at ASN Kidney Week demonstrating FilSpiri's efficacy in patients with lower proteinuria levels and the long term safety profile continue to reinforce physician confidence in VILSPARI as a long term treatment option for this larger segment of IgAN patients. Speaker 300:07:56Our medical teams are continuing with education on the data that supports VILSPARI's position as a foundational treatment for IgA nephropathy. This education focuses on the benefits of treating IgAN patients earlier and to lower proteinuria targets in line with the updated draft KDIGO guidelines. And it also highlights evidence that supports earlier and broader use of FilSpara as well as clinical studies on FilSpara used in combination with other available medicines. For example, the phase two SPARTAN study evaluates early use of Vilspara as a foundational treatment with anti inflammatory properties. Data from the study has shown a nearly 70% reduction in proteinuria and approximately 50% reduction in urinary inflammatory biomarker soluble CD163 over twenty four weeks and newly diagnosed patients of IgA nephropathy. Speaker 300:08:57We expect additional data from this ongoing study later this year. I'm also excited to share that preparations are underway to expand the START Spartan study to include post kidney transplant patients with recurrent IgA nephropathy. We also plan to initiate a new open label study of sparsentan to generate additional data with its use in post kidney transplant patients with recurrent IgA nephropathy or FSGS. These patients are already on chronic immunosuppressive therapy to prevent organ rejection and remain at high risk of disease progression. There is clearly a significant need for a safe and effective non immunosuppressive treatment option directly addressing the injury in the kidney and we're looking forward to generating more data in this area of high unmet need. Speaker 300:09:51Turning to FSGS, we continue to believe that FilSpiri if approved could become a new treatment standard in this highly progressive disease. It is important to note that FSGS is heterogeneous. And one of the distinct advantages we have seen in our development program is that FILSpiri has consistent efficacy data across disease subtypes, including in patients with genetic FSGS who are historically not responsive to treatment. This applicability is particularly important given the diverse patient population affected by FSGS and could uniquely position FILSpari for broad use if approved. Importantly, our robust clinical data in FSGS is aligned with the findings from the Parasol group and has demonstrated a clear correlation between proteinuria reduction and decreased risk of kidney failure. Speaker 300:10:51As we highlighted last week, we are very pleased with the progress on the regulatory front. Our recent interaction with the FDA provided clarity on our submission and we are confident in the strength of our clinical data and believe it provides an opportunity for Vilspari to potentially become the first approved therapy for patients with FSGS. As Eric mentioned, we plan to submit our sNDA around the end of the first quarter of twenty twenty five. Our medical teams are also preparing our physician education initiatives with an emphasis on the biologic plausibility of proteinuria as a causal marker of the disease and its impact on heart outcomes such as kidney failure. This will enable physicians to further understand the important role of proteinuria in FSGS. Speaker 300:11:41Turning briefly to our pegtovatinase program, as Eric mentioned earlier, we continue to believe in the potential for it to become the first and only disease modifying therapy for patients with HCU. We are pleased with the progress on the optimization efforts for manufacturing scale up and expect to restart enrollment in the pivotal HARMONY study next year. With that, I will now turn the call over to Peter for the commercial update. Peter? Speaker 400:12:09Thank you, Jua. I'm pleased to share our exceptional commercial performance for FilSpiri during the fourth quarter, which was our strongest period since launch. As expected, the conversion to full approval in The U. S. With an expanded FilSpiri label have accelerated our growth. Speaker 500:12:28In the Speaker 400:12:28fourth quarter, we received six ninety three new patient start forms representing a 37% increase from the prior quarter. Clear evidence of Sales Power is growing adoption in the iGAN community. This growth has been driven by both new prescribers and increased depth among repeat prescribers. On the patient access front, we continue to have excellent coverage and I'm particularly impressed with the advancements we have seen in payer formularies. This is best exemplified by updates of authorization criteria reflecting the broader filtbari IgA nephropathy label, which will further ease access for patients with lower proteinuria levels. Speaker 400:13:15This will also be beneficial as we see more therapies come to market, which we expect will be mostly indicated for patients at high risk of disease progression or protonuria levels of one point five gram per gram or above if under accelerated approval. In addition to the strong demand and access, we continue to see improvement in our fulfillment process as well as high compliance and persistent rates. All key fundamental drivers of a successful launch. These elements resulted in achieving approximately $50,000,000 in net product sales of Hills Parry for the fourth quarter, nearly 40% growth over the previous quarter. To start 2025, we have been pleased with the continued strength in demand and we are confident in Fiospiri's future uptake as we look ahead. Speaker 400:14:10For the foreseeable future, we expect Sholpi will be the only foundational kidney targeted non immunosuppressive and long term treatment option fully approved for IgA nephropathy. Furthermore, it is the only medicine that has demonstrated superiority versus an active control maximally dosed historical standard of care and has the flexibility to be combined with other modalities. This means that TILSPIRE will be uniquely positioned as the only medicine of its kind indicated for all adult patients with IgA nephropathy at risk of disease progression. As the IgA nephropathy landscape continues to evolve and more therapies may get accelerated approval, we expect many of them to be complementary to Filspiri and for them to have an initial label that will be limited to patients at high risk of progression, which has been defined as generally a proteinuria level of one point five gram per gram and above. While we are continuing to have success with Filspari in this high risk segment, our estimate suggests this group of patients above one point five gram per gram is approximately thirty percent of the addressable patients with IgA nephropathy and is likely to diminish over time as more approved therapies may become available. Speaker 400:15:39We believe about seventy percent of the addressable patient with IgA has proteinuria levels between zero point three and one point five g per gram. Notably, this segment is expected to grow with earlier diagnosis, increased biopsies and lower treatment thresholds target set by Kadigo. Consistent with our growth rider, the median starting claternuria level for patients initiating filsparity is now below 1.5 gram per gram, which is a signal that we are making good headway in this population in the first few months following our full approval, and that we have a good opportunity ahead of us. The updated draft PDU guidelines for IgA nephropathy are also expected to continue to be a large driver of change in physician behavior. This guidance encourages earlier diagnosis and treatment with more ambitious treatment targets of zero point five gs per gram or preferably complete remission. Speaker 400:16:43As you heard from Zula, this will ultimately result in patients getting access to medicines earlier with the goal of achieving complete remission. The updated draft CDU guidelines also highlight Filspiri as the only kidney targeted therapy that has shown superiority over an active control and maximally dosed RAAS inhibitor positioning Sulfpiri as the only treatment option to replace the traditional role ACE and ARBs have historically played in IgA nephropathy. We expect this to continue to drive adoption among physicians and payers as the guidelines are finalized. Finally, the potential modification of the liver monitoring requirements if approved this summer could further ease the process of adoption and enhance the patient experience. Now, let me briefly touch on the opportunity for filsparity in FSTS if approved. Speaker 400:17:45As Dula outlined earlier, FSDS is the most progressive glomerular disease and is often manifested with extremely elevated proteinuria levels. The high and urgent unmet needs of approved treatment for FSDS is well established across the nephrology community. Depending on label language and indication, we estimate up to thirty thousand patients in The US with FSDS could be addressable for FOSFARI if approved. Based on our assessments, we anticipate that over eighty percent of our target nephrologists are treating patients with IgA nephropathy and FSDS. With this high overlap of potential prescribers, the urgent need for medicines to lower proteinuria and with Philips Pare's strong established position in IGA nephropathy, we are confident that we will see a strong uptake in FSTS if approved. Speaker 400:18:44I'll now turn the call over to Chris for the financial update. Chris? Speaker 600:18:49Thank you, Peter, and good afternoon, everyone. In the fourth quarter and entering the new year, our operations have continued to strengthen. As you heard from Peter, we've seen a meaningful inflection in net product sales of Hillspiri following full approval and the outlook for the launch remains strong. We also continue to be measured in the investments we're making to drive our growth. I'll start with revenue, where we generated net product sales of $73,500,000 in the fourth quarter, representing significant sequential and year over year growth. Speaker 600:19:17For the full year, net product sales were $226,700,000 a nearly 80% increase compared to 2023. VOSPARI continues to be the key growth driver, generating $49,600,000 in net product sales during the fourth quarter and $132,200,000 for the full year 2024, which outperformed benchmarks for the first full year of launch. Thiola and Thiola EC also contributed $23,900,000 in net product sales for the fourth quarter and $94,500,000 for the full year 2024. The slight decrease in Thiola net product sales in the fourth quarter is a result of generic dynamics. Given there were several generics approved in 2024, for this smaller segment of our product sales, we do anticipate further headwinds throughout this year. Speaker 600:20:02During the quarter, we also recognized $1,200,000 of license and collaboration revenue, which results in total revenue of $74,800,000 reported for the fourth quarter and $233,200,000 for the full year 2024. Turning to operating expenses. Our research and development expenses for the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four were $62,100,000 compared to $59,700,000 from the same period in 2023. On a non GAAP adjusted basis, R and D expenses were $58,600,000 compared to $55,300,000 for the same period in 2023. Selling, general and administrative expenses for the fourth quarter were $69,500,000 compared to $63,600,000 for the same period in 2023. Speaker 600:20:43On a non GAAP adjusted basis, SG and A expenses were $51,600,000 for the fourth quarter compared to $49,700,000 in the same period in 2023. Speaker 200:20:53Overall, we reduced our R Speaker 600:20:54and D and SG and A expenses meaningfully in 2024. This was driven by the restructuring enacted at the end of twenty twenty three as well as reduced clinical expense as the Filspiri Phase three studies advanced towards completion. This was partially offset by additional investment to support the commercial launch of Filspiri and IgA nephropathy as well as peggedivatinase initiating its Phase three program and some early work to support a potential FSGS indication. Total other income net for the February was $400,000 compared to $5,700,000 in the same period in 2023. The difference is largely attributable to lower interest income during the period. Speaker 600:21:31Net loss, including discontinued operations for the fourth quarter twenty twenty four, was $60,300,000 or $0.73 per basic share compared to $90,200,000 or $1.18 per basic share for the same period in 2023. Net loss including discontinued operations for the full year 2024 was $321,500,000 or $4.08 per basic share compared to $111,400,000 or $1.5 per basic share for the same period in 2023. The full year 2023 includes the $265,000,000 gain on sale that was recorded following the sale of our BioLabs business. On a non GAAP adjusted basis, net loss including from discontinued operations for the fourth quarter twenty twenty four was $39,000,000 or $0.47 per basic share compared to $71,800,000 or $0.94 per basic share for the same period in 2023. And net loss for the full year in 2024 was $241,000,000 or $3.05 per basic share compared to $20,600,000 or $0.28 per basic share for the same period in 2023. Speaker 600:22:36As of 12/31/2024, we had cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities totaling $370,700,000 This includes net proceeds of approximately $134,700,000 from our successful financing completed in November. As we look ahead, we expect our business to strengthen further. From a revenue perspective, we expect a moderate increase in gross to net discounts compared to 2024, but we believe net product sales of TILspari and IgA nephropathy will grow significantly in 2025 and continue to outpace benchmark launches. We will also remain disciplined in our investments as we continue to support the successful launch in IgA nephropathy, prepare for a potential launch in FSGS and further optimize our CMC efforts to restart enrollment in our pivotal pectabatinase program. Additionally, we anticipate incoming milestone payments from CSLV4 upon conversion of FilSparri to full approval in Europe and achieving market access milestones later this year. Speaker 600:23:29With this plan, we project that our operating cash use will continue to decline over time and that our balance sheet will be able to support these investments aligned with the key priorities to advance our growth. I'll now turn it over to Eric for his closing comments. Eric? Speaker 200:23:43Thank you, Chris. In closing, 2024 was a year of great execution and progress by all of our team members and partners. The bar is high, but we are positioned for another great year in 2025. Our team is starting the year focused on the three key priorities I outlined at the outset of our call. We believe these will deliver value for patients and all of our stakeholders in the near and long term. Speaker 200:24:08And we will look forward to keeping you informed as we reach key milestones throughout the year. Now, let me turn the call over to Victoria for Q and A. Victoria? Speaker 100:24:18Thank you, Eric. Chloe, we can now open the line up for the Q and A. Operator00:24:23Thank We will now take the first question from Malcolm Rama from JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 600:24:57Hi. This is Malcolm Kino on for Anupam Rama. With the expanded VILSPARRI label, what are you seeing in terms of patient uptake? Speaker 200:25:09Thanks, Malcolm, for the question. I will turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:25:17Yeah, I think the most important aspect is what I called out in the prepared remarks is that we saw a meaningful increase in new patient start forms with thirty seven percent. But we also see that we have more use now in patient with lower proteinuria levels and I think that makes sense given that our accelerated approval was really focused on patient at risk of rapid progression, generally a proteinuria level of 1.5 grams per grams or higher. And in the full approval, you have no longer like a proteinuria threshold. And we start to see that being reflected also in the patients that are being prescribed TILsvari. Speaker 200:25:52Yes. Thank you, Peter. Malcolm, the only other thing that I would add is that we've seen a continued increase in the number of new prescribers, particularly those that were waiting for full approval on that broader label. And so I think as Peter has discussed this in prior calls, it gives us great confidence that with that clinical experience, we're going to continue to see uptake as they find new patients. Speaker 700:26:16Great. Thank you. Operator00:26:20Our next question comes from the line of Vamil Divan from Guggenheim. Your line is open. Speaker 500:26:27Great. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the progress. So just wondering, you touched on this a little bit in the prepared remarks, but just obviously you might get a new competitor entering the, IGAN space from Novartis. I'm just curious, maybe you can provide a little more just thoughts on how that might impact, Phil Spari's uptake, how you sort of see the competitive dynamics evolving here over the next several quarters, especially if the liver safety monitoring, if there's a difference between that label and your label? Thank you. Speaker 200:26:59Pammel, thanks for the question. We remain very confident in the profile and the outlook for growth of VILSPARRI. And I'll hand it over to Peter to provide a little bit more comments on our assessment. Speaker 400:27:13Yes. Thanks for that question. I believe you mentioned Novartis as a potential new competitor. Well, there are actually two. Falta was launched last year in the fall and Q4 was the first quarter that we have Falta entered the marketplace as well. Speaker 400:27:28Despite that we saw that to be our strongest quarter till date. So we haven't seen much competition there, but it also makes sense because it's a different mode of action and it's a different treatment category. I think where you may be alluding to is the potential approval of Atterison Tung that would play more in the same treatment category. And couple of things I would want to say on that. Let me start with saying that it's good to have another company that is talking about the importance of Emothelan as a bad actor in disease progression in particular regarding kidney injury. Speaker 400:28:06When I look more specifically within the treatment category of foundational treatment, I'm confident in the strong and differentiated Filspire profile both in efficacy as well as in convenience. The reason why is Filspire is simultaneously blocking angiotensin as well as endothelin And that consistent inhibition resulted in the impressive 50% reduction in proteinuria that we saw after nine months that largely sustained over the two year period in PROTECT resulting in an improvement of kidney preservation year over year. We can talk about that full benefit of filsparity and how it translates into long term benefits. The new entrants will not be able to do that. They will be segmented to like the nine month proteinuria label as well as what I mentioned before, likely an initial label will be focused on the more rapidly progressive patient with proteinuria of one point five grams or higher. Speaker 400:29:09So I think we have a very strong profile. I would also say Filstari offers flexibility in dosing with the two hundred and the four hundred milligram that I don't think, ultrasound pump will be providing. So all in all, we I feel very strongly where we are positioned and, yes, more to come on this one once they may be approved for IVR therapy. Speaker 200:29:31Yes. Thank you, Peter. And Vamil, just to close out on the last part of your question with regard to REMS, I think we need to see what their label and when approved, what that looks like. But regardless, for all of the reasons that Peter said, we believe that we have a very competitive profile and we'll be prepared for any scenario. Speaker 500:29:51Okay. Yes. Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 200:29:54Thanks, Pammel. Operator00:29:55Our next question comes from the line of Lara Chico from Wedbush Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 600:30:02Hey guys, thanks very much for taking the question. This is Dylan on for Lara Chico. So realizing the FSGS launch will change the trajectory of the overall postpart revenue, when might you be in a position to provide guidance for the iGand setting? Speaker 200:30:19Yes, Dylan, thanks for the question. So we've been very pleased with the uptake, particularly since full approval in Q4. With that said, it's really just one quarter, and we're pleased to see how the first quarter is starting. But we do want to make sure that we have a bit more data points to be able to estimate that. So it's something that we consistently are looking at and we'll provide further updates along the way. Speaker 200:30:45But at this point, we're not in a position to provide guidance, but certainly are looking at that. Speaker 400:30:52Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:30:58Our next question comes from the line of Mauri Rykov from Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 800:31:05Hi, this is Fazin on for Mauri. Speaker 900:31:07I wanted to ask on Speaker 800:31:08the BD side, like you have noted continued BD to diversify the pipeline. So what should we expect this year? Like will you be looking to potentially in licensed assets in the renal space or will you be more focused on the FSGS launch? Speaker 200:31:23Yes. Thank you, Parson. And I would say that our teams certainly are looking. It's an exciting time. I've talked about this area really as a renaissance within the rare renal space. Speaker 200:31:35And we believe that with the capabilities, the experience and the infrastructure that we certainly could add value to other potential medicines that are in development. So something we're looking at, always hard to be able to provide specifics on timing, but certainly it's aligned with our strategy. With that said, our number one priority is to make sure that we are able to bring FilSpari to patients with FSGS. And so our preparation for the launch will remain our top priority while in parallel looking at opportunities to diversify and bring potential therapies to patients that don't have any. Speaker 400:32:14Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:32:15Thanks, Marcelin. Operator00:32:17Our next question comes from the line of Tyler Van Buren from TD. Cowen. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:32:23Hi. This is Greg on for Tyler. Thanks for taking my question. So assuming the Sillspari REMS modification will be approved at or around the PDUFA date, what steps remain towards the ultimate goal for full removal of the REMS? And is there precedence for this happening? Speaker 200:32:41Sure. Thanks for the question, Greg. And I'll turn that one over to Bill. Speaker 1100:32:48Thanks. Yeah. The first step, as you noted, we'll learn our outcome this summer, the August, with our major REMS modification request where we're looking to change from monthly to quarterly monitoring in the first year. The agency had specified when we discussed this in the past, and from a post marketing perspective, they wanted to see a certain amount of exposure, about 3,000 patients over two years, in order to have enough data to entertain the discussion around full removal of the REMS. We're not at that point, but we're well on our way and look forward to that in the future. Speaker 1100:33:33But as I said, the first step is changing the frequency, from monthly to quarterly upon initiation. Speaker 1000:33:43Great. Thanks again and congrats on another successful quarter. Speaker 700:33:47Thank you. Thank you, Craig. Operator00:33:51Our next question comes from the line of Joseph Schwartz from Leerink Partners. Your line is open. Speaker 700:33:58Thanks so much. Based on reported sales and the current price, it looks like there might be around 2,000 patients on FilSpiri at the end of the year. And I think the company has received over 3,600 PSF since the beginning of the launch. So I was wondering if you can provide us with any additional context on the conversion of PSFs to patients on therapy as well as the discontinuation rate. Can you help us envision what the difference between these figures is accounted by? Speaker 200:34:41Joe, thanks for the questions and I'll turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:34:49Thank you, Joe, for that question. It's a good question. I think overall, I would say that we have very strong fulfillment right now. If you look at our growth trajectory in patient start forms equals quite nicely what we see in revenue as well. And I think that speaks to the improvements we have made in our fulfillment. Speaker 400:35:07Last year, about a year ago or a year and a half ago, we also committed like early on in the launch, there was a pocket of patients that required a little more hand holding in the REMS certification process. In particular, as in the first sixty days, we weren't able to promote filsparity and basically only had the label or the package inserts. Now that we have overcome that and especially now is the full approval where you have the full data packets both from an efficacy as well as safety packets to have that conversation with patients and make them more comfortable about the treatment option for Filspiri. We have seen really strong improvements in our fulfillment process. Having said that you also have to realize you never get to 100% conversion of all patients start forms. Speaker 400:35:58I mean, even in retail and we have done some research on that even in retail nephrology products, you have about 85% to 90% of the patients that are picking up their medicine, the rest never pick up their medicine. So there is a certain leakage points. I think we have identified where those leakage points are and were, and we have made good progress on that. Well, so I will expect that we you will see continuation of stronger transition of patients platforms to paid performance. Speaker 200:36:29Yes. Thanks, Peter for that. And Joe, the only thing I would add just as another data point for your question around discontinuation rates, we continue to see very high compliance and persistence rates. So this is not a medicine where you see a disproportionate number of patients that discontinue once they start. So really the focus as Peter talked about is having the teams get the patient from patient start form on the therapy. Speaker 200:36:54We've seen really good progress as Peter talked about. Once the patient's on, there's such a consistent positive experience, including as we saw our label expand. We've been very pleased with that part of the launch. Speaker 400:37:12Thanks for the color. Speaker 200:37:14Thank you. Operator00:37:18Our next question comes from the line of Lisa Baco from Evercore. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:37:25Hi there. Thanks for taking my question and congratulations on all the progress. I have a couple of questions actually. First of all, Speaker 100:37:32can you just give us Speaker 1200:37:33a sense of gross to net and how you're thinking about it for this year? Speaker 200:37:38Sure. Chris, why don't you take that one? Speaker 600:37:41Sure. So Lisa, as you might remember, we had previously guided for last year for FilSpari to have growth in SB in the mid to high teens with the highest part of that occurring in the first quarter and then, evening out through the balance of the year. This year, we're expecting it to be a bit higher. And so I think the best way of thinking about that is probably high teens to low 20s. And it's going to be a similar phenomenon where we expect the greatest, the greatest impact early in the year and for it to be a little bit more even through the balance of the year. Speaker 600:38:10So hopefully that helps. Speaker 1200:38:12Okay, great. And how is it going in the beginning of the year with, kind of having to do you have to are the patients required to renew any prior authorizations or anything like that? Should we expect any bumpiness in the first quarter for that reason? Speaker 200:38:28Yeah. Great question. Peter, why don't you take that one? Speaker 400:38:33Yeah. We haven't really seen that to be an issue. I mean, the you're right, you have the renewals of payer plans in particular in the beginning of the year, but we haven't really seen an impact on that so far. I would say what I mentioned in the prepared remarks, I'm in particular very pleased with like how payers are already adopting the broader label for Filspiri, some of them completely removing proteinuria levels, step edits. I think we make really good progress, but to your specific question on renewal criteria, we haven't really seen an impact there. Speaker 300:39:12Okay, great. Speaker 1200:39:13And then finally, I wanted to ask about, sort of more about the future and we can even go beyond the initial rollout of some of the new forthcoming April and April BAF compounds. But when they do get a full label and we're kind of in that era, how are you thinking about the potential use of two branded medicines? Is that something that you think is going to be widely accepted? Because ideally, you'd want to be on combination of so far or some of these newer mechanisms? Or do you think you'll have to step through one to the other? Speaker 1200:39:49Or will there be some other criteria? Will you have to pick and choose between these? I'm just curious how you're thinking about it and if you've gotten any feedback on that point from payers specifically. I know physicians want to use all the best drugs, so that's less of a concern. I'm kind of really focused more on the payers. Speaker 200:40:05Yes. It's a really good question, Lisa. And this is one that we've been very consistent over the years that we've been predicting that this is going to be the future of IgAN treatment. And that's largely why we have generated data on combinations. We're eager to see the ability to be able to look at combinations in newer immunosuppressants. Speaker 200:40:34With that said, I'll turn that over to Peter to get comments on what we're seeing to date in the market as well as feedback from payers. Speaker 400:40:44Yes. Thanks, Lisa. It is a really good question. And I think there will definitely be excitement across the nephrology community to combine different treatment modalities in particular when it's a different treatment category. So if you read the Credigo guidelines that's something that they're advertising as well. Speaker 400:41:02So it's really about the payer to your point like what is the payer accepting with regards to combination. In that regard, I am in particular very confident with our formularies and payer inclusions already. Also given that we really have the gold standards of, how payer evaluate medicine. Payers in generally want to see like direct head to head maximally dose comparison studies and that's exactly what we have. On top of that, Filspari is priced for broad access. Speaker 400:41:36I was talking about the broad patient population that Filspari is applicable to, we have priced accordingly. So it's up to the new entrants, how they price that and what evidence they will bring to the table, to see how they may be combined with Solspari. But I'm very pleased and very confident with our payer inclusion criteria so far and to every point we have been planning for this. Speaker 100:42:02Thank you. Speaker 200:42:04Thank you. Operator00:42:06Our next question comes from the line of Yigal Nokomotis from Citigroup. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:42:14Hi, thank you. Just a couple of things. So on the REMS, if you do get the shift to the quarterly, is it the expectation that that would flow to the label on FSGS or that's a different conversation? Or if you could answer that please? Speaker 200:42:32Yes. So I can answer that. So we would assume that FSGS will have the same labeling and same REMS if and when approved. So whatever happens at the time of approval would carry through. Speaker 1300:42:45Okay. And then assuming it does go to quarterly, at that point, the next step on the pathway would be to nothing or could it be like annually? How do you foresee that going forward? Speaker 200:42:59Yes. Our plan has always been two step process, one to modify and second to remove. So assuming we are able get that to quarterly, the next step would be removal of the REMS. Speaker 1300:43:11Okay. And then, may have answered this one in the past, but on pricing given the dosing increase with FSGS, is it fair to assume it's simply going to flow to be twice the price? Or is there going to be some economies of scale there that's incorporated in the pricing discussion on FSGS? Thanks. Speaker 200:43:31Yes. So I mean, first of all, our pricing strategy is really to ensure broad access because like IgA nephropathy, we are assuming that the broad community of FSGS patients could benefit from filspari if approved. So, it's certainly something we'll look at. It's It's premature for us to talk in specifics, but I will have Peter talk a little bit about what the dynamics are that are different in FSGS including dosing. Speaker 400:44:04Sorry about that. I had to unmute myself. I think generally I mean the value proposition is probably different in FSDS as well because it's a different patient population. And as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, this is the most progressive glomerular disease, patients with the highest unmet need. So the value proposition is higher here as well, but to the point we have doubled the dose and with linear pricing that may potentially end up to double the price as well. Speaker 400:44:33We're really focusing on what the value proposition is. This is something we don't start from scratch. I mean, we were initially planning for FSGS as our first indication, so a lot of the work has been done already. But now we are refreshing it and rebuilding a value proposition for potential FTSE as launch. Got you. Speaker 400:44:52Thank you very much. Thanks Operator00:45:04if you ever have another question, please rejoin the queue. Our next question comes from the line of Prahar Agrawal from Cantor. Your line is open. Speaker 900:45:16Hi, thank you so much for taking my questions. So Speaker 400:45:20there are a lot Speaker 900:45:21of competent readouts in the I GAN space coming over the next one to two years. Can you give your perspective on how long will the accelerated approval path in I GAN will remain open since two drugs have full approval now? And what will the competitors need to show to get extended approval? Thank you. Speaker 200:45:38Yeah, it's a really good question. Probably one that you might not be satisfied with our answer because it's very difficult for us to predict. With that said, Bill, I'll turn it over to you for any potential thoughts. Speaker 1100:45:51Yeah. I appreciate the lead in, Eric, because it's us speaking for the FDA, which isn't where we can speak with authority. But at some point, the agency will make the judgment that the unmet need in IgA nephropathy and for that patient population has been met sufficiently to the point where accelerated approval is no longer a viable pathway. I do know that Doctor. Aliza Thompson has said at the podium publicly, this is not a pathway that will stay open indefinitely for IgA nephropathy. Speaker 1100:46:31So, at some point, they are going to make that distinction. We have three drugs approved that has certainly increased in the armamentarium that physicians have to treat this disease. I think certainly, you've got some of the BAFF April B cell initiatives that are on an accelerated approval pathway. But I don't expect that too many of those will be able to get there. And like you, we're watching to see when that change occurs. Speaker 900:47:07Thank Speaker 200:47:10you. Operator00:47:15Our next question comes from the line of Mohit Bansal from Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Speaker 1400:47:21Hi. This is Fadi Armand on for Mohit. Thanks for taking our question. So on the point about the expanding prescriber base after the full approval in IgAN, can you give some sense of the number of IgAN patients on average that these new prescribers treat? I know this is a highly fragmented market, so I imagine you've targeted the high prescribers earlier in the launch. Speaker 1400:47:48So you're trying to understand if there's potentially, a lot of depth to the new prescribers that are coming on now. Thanks. Speaker 200:47:58Sure. Thank you. I'll turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:48:02Yes. As we have mentioned in the past, we target about 6,000 nephrologists out of, I would say, a U. S. Universe of about 10,000. That 6,000 nephrologists approximately treat eighty five percent of the IgA nephropathy patients in our estimations. Speaker 400:48:19To your other point, so you have to go quite broad to cover and get access to all the patients. I would say in general, many of those nephrology see five to ten IgA nephropathy patients in their practice, but it depends on you have like higher volume offices as well. And yes, we are targeting those offices more heavily. But overall, you have to catch the broad net across both academia as well as the community nephrologists. Speaker 200:48:48Yes. Thank you, Peter, for that. One thing that I would add is unlike many other rare diseases, you don't see the type of referral patterns and therefore you don't see as much concentration of patients being treated within a small number of centers. There's quite a breadth which I think really explains why Peter's team is going quite broad within the nephrology community, quite different from other rare diseases. And I think if we take a step back, what that signal should signal is that we have a substantial opportunity to continue to grow by reaching many more of these patients in the years to come. Speaker 100:49:28Got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:49:30Thank you. Operator00:49:33Our next question comes from the line of Greg Harrison from Scotiabank. Your line is open. Speaker 800:49:40Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Could you speak to the potential impact commercially from a REMS modification? As far as any patients who maybe can't comply with the liver monitoring currently and thus aren't receiving Telspari and may initiate treatment after, you Speaker 1500:50:05know, the REMS, you know, potentially becomes, less onerous. Speaker 200:50:12Great. Thanks for the question. And I'll turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:50:16Yeah. Thanks, Rick. It's a good question. I would say, I mean, rents have not been an obstacle for Filspiri performance relative to recent benchmarks. I think we outperformed those benchmarks even though they didn't have ramps and we have ramps. Speaker 400:50:35To your question, like what is the additional upside if you have an easening or a modification of the REMS, what would it do? I would say the main impact that I'm expecting is that physicians are broadening their perspective of what patients could be eligible for filsparity and what patients will be compliant to monthly monitoring as well. That's the only thing that I sometimes hear from physicians that they have quite a preconceived notion like what patients would be compliant with that monthly monitoring. If you go to three monthly from the very beginning that would broaden the patient selection for physicians and that's why I really see the opportunity. Speaker 700:51:18Great. That's helpful. Thank you. Speaker 600:51:20Thanks, Frank. Operator00:51:24Our next question comes from the line of Jason Zemansky from Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 1600:51:32Good afternoon. Congrats on the progress and thank you so much for taking our question. I was hoping you could provide some additional color regarding your pre launch activities in FSGS. I know Julia mentioned expanding awareness of proteinuria as a biomarker, but based on Parasol, there seemed to be pretty broad support, at least maybe from the academic providers. Curious if you see this as a bottleneck in the more broader community and I don't know any other potential headwinds or I guess opportunities to maybe smooth adoption out? Speaker 200:52:04Sure. Thanks for the question, Jason. I'll first hand it over to Jula to talk about what her team will be doing and then Peter, you can talk about what your team will be preparing for. Speaker 300:52:15Yeah, thanks for that question. I think it is really important to continue to reiterate not just with academicians but across the spectrum with private practitioners that proteinuria is in the biologic pathway for progression to kidney failure. And we know that that's how we treat our patients. But just to reiterate that eGFR is noisy and over the short term it can be challenging to show a treatment effect even if you might see a good relationship over the long term. And so it really is reinforcing that if you can reduce proteinuria, similar to what we saw in both duet and in duplex and consistent with Parasol, that you can reduce the rate of loss of kidney function and minimize rates of kidney failure. Speaker 300:52:59That's a key aspect of what we're educating around and what we need to continue to reinforce as well as education around our data. And I'll turn it over to Peter for continued discussion. Speaker 400:53:11Thank you, Juha. And thank you, Jia for that question. As I mentioned earlier, FSGS readers are largely the same prescriber base as FOSPARI. There's like an over 80% overlap in those positions that we are targeting today. So there is a high familiarity and brand awareness for FOLSpiri already among those positions and many already have the experience with FOLSpiri as well. Speaker 400:53:36I think most importantly is that we are building upon our established organization allowing for a rapid uptake in FSDS while also continuing our growth trajectory in IGA nephropathy. I talked to you about the physicians already. I think we have well covered there and the best pre marketing for FSDS is really getting experience with Sospari and IGA nephropathy. From a patient perspective, we recognize that there are different patient communities and so we are really focused on like what is the patient journey and what can we learn with regards to intervention points and that is the work that we are assessing right now. And then the third aspect is read payer and the health economic assessment that I was talking about earlier really building out the value story for FSDS. Speaker 400:54:23And I mentioned earlier a lot of this work is already has already been started as we were planning for FSDS as the initial indication originally. But I think in summary we will be well prepared in a time of approval for FSBS by the end of the year. Speaker 1600:54:42Got it. Appreciate the deep color guys. Thanks. Speaker 400:54:46Thank you, Chetan. Operator00:54:48Our next question comes from the line of Alex Thompson from Stifel. Your line is open. Speaker 1600:54:55Hey, great. Congrats on the update. I guess on shifting gears to peg to batonase, could you talk a little bit more on sort of the progress that you've made on restarting the Phase three and when we might learn more about the timelines there? Thanks. Speaker 200:55:10Certainly. Thank you. And I appreciate the question on peg to batonase. Bill, I'll hand that one over to you. Speaker 1100:55:15Certainly. As you're aware, we work with CDMO partners externally on the manufacturer of the recombinant enzyme. And the scale up challenges that we have observed are ones that our partners have seen before and have worked through before. And with that, the path has been pretty clear. We're pleased with the progress on the necessary process improvements that we're seeing in the manufacturing scale up to date. Speaker 1100:55:49And we expect to restart enrollment in Harmony in 2026. I don't have a specific point in the calendar to point to where we'll have more specificity that's really going to be data driven and how the experimental data comes from those efforts on scale up. Speaker 200:56:22Do we have any other questions? Operator00:56:25Our next question comes from the line of Ed Arcey from H. C. Wainwright. Your line is open. Speaker 1700:56:32Great. Thanks for taking my questions and congrats on another strong quarter of progress here. So trying to get three in here quickly. First, with regard to FSGS, obviously this pathway now has rather quickly presented itself based on the findings from Parasol. And so first question is, if it comes to pass that there is an ad comp, what kind of specific questions would you expect the panel to sort of challenge the findings from Parasol on given that that's the basis? Speaker 1700:57:16And then secondly, I know we've talked about this a little bit on the call, but I'm just wondering regarding pre commercial activities for FSGS. Obviously, this would be the first approved drug and you've talked about the eighty percent overlap in patients. So some strong structural components to the launch itself. But just wondering what specific activities would you be focused on to really ensure rapid uptake right from the start? And then lastly, given that overlap between the two indications, Wondering how much additional SG and A investment you would be considering around the end of the year if that's when the launch happens? Speaker 1700:58:04Thanks so much. Speaker 200:58:06Okay. Thanks so much for the questions, Ed. I'm going to take them in opposite order, and then I'll leave the adcom question for Jula. The SG and A will be incremental. We have the infrastructure and so a lot of the readiness is there. Speaker 200:58:22There will be some variable spend, but that's largely going to occur once we are and if we are approved. With regard to pre commercial activities, it's a lot about planning. There is we do not promote pre approval, so it's really about preparing and understanding the journey of the patient and the needs of the physicians as Peter outlined. But we've got a team in place, they're in the field, they've got a job and that is to identify and treat additional patients by Gannon. As Peter said, that's really going to help in establishing that trust, the relationships and the profile of FilSparri. Speaker 200:58:57So that really is largely the activities. And I think one thing we've mentioned in the past, but I think it really bears repeating on this question is nephrologists know that there is an urgency to treat patients with FSGS. It's very different than how they were trained on IgAN. There is a desperation for something to be approved in FSGS. So I think that that's a dynamic that is going to play out if we are approved. Speaker 200:59:26And with that, I'll turn that over the question about the AdCom questions to Julah. Speaker 300:59:32Thanks for the question, Ed. I think a big part of an AdCom is education and as well as helping the agency to understand the overall benefit risk of any potential new therapy. And so some of the key questions that will be asked is similar to what's already been done within Parasol is what is the clinical meaningfulness of the magnitude of protein reduction that was seen with sparsent and what does that translate into and realize that when you have an ADCOM, it's not just for the nephrology community and the FDA, it's also other stakeholders who have patients there. So, it gives the agency and us an opportunity to discuss all of the evidence and data and hear back from key stakeholders including patients. Speaker 1701:00:18Great. Thanks so much. Speaker 201:00:21Thanks, Ed. Operator01:00:23Thank you and gentlemen. This concludes the question and answer session of today's conference call. I'll hand the call back over to Victoria. Speaker 101:00:32Thank you, Chloe, and thank you everyone for joining our fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four financial results call. We look forward to seeing everyone at the upcoming spring conferences. Have a great rest of your day. Operator01:00:46This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallTravere Therapeutics Q4 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Travere Therapeutics Earnings HeadlinesGuggenheim Reiterates Buy Rating for Travere Therapeutics (NASDAQ:TVTX)April 15 at 1:59 AM | americanbankingnews.comTravere Therapeutics (NASDAQ:TVTX) Price Target Raised to $47.00April 13 at 2:33 AM | americanbankingnews.comWhat to do with your collapsing portfolio…There might be only one way to save your retirement in this volatile time. After watching investors lose $6 trillion in market cap in a matter of DAYS... And after seeing businesses bleeding dry as trade tensions spiral out of control... What the acclaimed “Market Wizard” Larry Benedict — who beat the market by 103% during the 2008 crash — is about to reveal could not only save your retirement from Trump's tariffs…April 16, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)Scotiabank Remains a Buy on Travere Therapeutics (TVTX)April 11, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comTravere Therapeutics (TVTX) Receives a Buy from Wells FargoApril 10, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comTravere Therapeutics (TVTX) Receives a Buy from GuggenheimApril 5, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Travere Therapeutics Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Travere Therapeutics? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Travere Therapeutics and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Travere TherapeuticsTravere Therapeutics (NASDAQ:TVTX), a biopharmaceutical company, identifies, develops, and delivers therapies to people living with rare kidney and metabolic diseases. Its products include FILSPARI (sparsentan), a once-daily, oral medication designed to target two critical pathways in the disease progression of IgA Nephropathy (endothelin 1 and angiotensin-II); and Thiola and Thiola EC (tiopronin tablets) for the treatment of cystinuria, a rare genetic cystine transport disorder that causes high cystine levels in the urine and the formation of recurring kidney stones. The company's clinical-stage programs consist of Sparsentan, a novel investigational product candidate, which has been granted Orphan Drug Designation for the treatment of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in the U.S. and Europe; and Pegtibatinase (TVT-058), a novel investigational human enzyme replacement candidate being evaluated for the treatment of classical homocystinuria. It has a cooperative research and development agreement with National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences and Alagille Syndrome Alliance for the identification of potential small molecule therapeutics for Alagille syndrome. The company was formerly known as Retrophin, Inc. and changed its name to Travere Therapeutics, Inc. in November 2020. Travere Therapeutics, Inc. was incorporated in 2008 and is headquartered in San Diego, California.View Travere 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 Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Analysts Boosted United Airlines Stock Ahead of EarningsLamb Weston Stock Rises, Earnings Provide Calm Amidst ChaosIntuitive Machines Gains After Earnings Beat, NASA Missions AheadCintas Delivers Earnings Beat, Signals More Growth AheadNike Stock Dips on Earnings: Analysts Weigh in on What’s NextAfter Massive Post Earnings Fall, Does Hope Remain for MongoDB?Semtech Rallies on Earnings Beat—Is There More Upside? 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There are 18 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to the Trevir Therapeutics Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Financial Results Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference call over to Victoria Prescod, Manager of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Victoria. Speaker 100:00:21Thank you, Chloe. Good afternoon, and welcome to Travir Therapeutics' first quarter and full year twenty twenty four financial results and corporate update call. Thank you all for joining. Today's call will be led by Doctor. Eric Dube, our President and Chief Executive Officer. Speaker 100:00:38Eric will be joined in the prepared remarks by Doctor. Jule Enrich, our Chief Medical Officer Peter Herma, our Chief Commercial Officer Klein, our Chief Financial Officer. Doctor. Bill Rhodes, Senior Vice President of Research and Development will join us for the Q and A. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that statements made during this call regarding matters that are not historical facts are forward looking statements within the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Speaker 100:01:12Forward looking statements are not guarantees of performance. They involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause actual results, performance and achievements to differ materially from those expressed or implied by this statements. Please see the forward looking statement disclaimer on the company's press release issued earlier today, as well as the Risk Factors section in our Forms 10 Q and 10 K filed with the SEC. In addition, any forward looking statements represent our views only as of the date such statements are made, 02/20/2025, and Trevir specifically disclaims any obligation to update such statements to reflect future information, events or circumstances. With that, let me now turn the call over to Eric. Speaker 200:02:02Thank you, Victoria, and good afternoon, everyone. We just completed a remarkable year, one marked by execution, innovation and a relentless commitment to patients with rare kidney and metabolic diseases. Our exceptional progress culminated culminated in the full FDA approval of PILSPARRI for IJ nephropathy in September, a major milestone for our company and the patients we serve. In the fourth quarter, net sales at PILSPARRI grew by nearly 40% compared to the third quarter and we saw a meaningful inflection in demand following full approval. This is a testament to our sound commercial execution alongside FilSpari's strong profile with robust long term efficacy including preservation of kidney function and two year safety data. Speaker 200:02:54It also speaks to the ability for physicians to now prescribe PILspari to more of their patients with IgAN with a broader label and supportive draft Codigo guidelines. I'm also excited about the progress we've been making in expanding TILsparis potential beyond IgAN. As we highlighted last week, we recently completed our Type C interactions with the FDA and plan to submit our sNDA for a potential FSGS indication around the end of this quarter. This submission supported by compelling data from our Duplex and DUET studies that we believe are further validated by the findings from the Paracel group could lead to the first ever FDA approved therapy for patients with FSGS by year end. We continue to believe that FSGS represents an even greater potential opportunity to help patients and we look forward to the submission and review process. Speaker 200:03:50In addition, we remain committed to generating further evidence to support VOSPARI's foundational positioning in IgAN and broad use, which Juhua will touch on shortly. Also in the pipeline, we continue to believe in the disease modifying potential for pegdebatinase and the hope it can bring to the HCU community. We are continuing to optimize our manufacturing scale up of our pegdebatinase program and I am pleased with our recent progress. Looking ahead into 2025, our strategic priorities are clear and focused. We will leverage our recent full approval and broader label to further solidify Vilspari's foundational positioning in IgAN as the only non immunosuppressive kidney targeted therapy that has demonstrated superiority over historical standard of care. Speaker 200:04:41With the unique profile and unsurpassed clinical data, we believe that VILspari will be utilized as a new foundational therapy in IgAN now and into the future, replacing the traditional role that RAS inhibitors have played. We will also focus on submitting a high quality SNDA for FSGS, working with the FDA throughout the review process and preparing for a potential launch later this year. And lastly, with peggedivatinase, we aim to maintain the momentum in our CMC efforts to enable reopening enrollment in our Phase III HARMONY study and we are on track to achieve that next year. Following our successful financing near the end of the year, we are well capitalized to execute on these key strategic priorities. Let me now turn the call over to Jula for the clinical update. Speaker 200:05:33Jula? Speaker 300:05:35Thank you, Eric. I'd like to start with hearing some feedback from physicians following FilSpari's full approval in IJ nephropathy. Nephrologists are expressing a greater urgency to get their patients with IgAN into complete proteinuria remission or less than zero point three grams per gram. This is driven by the complete remission data from both PROTECT and SPARTAN studies that demonstrate that SILSpari, particularly if used earlier, can get more patients into complete remission, as well as the updated draft KDIGO guidelines that recommend earlier diagnosis and treatment to lower proteinuria targets. These data also show that patients reaching complete remission can achieve kidney function loss close to that of normal aging. Speaker 300:06:31Additionally, more physicians see PSALsparity as a foundational therapy. When we speak to nephrologists, foundational treatment is defined as non immunosuppressive, kidney targeted and nephrotective that can be used chronically in nearly all patients with IgAN. The foundational role of FILSpari is supported by the fact that it targets directly two pathways causing kidney injury, is non immunosuppressive and can be used safely long term, and has efficacy based on superior kidney function preservation from a head to head comparison over a historical standard of care medicine erbasartan. Also with the removal of the one point five gs per gram threshold from the label following full approval in IgA nephropathy, we're hearing that nephrologists are seeking use in a broader eligible patient population. The new evidence presented at ASN Kidney Week demonstrating FilSpiri's efficacy in patients with lower proteinuria levels and the long term safety profile continue to reinforce physician confidence in VILSPARI as a long term treatment option for this larger segment of IgAN patients. Speaker 300:07:56Our medical teams are continuing with education on the data that supports VILSPARI's position as a foundational treatment for IgA nephropathy. This education focuses on the benefits of treating IgAN patients earlier and to lower proteinuria targets in line with the updated draft KDIGO guidelines. And it also highlights evidence that supports earlier and broader use of FilSpara as well as clinical studies on FilSpara used in combination with other available medicines. For example, the phase two SPARTAN study evaluates early use of Vilspara as a foundational treatment with anti inflammatory properties. Data from the study has shown a nearly 70% reduction in proteinuria and approximately 50% reduction in urinary inflammatory biomarker soluble CD163 over twenty four weeks and newly diagnosed patients of IgA nephropathy. Speaker 300:08:57We expect additional data from this ongoing study later this year. I'm also excited to share that preparations are underway to expand the START Spartan study to include post kidney transplant patients with recurrent IgA nephropathy. We also plan to initiate a new open label study of sparsentan to generate additional data with its use in post kidney transplant patients with recurrent IgA nephropathy or FSGS. These patients are already on chronic immunosuppressive therapy to prevent organ rejection and remain at high risk of disease progression. There is clearly a significant need for a safe and effective non immunosuppressive treatment option directly addressing the injury in the kidney and we're looking forward to generating more data in this area of high unmet need. Speaker 300:09:51Turning to FSGS, we continue to believe that FilSpiri if approved could become a new treatment standard in this highly progressive disease. It is important to note that FSGS is heterogeneous. And one of the distinct advantages we have seen in our development program is that FILSpiri has consistent efficacy data across disease subtypes, including in patients with genetic FSGS who are historically not responsive to treatment. This applicability is particularly important given the diverse patient population affected by FSGS and could uniquely position FILSpari for broad use if approved. Importantly, our robust clinical data in FSGS is aligned with the findings from the Parasol group and has demonstrated a clear correlation between proteinuria reduction and decreased risk of kidney failure. Speaker 300:10:51As we highlighted last week, we are very pleased with the progress on the regulatory front. Our recent interaction with the FDA provided clarity on our submission and we are confident in the strength of our clinical data and believe it provides an opportunity for Vilspari to potentially become the first approved therapy for patients with FSGS. As Eric mentioned, we plan to submit our sNDA around the end of the first quarter of twenty twenty five. Our medical teams are also preparing our physician education initiatives with an emphasis on the biologic plausibility of proteinuria as a causal marker of the disease and its impact on heart outcomes such as kidney failure. This will enable physicians to further understand the important role of proteinuria in FSGS. Speaker 300:11:41Turning briefly to our pegtovatinase program, as Eric mentioned earlier, we continue to believe in the potential for it to become the first and only disease modifying therapy for patients with HCU. We are pleased with the progress on the optimization efforts for manufacturing scale up and expect to restart enrollment in the pivotal HARMONY study next year. With that, I will now turn the call over to Peter for the commercial update. Peter? Speaker 400:12:09Thank you, Jua. I'm pleased to share our exceptional commercial performance for FilSpiri during the fourth quarter, which was our strongest period since launch. As expected, the conversion to full approval in The U. S. With an expanded FilSpiri label have accelerated our growth. Speaker 500:12:28In the Speaker 400:12:28fourth quarter, we received six ninety three new patient start forms representing a 37% increase from the prior quarter. Clear evidence of Sales Power is growing adoption in the iGAN community. This growth has been driven by both new prescribers and increased depth among repeat prescribers. On the patient access front, we continue to have excellent coverage and I'm particularly impressed with the advancements we have seen in payer formularies. This is best exemplified by updates of authorization criteria reflecting the broader filtbari IgA nephropathy label, which will further ease access for patients with lower proteinuria levels. Speaker 400:13:15This will also be beneficial as we see more therapies come to market, which we expect will be mostly indicated for patients at high risk of disease progression or protonuria levels of one point five gram per gram or above if under accelerated approval. In addition to the strong demand and access, we continue to see improvement in our fulfillment process as well as high compliance and persistent rates. All key fundamental drivers of a successful launch. These elements resulted in achieving approximately $50,000,000 in net product sales of Hills Parry for the fourth quarter, nearly 40% growth over the previous quarter. To start 2025, we have been pleased with the continued strength in demand and we are confident in Fiospiri's future uptake as we look ahead. Speaker 400:14:10For the foreseeable future, we expect Sholpi will be the only foundational kidney targeted non immunosuppressive and long term treatment option fully approved for IgA nephropathy. Furthermore, it is the only medicine that has demonstrated superiority versus an active control maximally dosed historical standard of care and has the flexibility to be combined with other modalities. This means that TILSPIRE will be uniquely positioned as the only medicine of its kind indicated for all adult patients with IgA nephropathy at risk of disease progression. As the IgA nephropathy landscape continues to evolve and more therapies may get accelerated approval, we expect many of them to be complementary to Filspiri and for them to have an initial label that will be limited to patients at high risk of progression, which has been defined as generally a proteinuria level of one point five gram per gram and above. While we are continuing to have success with Filspari in this high risk segment, our estimate suggests this group of patients above one point five gram per gram is approximately thirty percent of the addressable patients with IgA nephropathy and is likely to diminish over time as more approved therapies may become available. Speaker 400:15:39We believe about seventy percent of the addressable patient with IgA has proteinuria levels between zero point three and one point five g per gram. Notably, this segment is expected to grow with earlier diagnosis, increased biopsies and lower treatment thresholds target set by Kadigo. Consistent with our growth rider, the median starting claternuria level for patients initiating filsparity is now below 1.5 gram per gram, which is a signal that we are making good headway in this population in the first few months following our full approval, and that we have a good opportunity ahead of us. The updated draft PDU guidelines for IgA nephropathy are also expected to continue to be a large driver of change in physician behavior. This guidance encourages earlier diagnosis and treatment with more ambitious treatment targets of zero point five gs per gram or preferably complete remission. Speaker 400:16:43As you heard from Zula, this will ultimately result in patients getting access to medicines earlier with the goal of achieving complete remission. The updated draft CDU guidelines also highlight Filspiri as the only kidney targeted therapy that has shown superiority over an active control and maximally dosed RAAS inhibitor positioning Sulfpiri as the only treatment option to replace the traditional role ACE and ARBs have historically played in IgA nephropathy. We expect this to continue to drive adoption among physicians and payers as the guidelines are finalized. Finally, the potential modification of the liver monitoring requirements if approved this summer could further ease the process of adoption and enhance the patient experience. Now, let me briefly touch on the opportunity for filsparity in FSTS if approved. Speaker 400:17:45As Dula outlined earlier, FSDS is the most progressive glomerular disease and is often manifested with extremely elevated proteinuria levels. The high and urgent unmet needs of approved treatment for FSDS is well established across the nephrology community. Depending on label language and indication, we estimate up to thirty thousand patients in The US with FSDS could be addressable for FOSFARI if approved. Based on our assessments, we anticipate that over eighty percent of our target nephrologists are treating patients with IgA nephropathy and FSDS. With this high overlap of potential prescribers, the urgent need for medicines to lower proteinuria and with Philips Pare's strong established position in IGA nephropathy, we are confident that we will see a strong uptake in FSTS if approved. Speaker 400:18:44I'll now turn the call over to Chris for the financial update. Chris? Speaker 600:18:49Thank you, Peter, and good afternoon, everyone. In the fourth quarter and entering the new year, our operations have continued to strengthen. As you heard from Peter, we've seen a meaningful inflection in net product sales of Hillspiri following full approval and the outlook for the launch remains strong. We also continue to be measured in the investments we're making to drive our growth. I'll start with revenue, where we generated net product sales of $73,500,000 in the fourth quarter, representing significant sequential and year over year growth. Speaker 600:19:17For the full year, net product sales were $226,700,000 a nearly 80% increase compared to 2023. VOSPARI continues to be the key growth driver, generating $49,600,000 in net product sales during the fourth quarter and $132,200,000 for the full year 2024, which outperformed benchmarks for the first full year of launch. Thiola and Thiola EC also contributed $23,900,000 in net product sales for the fourth quarter and $94,500,000 for the full year 2024. The slight decrease in Thiola net product sales in the fourth quarter is a result of generic dynamics. Given there were several generics approved in 2024, for this smaller segment of our product sales, we do anticipate further headwinds throughout this year. Speaker 600:20:02During the quarter, we also recognized $1,200,000 of license and collaboration revenue, which results in total revenue of $74,800,000 reported for the fourth quarter and $233,200,000 for the full year 2024. Turning to operating expenses. Our research and development expenses for the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four were $62,100,000 compared to $59,700,000 from the same period in 2023. On a non GAAP adjusted basis, R and D expenses were $58,600,000 compared to $55,300,000 for the same period in 2023. Selling, general and administrative expenses for the fourth quarter were $69,500,000 compared to $63,600,000 for the same period in 2023. Speaker 600:20:43On a non GAAP adjusted basis, SG and A expenses were $51,600,000 for the fourth quarter compared to $49,700,000 in the same period in 2023. Speaker 200:20:53Overall, we reduced our R Speaker 600:20:54and D and SG and A expenses meaningfully in 2024. This was driven by the restructuring enacted at the end of twenty twenty three as well as reduced clinical expense as the Filspiri Phase three studies advanced towards completion. This was partially offset by additional investment to support the commercial launch of Filspiri and IgA nephropathy as well as peggedivatinase initiating its Phase three program and some early work to support a potential FSGS indication. Total other income net for the February was $400,000 compared to $5,700,000 in the same period in 2023. The difference is largely attributable to lower interest income during the period. Speaker 600:21:31Net loss, including discontinued operations for the fourth quarter twenty twenty four, was $60,300,000 or $0.73 per basic share compared to $90,200,000 or $1.18 per basic share for the same period in 2023. Net loss including discontinued operations for the full year 2024 was $321,500,000 or $4.08 per basic share compared to $111,400,000 or $1.5 per basic share for the same period in 2023. The full year 2023 includes the $265,000,000 gain on sale that was recorded following the sale of our BioLabs business. On a non GAAP adjusted basis, net loss including from discontinued operations for the fourth quarter twenty twenty four was $39,000,000 or $0.47 per basic share compared to $71,800,000 or $0.94 per basic share for the same period in 2023. And net loss for the full year in 2024 was $241,000,000 or $3.05 per basic share compared to $20,600,000 or $0.28 per basic share for the same period in 2023. Speaker 600:22:36As of 12/31/2024, we had cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities totaling $370,700,000 This includes net proceeds of approximately $134,700,000 from our successful financing completed in November. As we look ahead, we expect our business to strengthen further. From a revenue perspective, we expect a moderate increase in gross to net discounts compared to 2024, but we believe net product sales of TILspari and IgA nephropathy will grow significantly in 2025 and continue to outpace benchmark launches. We will also remain disciplined in our investments as we continue to support the successful launch in IgA nephropathy, prepare for a potential launch in FSGS and further optimize our CMC efforts to restart enrollment in our pivotal pectabatinase program. Additionally, we anticipate incoming milestone payments from CSLV4 upon conversion of FilSparri to full approval in Europe and achieving market access milestones later this year. Speaker 600:23:29With this plan, we project that our operating cash use will continue to decline over time and that our balance sheet will be able to support these investments aligned with the key priorities to advance our growth. I'll now turn it over to Eric for his closing comments. Eric? Speaker 200:23:43Thank you, Chris. In closing, 2024 was a year of great execution and progress by all of our team members and partners. The bar is high, but we are positioned for another great year in 2025. Our team is starting the year focused on the three key priorities I outlined at the outset of our call. We believe these will deliver value for patients and all of our stakeholders in the near and long term. Speaker 200:24:08And we will look forward to keeping you informed as we reach key milestones throughout the year. Now, let me turn the call over to Victoria for Q and A. Victoria? Speaker 100:24:18Thank you, Eric. Chloe, we can now open the line up for the Q and A. Operator00:24:23Thank We will now take the first question from Malcolm Rama from JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 600:24:57Hi. This is Malcolm Kino on for Anupam Rama. With the expanded VILSPARRI label, what are you seeing in terms of patient uptake? Speaker 200:25:09Thanks, Malcolm, for the question. I will turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:25:17Yeah, I think the most important aspect is what I called out in the prepared remarks is that we saw a meaningful increase in new patient start forms with thirty seven percent. But we also see that we have more use now in patient with lower proteinuria levels and I think that makes sense given that our accelerated approval was really focused on patient at risk of rapid progression, generally a proteinuria level of 1.5 grams per grams or higher. And in the full approval, you have no longer like a proteinuria threshold. And we start to see that being reflected also in the patients that are being prescribed TILsvari. Speaker 200:25:52Yes. Thank you, Peter. Malcolm, the only other thing that I would add is that we've seen a continued increase in the number of new prescribers, particularly those that were waiting for full approval on that broader label. And so I think as Peter has discussed this in prior calls, it gives us great confidence that with that clinical experience, we're going to continue to see uptake as they find new patients. Speaker 700:26:16Great. Thank you. Operator00:26:20Our next question comes from the line of Vamil Divan from Guggenheim. Your line is open. Speaker 500:26:27Great. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the progress. So just wondering, you touched on this a little bit in the prepared remarks, but just obviously you might get a new competitor entering the, IGAN space from Novartis. I'm just curious, maybe you can provide a little more just thoughts on how that might impact, Phil Spari's uptake, how you sort of see the competitive dynamics evolving here over the next several quarters, especially if the liver safety monitoring, if there's a difference between that label and your label? Thank you. Speaker 200:26:59Pammel, thanks for the question. We remain very confident in the profile and the outlook for growth of VILSPARRI. And I'll hand it over to Peter to provide a little bit more comments on our assessment. Speaker 400:27:13Yes. Thanks for that question. I believe you mentioned Novartis as a potential new competitor. Well, there are actually two. Falta was launched last year in the fall and Q4 was the first quarter that we have Falta entered the marketplace as well. Speaker 400:27:28Despite that we saw that to be our strongest quarter till date. So we haven't seen much competition there, but it also makes sense because it's a different mode of action and it's a different treatment category. I think where you may be alluding to is the potential approval of Atterison Tung that would play more in the same treatment category. And couple of things I would want to say on that. Let me start with saying that it's good to have another company that is talking about the importance of Emothelan as a bad actor in disease progression in particular regarding kidney injury. Speaker 400:28:06When I look more specifically within the treatment category of foundational treatment, I'm confident in the strong and differentiated Filspire profile both in efficacy as well as in convenience. The reason why is Filspire is simultaneously blocking angiotensin as well as endothelin And that consistent inhibition resulted in the impressive 50% reduction in proteinuria that we saw after nine months that largely sustained over the two year period in PROTECT resulting in an improvement of kidney preservation year over year. We can talk about that full benefit of filsparity and how it translates into long term benefits. The new entrants will not be able to do that. They will be segmented to like the nine month proteinuria label as well as what I mentioned before, likely an initial label will be focused on the more rapidly progressive patient with proteinuria of one point five grams or higher. Speaker 400:29:09So I think we have a very strong profile. I would also say Filstari offers flexibility in dosing with the two hundred and the four hundred milligram that I don't think, ultrasound pump will be providing. So all in all, we I feel very strongly where we are positioned and, yes, more to come on this one once they may be approved for IVR therapy. Speaker 200:29:31Yes. Thank you, Peter. And Vamil, just to close out on the last part of your question with regard to REMS, I think we need to see what their label and when approved, what that looks like. But regardless, for all of the reasons that Peter said, we believe that we have a very competitive profile and we'll be prepared for any scenario. Speaker 500:29:51Okay. Yes. Thanks for taking the question. Speaker 200:29:54Thanks, Pammel. Operator00:29:55Our next question comes from the line of Lara Chico from Wedbush Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 600:30:02Hey guys, thanks very much for taking the question. This is Dylan on for Lara Chico. So realizing the FSGS launch will change the trajectory of the overall postpart revenue, when might you be in a position to provide guidance for the iGand setting? Speaker 200:30:19Yes, Dylan, thanks for the question. So we've been very pleased with the uptake, particularly since full approval in Q4. With that said, it's really just one quarter, and we're pleased to see how the first quarter is starting. But we do want to make sure that we have a bit more data points to be able to estimate that. So it's something that we consistently are looking at and we'll provide further updates along the way. Speaker 200:30:45But at this point, we're not in a position to provide guidance, but certainly are looking at that. Speaker 400:30:52Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:30:58Our next question comes from the line of Mauri Rykov from Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 800:31:05Hi, this is Fazin on for Mauri. Speaker 900:31:07I wanted to ask on Speaker 800:31:08the BD side, like you have noted continued BD to diversify the pipeline. So what should we expect this year? Like will you be looking to potentially in licensed assets in the renal space or will you be more focused on the FSGS launch? Speaker 200:31:23Yes. Thank you, Parson. And I would say that our teams certainly are looking. It's an exciting time. I've talked about this area really as a renaissance within the rare renal space. Speaker 200:31:35And we believe that with the capabilities, the experience and the infrastructure that we certainly could add value to other potential medicines that are in development. So something we're looking at, always hard to be able to provide specifics on timing, but certainly it's aligned with our strategy. With that said, our number one priority is to make sure that we are able to bring FilSpari to patients with FSGS. And so our preparation for the launch will remain our top priority while in parallel looking at opportunities to diversify and bring potential therapies to patients that don't have any. Speaker 400:32:14Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:32:15Thanks, Marcelin. Operator00:32:17Our next question comes from the line of Tyler Van Buren from TD. Cowen. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:32:23Hi. This is Greg on for Tyler. Thanks for taking my question. So assuming the Sillspari REMS modification will be approved at or around the PDUFA date, what steps remain towards the ultimate goal for full removal of the REMS? And is there precedence for this happening? Speaker 200:32:41Sure. Thanks for the question, Greg. And I'll turn that one over to Bill. Speaker 1100:32:48Thanks. Yeah. The first step, as you noted, we'll learn our outcome this summer, the August, with our major REMS modification request where we're looking to change from monthly to quarterly monitoring in the first year. The agency had specified when we discussed this in the past, and from a post marketing perspective, they wanted to see a certain amount of exposure, about 3,000 patients over two years, in order to have enough data to entertain the discussion around full removal of the REMS. We're not at that point, but we're well on our way and look forward to that in the future. Speaker 1100:33:33But as I said, the first step is changing the frequency, from monthly to quarterly upon initiation. Speaker 1000:33:43Great. Thanks again and congrats on another successful quarter. Speaker 700:33:47Thank you. Thank you, Craig. Operator00:33:51Our next question comes from the line of Joseph Schwartz from Leerink Partners. Your line is open. Speaker 700:33:58Thanks so much. Based on reported sales and the current price, it looks like there might be around 2,000 patients on FilSpiri at the end of the year. And I think the company has received over 3,600 PSF since the beginning of the launch. So I was wondering if you can provide us with any additional context on the conversion of PSFs to patients on therapy as well as the discontinuation rate. Can you help us envision what the difference between these figures is accounted by? Speaker 200:34:41Joe, thanks for the questions and I'll turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:34:49Thank you, Joe, for that question. It's a good question. I think overall, I would say that we have very strong fulfillment right now. If you look at our growth trajectory in patient start forms equals quite nicely what we see in revenue as well. And I think that speaks to the improvements we have made in our fulfillment. Speaker 400:35:07Last year, about a year ago or a year and a half ago, we also committed like early on in the launch, there was a pocket of patients that required a little more hand holding in the REMS certification process. In particular, as in the first sixty days, we weren't able to promote filsparity and basically only had the label or the package inserts. Now that we have overcome that and especially now is the full approval where you have the full data packets both from an efficacy as well as safety packets to have that conversation with patients and make them more comfortable about the treatment option for Filspiri. We have seen really strong improvements in our fulfillment process. Having said that you also have to realize you never get to 100% conversion of all patients start forms. Speaker 400:35:58I mean, even in retail and we have done some research on that even in retail nephrology products, you have about 85% to 90% of the patients that are picking up their medicine, the rest never pick up their medicine. So there is a certain leakage points. I think we have identified where those leakage points are and were, and we have made good progress on that. Well, so I will expect that we you will see continuation of stronger transition of patients platforms to paid performance. Speaker 200:36:29Yes. Thanks, Peter for that. And Joe, the only thing I would add just as another data point for your question around discontinuation rates, we continue to see very high compliance and persistence rates. So this is not a medicine where you see a disproportionate number of patients that discontinue once they start. So really the focus as Peter talked about is having the teams get the patient from patient start form on the therapy. Speaker 200:36:54We've seen really good progress as Peter talked about. Once the patient's on, there's such a consistent positive experience, including as we saw our label expand. We've been very pleased with that part of the launch. Speaker 400:37:12Thanks for the color. Speaker 200:37:14Thank you. Operator00:37:18Our next question comes from the line of Lisa Baco from Evercore. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:37:25Hi there. Thanks for taking my question and congratulations on all the progress. I have a couple of questions actually. First of all, Speaker 100:37:32can you just give us Speaker 1200:37:33a sense of gross to net and how you're thinking about it for this year? Speaker 200:37:38Sure. Chris, why don't you take that one? Speaker 600:37:41Sure. So Lisa, as you might remember, we had previously guided for last year for FilSpari to have growth in SB in the mid to high teens with the highest part of that occurring in the first quarter and then, evening out through the balance of the year. This year, we're expecting it to be a bit higher. And so I think the best way of thinking about that is probably high teens to low 20s. And it's going to be a similar phenomenon where we expect the greatest, the greatest impact early in the year and for it to be a little bit more even through the balance of the year. Speaker 600:38:10So hopefully that helps. Speaker 1200:38:12Okay, great. And how is it going in the beginning of the year with, kind of having to do you have to are the patients required to renew any prior authorizations or anything like that? Should we expect any bumpiness in the first quarter for that reason? Speaker 200:38:28Yeah. Great question. Peter, why don't you take that one? Speaker 400:38:33Yeah. We haven't really seen that to be an issue. I mean, the you're right, you have the renewals of payer plans in particular in the beginning of the year, but we haven't really seen an impact on that so far. I would say what I mentioned in the prepared remarks, I'm in particular very pleased with like how payers are already adopting the broader label for Filspiri, some of them completely removing proteinuria levels, step edits. I think we make really good progress, but to your specific question on renewal criteria, we haven't really seen an impact there. Speaker 300:39:12Okay, great. Speaker 1200:39:13And then finally, I wanted to ask about, sort of more about the future and we can even go beyond the initial rollout of some of the new forthcoming April and April BAF compounds. But when they do get a full label and we're kind of in that era, how are you thinking about the potential use of two branded medicines? Is that something that you think is going to be widely accepted? Because ideally, you'd want to be on combination of so far or some of these newer mechanisms? Or do you think you'll have to step through one to the other? Speaker 1200:39:49Or will there be some other criteria? Will you have to pick and choose between these? I'm just curious how you're thinking about it and if you've gotten any feedback on that point from payers specifically. I know physicians want to use all the best drugs, so that's less of a concern. I'm kind of really focused more on the payers. Speaker 200:40:05Yes. It's a really good question, Lisa. And this is one that we've been very consistent over the years that we've been predicting that this is going to be the future of IgAN treatment. And that's largely why we have generated data on combinations. We're eager to see the ability to be able to look at combinations in newer immunosuppressants. Speaker 200:40:34With that said, I'll turn that over to Peter to get comments on what we're seeing to date in the market as well as feedback from payers. Speaker 400:40:44Yes. Thanks, Lisa. It is a really good question. And I think there will definitely be excitement across the nephrology community to combine different treatment modalities in particular when it's a different treatment category. So if you read the Credigo guidelines that's something that they're advertising as well. Speaker 400:41:02So it's really about the payer to your point like what is the payer accepting with regards to combination. In that regard, I am in particular very confident with our formularies and payer inclusions already. Also given that we really have the gold standards of, how payer evaluate medicine. Payers in generally want to see like direct head to head maximally dose comparison studies and that's exactly what we have. On top of that, Filspari is priced for broad access. Speaker 400:41:36I was talking about the broad patient population that Filspari is applicable to, we have priced accordingly. So it's up to the new entrants, how they price that and what evidence they will bring to the table, to see how they may be combined with Solspari. But I'm very pleased and very confident with our payer inclusion criteria so far and to every point we have been planning for this. Speaker 100:42:02Thank you. Speaker 200:42:04Thank you. Operator00:42:06Our next question comes from the line of Yigal Nokomotis from Citigroup. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:42:14Hi, thank you. Just a couple of things. So on the REMS, if you do get the shift to the quarterly, is it the expectation that that would flow to the label on FSGS or that's a different conversation? Or if you could answer that please? Speaker 200:42:32Yes. So I can answer that. So we would assume that FSGS will have the same labeling and same REMS if and when approved. So whatever happens at the time of approval would carry through. Speaker 1300:42:45Okay. And then assuming it does go to quarterly, at that point, the next step on the pathway would be to nothing or could it be like annually? How do you foresee that going forward? Speaker 200:42:59Yes. Our plan has always been two step process, one to modify and second to remove. So assuming we are able get that to quarterly, the next step would be removal of the REMS. Speaker 1300:43:11Okay. And then, may have answered this one in the past, but on pricing given the dosing increase with FSGS, is it fair to assume it's simply going to flow to be twice the price? Or is there going to be some economies of scale there that's incorporated in the pricing discussion on FSGS? Thanks. Speaker 200:43:31Yes. So I mean, first of all, our pricing strategy is really to ensure broad access because like IgA nephropathy, we are assuming that the broad community of FSGS patients could benefit from filspari if approved. So, it's certainly something we'll look at. It's It's premature for us to talk in specifics, but I will have Peter talk a little bit about what the dynamics are that are different in FSGS including dosing. Speaker 400:44:04Sorry about that. I had to unmute myself. I think generally I mean the value proposition is probably different in FSDS as well because it's a different patient population. And as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, this is the most progressive glomerular disease, patients with the highest unmet need. So the value proposition is higher here as well, but to the point we have doubled the dose and with linear pricing that may potentially end up to double the price as well. Speaker 400:44:33We're really focusing on what the value proposition is. This is something we don't start from scratch. I mean, we were initially planning for FSGS as our first indication, so a lot of the work has been done already. But now we are refreshing it and rebuilding a value proposition for potential FTSE as launch. Got you. Speaker 400:44:52Thank you very much. Thanks Operator00:45:04if you ever have another question, please rejoin the queue. Our next question comes from the line of Prahar Agrawal from Cantor. Your line is open. Speaker 900:45:16Hi, thank you so much for taking my questions. So Speaker 400:45:20there are a lot Speaker 900:45:21of competent readouts in the I GAN space coming over the next one to two years. Can you give your perspective on how long will the accelerated approval path in I GAN will remain open since two drugs have full approval now? And what will the competitors need to show to get extended approval? Thank you. Speaker 200:45:38Yeah, it's a really good question. Probably one that you might not be satisfied with our answer because it's very difficult for us to predict. With that said, Bill, I'll turn it over to you for any potential thoughts. Speaker 1100:45:51Yeah. I appreciate the lead in, Eric, because it's us speaking for the FDA, which isn't where we can speak with authority. But at some point, the agency will make the judgment that the unmet need in IgA nephropathy and for that patient population has been met sufficiently to the point where accelerated approval is no longer a viable pathway. I do know that Doctor. Aliza Thompson has said at the podium publicly, this is not a pathway that will stay open indefinitely for IgA nephropathy. Speaker 1100:46:31So, at some point, they are going to make that distinction. We have three drugs approved that has certainly increased in the armamentarium that physicians have to treat this disease. I think certainly, you've got some of the BAFF April B cell initiatives that are on an accelerated approval pathway. But I don't expect that too many of those will be able to get there. And like you, we're watching to see when that change occurs. Speaker 900:47:07Thank Speaker 200:47:10you. Operator00:47:15Our next question comes from the line of Mohit Bansal from Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Speaker 1400:47:21Hi. This is Fadi Armand on for Mohit. Thanks for taking our question. So on the point about the expanding prescriber base after the full approval in IgAN, can you give some sense of the number of IgAN patients on average that these new prescribers treat? I know this is a highly fragmented market, so I imagine you've targeted the high prescribers earlier in the launch. Speaker 1400:47:48So you're trying to understand if there's potentially, a lot of depth to the new prescribers that are coming on now. Thanks. Speaker 200:47:58Sure. Thank you. I'll turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:48:02Yes. As we have mentioned in the past, we target about 6,000 nephrologists out of, I would say, a U. S. Universe of about 10,000. That 6,000 nephrologists approximately treat eighty five percent of the IgA nephropathy patients in our estimations. Speaker 400:48:19To your other point, so you have to go quite broad to cover and get access to all the patients. I would say in general, many of those nephrology see five to ten IgA nephropathy patients in their practice, but it depends on you have like higher volume offices as well. And yes, we are targeting those offices more heavily. But overall, you have to catch the broad net across both academia as well as the community nephrologists. Speaker 200:48:48Yes. Thank you, Peter, for that. One thing that I would add is unlike many other rare diseases, you don't see the type of referral patterns and therefore you don't see as much concentration of patients being treated within a small number of centers. There's quite a breadth which I think really explains why Peter's team is going quite broad within the nephrology community, quite different from other rare diseases. And I think if we take a step back, what that signal should signal is that we have a substantial opportunity to continue to grow by reaching many more of these patients in the years to come. Speaker 100:49:28Got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:49:30Thank you. Operator00:49:33Our next question comes from the line of Greg Harrison from Scotiabank. Your line is open. Speaker 800:49:40Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Could you speak to the potential impact commercially from a REMS modification? As far as any patients who maybe can't comply with the liver monitoring currently and thus aren't receiving Telspari and may initiate treatment after, you Speaker 1500:50:05know, the REMS, you know, potentially becomes, less onerous. Speaker 200:50:12Great. Thanks for the question. And I'll turn that one over to Peter. Speaker 400:50:16Yeah. Thanks, Rick. It's a good question. I would say, I mean, rents have not been an obstacle for Filspiri performance relative to recent benchmarks. I think we outperformed those benchmarks even though they didn't have ramps and we have ramps. Speaker 400:50:35To your question, like what is the additional upside if you have an easening or a modification of the REMS, what would it do? I would say the main impact that I'm expecting is that physicians are broadening their perspective of what patients could be eligible for filsparity and what patients will be compliant to monthly monitoring as well. That's the only thing that I sometimes hear from physicians that they have quite a preconceived notion like what patients would be compliant with that monthly monitoring. If you go to three monthly from the very beginning that would broaden the patient selection for physicians and that's why I really see the opportunity. Speaker 700:51:18Great. That's helpful. Thank you. Speaker 600:51:20Thanks, Frank. Operator00:51:24Our next question comes from the line of Jason Zemansky from Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 1600:51:32Good afternoon. Congrats on the progress and thank you so much for taking our question. I was hoping you could provide some additional color regarding your pre launch activities in FSGS. I know Julia mentioned expanding awareness of proteinuria as a biomarker, but based on Parasol, there seemed to be pretty broad support, at least maybe from the academic providers. Curious if you see this as a bottleneck in the more broader community and I don't know any other potential headwinds or I guess opportunities to maybe smooth adoption out? Speaker 200:52:04Sure. Thanks for the question, Jason. I'll first hand it over to Jula to talk about what her team will be doing and then Peter, you can talk about what your team will be preparing for. Speaker 300:52:15Yeah, thanks for that question. I think it is really important to continue to reiterate not just with academicians but across the spectrum with private practitioners that proteinuria is in the biologic pathway for progression to kidney failure. And we know that that's how we treat our patients. But just to reiterate that eGFR is noisy and over the short term it can be challenging to show a treatment effect even if you might see a good relationship over the long term. And so it really is reinforcing that if you can reduce proteinuria, similar to what we saw in both duet and in duplex and consistent with Parasol, that you can reduce the rate of loss of kidney function and minimize rates of kidney failure. Speaker 300:52:59That's a key aspect of what we're educating around and what we need to continue to reinforce as well as education around our data. And I'll turn it over to Peter for continued discussion. Speaker 400:53:11Thank you, Juha. And thank you, Jia for that question. As I mentioned earlier, FSGS readers are largely the same prescriber base as FOSPARI. There's like an over 80% overlap in those positions that we are targeting today. So there is a high familiarity and brand awareness for FOLSpiri already among those positions and many already have the experience with FOLSpiri as well. Speaker 400:53:36I think most importantly is that we are building upon our established organization allowing for a rapid uptake in FSDS while also continuing our growth trajectory in IGA nephropathy. I talked to you about the physicians already. I think we have well covered there and the best pre marketing for FSDS is really getting experience with Sospari and IGA nephropathy. From a patient perspective, we recognize that there are different patient communities and so we are really focused on like what is the patient journey and what can we learn with regards to intervention points and that is the work that we are assessing right now. And then the third aspect is read payer and the health economic assessment that I was talking about earlier really building out the value story for FSDS. Speaker 400:54:23And I mentioned earlier a lot of this work is already has already been started as we were planning for FSDS as the initial indication originally. But I think in summary we will be well prepared in a time of approval for FSBS by the end of the year. Speaker 1600:54:42Got it. Appreciate the deep color guys. Thanks. Speaker 400:54:46Thank you, Chetan. Operator00:54:48Our next question comes from the line of Alex Thompson from Stifel. Your line is open. Speaker 1600:54:55Hey, great. Congrats on the update. I guess on shifting gears to peg to batonase, could you talk a little bit more on sort of the progress that you've made on restarting the Phase three and when we might learn more about the timelines there? Thanks. Speaker 200:55:10Certainly. Thank you. And I appreciate the question on peg to batonase. Bill, I'll hand that one over to you. Speaker 1100:55:15Certainly. As you're aware, we work with CDMO partners externally on the manufacturer of the recombinant enzyme. And the scale up challenges that we have observed are ones that our partners have seen before and have worked through before. And with that, the path has been pretty clear. We're pleased with the progress on the necessary process improvements that we're seeing in the manufacturing scale up to date. Speaker 1100:55:49And we expect to restart enrollment in Harmony in 2026. I don't have a specific point in the calendar to point to where we'll have more specificity that's really going to be data driven and how the experimental data comes from those efforts on scale up. Speaker 200:56:22Do we have any other questions? Operator00:56:25Our next question comes from the line of Ed Arcey from H. C. Wainwright. Your line is open. Speaker 1700:56:32Great. Thanks for taking my questions and congrats on another strong quarter of progress here. So trying to get three in here quickly. First, with regard to FSGS, obviously this pathway now has rather quickly presented itself based on the findings from Parasol. And so first question is, if it comes to pass that there is an ad comp, what kind of specific questions would you expect the panel to sort of challenge the findings from Parasol on given that that's the basis? Speaker 1700:57:16And then secondly, I know we've talked about this a little bit on the call, but I'm just wondering regarding pre commercial activities for FSGS. Obviously, this would be the first approved drug and you've talked about the eighty percent overlap in patients. So some strong structural components to the launch itself. But just wondering what specific activities would you be focused on to really ensure rapid uptake right from the start? And then lastly, given that overlap between the two indications, Wondering how much additional SG and A investment you would be considering around the end of the year if that's when the launch happens? Speaker 1700:58:04Thanks so much. Speaker 200:58:06Okay. Thanks so much for the questions, Ed. I'm going to take them in opposite order, and then I'll leave the adcom question for Jula. The SG and A will be incremental. We have the infrastructure and so a lot of the readiness is there. Speaker 200:58:22There will be some variable spend, but that's largely going to occur once we are and if we are approved. With regard to pre commercial activities, it's a lot about planning. There is we do not promote pre approval, so it's really about preparing and understanding the journey of the patient and the needs of the physicians as Peter outlined. But we've got a team in place, they're in the field, they've got a job and that is to identify and treat additional patients by Gannon. As Peter said, that's really going to help in establishing that trust, the relationships and the profile of FilSparri. Speaker 200:58:57So that really is largely the activities. And I think one thing we've mentioned in the past, but I think it really bears repeating on this question is nephrologists know that there is an urgency to treat patients with FSGS. It's very different than how they were trained on IgAN. There is a desperation for something to be approved in FSGS. So I think that that's a dynamic that is going to play out if we are approved. Speaker 200:59:26And with that, I'll turn that over the question about the AdCom questions to Julah. Speaker 300:59:32Thanks for the question, Ed. I think a big part of an AdCom is education and as well as helping the agency to understand the overall benefit risk of any potential new therapy. And so some of the key questions that will be asked is similar to what's already been done within Parasol is what is the clinical meaningfulness of the magnitude of protein reduction that was seen with sparsent and what does that translate into and realize that when you have an ADCOM, it's not just for the nephrology community and the FDA, it's also other stakeholders who have patients there. So, it gives the agency and us an opportunity to discuss all of the evidence and data and hear back from key stakeholders including patients. Speaker 1701:00:18Great. Thanks so much. Speaker 201:00:21Thanks, Ed. Operator01:00:23Thank you and gentlemen. This concludes the question and answer session of today's conference call. I'll hand the call back over to Victoria. Speaker 101:00:32Thank you, Chloe, and thank you everyone for joining our fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four financial results call. We look forward to seeing everyone at the upcoming spring conferences. Have a great rest of your day. Operator01:00:46This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by