NASDAQ:AUTL Autolus Therapeutics Q2 2025 Earnings Report $1.85 +0.01 (+0.54%) Closing price 08/14/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$1.88 +0.02 (+1.35%) As of 08/14/2025 06:53 PM 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. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Autolus Therapeutics EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.18Consensus EPS -$0.24Beat/MissBeat by +$0.06One Year Ago EPSN/AAutolus Therapeutics Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$13.50 millionExpected Revenue$12.92 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$576.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/AAutolus Therapeutics Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2025Date8/12/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, August 12, 2025Conference Call Time8:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Autolus Therapeutics Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 12, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: In Q2, Autolus generated $20.9 million in Ocatsol product sales and $29.9 million in H1, covering 90% of U.S. medical lives across 46 authorized centers. Negative Sentiment: CMS’s split reimbursement decision altered revenue recognition and temporarily slowed patient enrollment, with full operational resolution anticipated by Q4 2025. Positive Sentiment: The FELIX trial showed a median duration of response of 42.6 months and an overall survival plateau around 40%, reinforcing Ocatsol’s long-term efficacy and safety. Positive Sentiment: Autolus held $454.3 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities as of Q2 end, supporting the Ocatsol launch and ongoing clinical programs. Positive Sentiment: Key pipeline milestones include an expanded pediatric Phase 1/2 ALL study and initiation of Phase II lupus nephritis and Phase I multiple sclerosis trials, all set to dose first patients in H2 2025. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAutolus Therapeutics Q2 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Autolus Second Quarter twenty twenty five Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Amanda Cray, Executive Director, Investor Relations. Operator00:00:26Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:29Thank you, Kevin. Good morning or good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today's call. With me are Chief Executive Officer, Doctor. Christian Eitan and Chief Financial Officer, Rob Dolesky. I'd like to remind you that during today's call, we will make statements related to our business that are forward looking under federal securities laws and the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Speaker 100:00:56These may include, but are not limited to, statements regarding status of the ongoing commercial launch of Ocatsol, Autolysis manufacturing, sales and marketing plans for Ocatsol, the market potential for Ocatsol, and the status of clinical trials, development, and or regulatory timelines and market opportunities for OviCel and our other product candidates. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations and reflect our views only as of today. We assume no obligation to update any such forward looking statements. For a discussion of the material risks and uncertainties that could affect our actual results, please refer to the risks identified in today's press release and in our SEC filings, both available on the Investors section of our website. On slide three, you'll see the agenda for today's call. Speaker 100:01:53As usual, Christian will provide an overview of our operational highlights. Rob will then discuss the financial results, and Christian will conclude with upcoming milestones and closing remarks. We'll then take questions. With that, I'll turn it over to Christian. Speaker 200:02:09Thank you, Amanda, and moving to slide four. Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for joining us for the second quarter call. We had an excellent second quarter with good momentum in our launch of a capsule. In the second quarter, we generated $20,900,000 product sales, bringing the first six months of the launch to $29,900,000 The product profile resonates very well with treating physicians and there is a clear unmet medical need. Our supply chain has proven to be robust, reliable, and delivering consistent quality to our customers. Speaker 200:02:44We continue to expand our center presence with now 46 centers authorized for use of a capsule and 90% total US medical lives covered. We're well on track to achieve our year end objective of reaching 60 plus authorized centers. As of July 1, we have permanent HCPCS code effective following a positive CMS decision on April 1. The decision by CMS of a split reimbursement based on the infusion of product was a deviation of precedence. The impact was twofold, a change in revenue recognition for the company and an adjustment of the administrative processes at the medical centers. Speaker 200:03:27The adjustments were made during the second quarter and did slow patient enrollment at those centers. We expect the impact on patients treated to be resolved by Q4. Moving to slide number five, we're very pleased with the progress of our regulatory filings. In April, we received conditional marketing authorization in The UK and in July from the European Commission. We're working on market access in The UK and are interacting with NICE. Speaker 200:03:57In The EU, we are looking at a country by country evaluation. While we aim to get Ocanthol to as many patients as possible, as a small company with limited resources, we also have to be disciplined and make sure to only launch where market access is economically viable. At this stage, we do not expect EU sales in 2025 and 2026. Meanwhile, we continue to engage with physicians and study groups like the German ALL study group to enable ISTs in Europe. In addition, we are broadening our real world experience in The U. Speaker 200:04:34S. With ObiCell, which may provide additional support for our market access conversations elsewhere. Moving to slide number six, the Felix data continued to mature very favorably. At EHA, we presented an update with thirty two point eight months of median follow-up. Importantly, 38% of the responding patients remain in remission without any subsequent treatment. Speaker 200:05:02On slide seven, consistent with this finding, we see median duration of response reached forty two point six months. Slide eight then looks at the overall survival, which shows a plateau forming at around forty percent with most patients beyond two years of observation. A long term outcome together with a favorable safety profile is a strong foundation to build on. Where next with OBI SIL is summarized on slide nine. Our development focus is on expanding the OBI SIL beyond adult patients with relapsedrefractory ALL. Speaker 200:05:40We made good progress with our pediatric study PY1. We expect the Phase one experience to be presented by the year end and are expanding the study from a Phase one to a Phase onetwo study with an intent to expand the age range for our current label. Encouragingly, several of the physicians treating commercial patients expressed an interest in exploring ObiCell in frontline consolidation settings. And we expect to see several ISTs active in 2026. We are also excited about our progress in autoimmune diseases. Speaker 200:06:15Building on the encouraging initial experience in SLE, we are starting up a phase two lupus nephritis study with registrational intent. In addition, our phase one study in progressive multiple sclerosis is open for enrollment now. With that, I'm handing over to Rob for the financial results for the second quarter twenty twenty five. Rob. Speaker 300:06:39Thanks Christian. And good morning or good afternoon to everyone. It's my pleasure to review our financial results for the second quarter twenty twenty five. In the second quarter, net product revenue for the three months ending 06/30/2025 was 20,900,000.0 compared with 9,000,000 in the first quarter. As Christian noted, we continue to be encouraged by Elcatsil's uptake and strong momentum in The US. Speaker 300:07:08Cost of sales in the second quarter totaled 24,400,000.0. As a reminder, this amount includes the cost of all commercial product delivered to the authorized treatment centers, including product delivered but not yet administered to patients. So again, as a reminder, the sales value of these products not yet recorded as product revenue in the P and L is reflected as deferred revenue on the balance sheet and our deferred revenue balance at the end of Q2 was 2,100,000.0. Additionally, cost of sales includes any canceled orders in the period, our patient access program product, third party royalties for certain technologies, as well as idle capacity. As expected, this dynamic will drive cost of sales to be higher at the beginning of the launch as we've experienced versus what we would consider our ultimate target. Speaker 300:08:03Our expectation is to see improvement as volumes increase and as we improve efficiencies in our own manufacturing operations. Moving on to research and development, these expenses decreased to 27,400,000.0 for the three months ending 06/30/2025 that's compared to 36,600,000.0 during the same period in '24. This change was primarily driven by the commercial manufacturing related employee and infrastructure costs that have shifted out of R and D expense into our cost of sales and inventory. Our selling, general and administrative expenses increased to 30,300,000 for the three months ending 06/30/2025 and that's compared to 21,900,000.0 in the same period in '24. This increase was primarily due to salaries and other employee related costs driven by increased headcount supporting our commercialization activities. Speaker 300:09:00Our loss from operations for the three months ending 06/30/2025 was 61,200,000.0 as compared to 58,900,000.0 for the same period in 2024. During the quarter, we also recorded 12,100,000.0 in net interest income and expense. This is primarily driven by a one time non cash adjustment to the liability related to the valuation of future royalties and milestones associated with the Blackstone and BioNTech agreements. The valuation assessment incorporated the revised commercial assumptions already discussed by Christian with respect to the EU launch. And finally net loss was 47,900,000.0 for the three months ending 06/30/2025, reduced from a loss of 58,300,000.0 for the same period in 2024. Speaker 300:09:56Our cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities at Q2 twenty twenty five total 454,300,000 as compared to $588,000,000 at the December 2024. This decrease was primarily driven by net cash use in operating activities and also impacted by a delay cash receipt of approximately 21,700,000.0 in R and D tax credit that we've expected from The UK HMRC, which was expected to receive during the six months ending June 30, but has been delayed. We continue to believe that with our current cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, we are well capitalized to drive the launch and commercialization of OB cell and to obtain data in the LN pivotal trial as well as MS phase one study. I'll now hand back to Christian to wrap things up with a brief outlook on expected milestones for the rest of the year. Christian. Speaker 200:10:57Thanks a lot, Rob. So this gets me to kind of the outlook for the remainder of the year. The two data releases that we're planning, the first one is the updated data from our Phase I in S patients, which we expect to provide the update at the ACR meeting at the October. And then we're aiming to provide a review of the Phase I data of our pediatric ALL experience towards the end of the year. When we look at the clinical trial conduct, we expect first patients to be dosed for our lupus nephritis phase two study, our MS phase one study and the AUTO8 study in amyloidosis, which is also expected to dose the first patient in the second half of the year. Speaker 200:11:43So a lot of progress and I think driving towards a very attractive dynamic on the launch, but also driving hard towards an expanded use of Ovicell beyond the relapsedrefractory adult ALL opportunity. And with that, I think we're in a great spot for the second half of the year. I'm happy for you to actually join us for the Q and A session. Thank you. Operator00:12:08Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. If your question has been answered, you wish to move yourself from the queue, please press star one one again. We will pause for a moment while we compile our Q and A roster. Our first question comes from James Shin with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 400:12:31Good morning, guys. Thank you for the question. First question is for Christian on the Germany launch. Was this originally a green light, call it, but flip to hold based on pricing and reimbursement changes from, say, the MSN undercurrent? And then I guess the second one for Rob is once the split reimbursement is I guess absorbed or embedded by the hospitals, is enrollment and sales expected to accelerate or like what's the recognition pattern or cadence thereafter? Speaker 400:13:05Thank you. Speaker 200:13:06Thanks a lot for joining James. So what I think is important to understand in terms of the market access process in Europe in general, is that the methodologies that are being used for market access are designed to use data from randomized controlled studies. And that has been a challenge, think for, I think many of the CAR T programs and cell and gene therapy programs in general, which are based typically are placed in rare diseases initially typically based on single arm studies. So that's a methodological challenge that we do have across the board and across all of the assessing agencies and bodies. So that's, I think first, the first observation. Speaker 200:13:49So there is a disjointedness and with that an element of a judgment call required. The second is clearly that we have to make sure that we are navigating, I think the various processes such that we do get to play a outcome that is economically reasonable for us and doable for us. What we have seen in the past is that, for certain products were launched below their actual production prices, which obviously is not a good precedent and doesn't really, I think support a sustained business. And as a consequence, we've seen a substantial proportion of cell and gene therapy products actually not being launched in Europe. There's something like eight out of 18 that were not launched. Speaker 200:14:33So that's it, that's the backdrop. So we're gonna do this very methodically gonna go through country by country and are gonna navigating that. What is important to understand as well is obviously in the current environment that there is a number of countries actually do publish the actual negotiated prices and you were pointing to MFN, and you can imagine that also creates obviously a possible tension that may or may not be helpful in the process. So we're gonna take a very disciplined approach. We're gonna engage with the respective countries and we're gonna work through the process, but we're also, we'll certainly make sure that we're gonna get to the right outcomes before launching, which is why we're sort of putting to a longer timeline before we realize any sales in Europe. Speaker 200:15:24And with that, I'm handing over to Rob. Speaker 300:15:27Yeah, hi James. Your question on the revenue recognition. So just to maybe clarify the specifics here. So we moved from the first quarter where all recognized was recognized on the first administration of OB cell to a fiftyfifty split between the first administration and the second administration. At the time, we also called out that obviously this is only for a portion of patients, CMS outpatients, and the time between those two time points was per the label about ten days plus or minus two days I think in the field we've seen about nine days thus far. Speaker 300:16:06So the specific implementation of the revenue recognition change, we said at the time was going to have a very little impact and we kind of see that as this quarter has even played out. The adjustments that Christian referred to certainly that the centers had to make more on the administrative side and then in turn impacting some of the registrations that were happening in that timeframe. We really expect those to resolve themselves kind of a full quarter basis by Q4, but we will see some of that certainly in Q2 and probably early in Q3. Speaker 500:16:49Thank you. Operator00:16:50One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Matt Phipps with William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 600:17:01Hi. Thanks for taking my question and all the updates today. I guess, Robert, quickly then, what happens if a patient only gets the first infusion? I realize this doesn't happen very often, but is there just a eventual time where you can recognize the rest of that? And then just thinking ahead, I'm sure no guidance here, but do you think you can become you can gross profit positive sometime by the end of this year or next year? Speaker 600:17:28Just wondering if how we think about kind of that getting over that fixed cost and getting to kind of capacity levels where you think we at least get to a gross profit level? Thank you. Speaker 200:17:41For joining, I'll take first the first question and hand over to Rob. So when you have the first infusion and only the first infusion, which is actually extremely rare because obviously the only reason why that second infusion wasn't happen is the patient would have an adverse event reaction that wouldn't allow you to actually do second dose. And you remember from our clinical experience, that is exceedingly rare. And in fact, we do see this very, very rarely in the commercial setting. If that happens, then only the first infusion will be recognized. Speaker 200:18:15If the second is not administered, that will not be recognized. So with that, I'm handing over to Rob to address the fixed cost questions. Speaker 300:18:27Yeah, Matt. So on the gross margin front, certainly we saw as you looked quarter to quarter from Q4 even last year where we had to recognize some idle capacity costs and then into Q1 and Q2 certainly trending the right way in terms of that number getting closer to break even. It's really a volume story for this year and so what we've been very focused on is making sure the product is available and we wanna really make sure there's no limitations to the launch. We do expect as certainly the second half of the year will play out and we continue to see volume increases that that'll continue moving in the right direction. No specific timing in terms of guidance and you know kind of when something will flip but we certainly expect in the second half to continue in that direction. Operator00:19:23Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Gil Blum with Needham and Company. Your line is open. Speaker 700:19:33Good morning, everyone, congrats on a strong quarter. Maybe a quick question here as it relates to kind of how is the product being received by the community in The US. Do you have some anecdotal feedback and maybe already some level of reorders? And I have a follow-up. Speaker 200:19:55Well, thanks a lot for joining, Gil. The reception has been very, very positive. What we're seeing is and what we have pointed out in the past is obviously that the safety profile and the manageability was really something that was immediately experienceable and that's been incredibly helpful. And we believe it's one of the key reasons also why we had early, very early on, we started to see actually reorders at the centers for the product. And that actually is developing very nicely across the centers that are active, commercially active at this point. Speaker 200:20:27So this looks very positive and I think has a very nice reinforcing impact. And I think it's in line with frankly, prior experience. What we now see obviously, as we go to the middle of the year is that we start, the physicians start to see the outcome, not just the immediate manageability of the product, but also the outcome in their patients. And we think that's gonna be sort of a second push as we go into the second part of the year. And certainly the Felix data that we update that we presented at strongly, think point in that direction with the long term plateau that we're seeing in the data and the survival data. Speaker 200:21:04And obviously a lot of the patients not requiring additional therapy, which is obviously resonating very well. So we're really pleased with what we're seeing, the dynamic and the feedback we're getting from the product, the experience, but also the experience obviously that the centers have with our commercial team and the reliability on the supply side, on the production side, which I think are really important to sort of actually have a be a real partner, frankly, for these physicians and patients in this space. Speaker 700:21:35Thank you for that. And can you provide any additional color regarding your negotiations with NICE? Speaker 200:21:44So the process is obviously a very regulated process where there's obviously a query for quite a substantial amount of information and health economic assessments that we sort of provide and provide the data behind that. And then it is a process that actually involves to quite an extent the treating physicians with experience with the product and experience with the indication, but also the patients themselves, which do actually have a voice in this process. So there is a dynamic there where there's the company provides information, but we're actually not actively negotiating in that process, in particular interaction with NICE, but it's a process that's actually within that body with obviously information requested from us, but then also support from the physician and patient community. And so this is ongoing. We went through a first step. Speaker 200:22:36There is a second step now that we're running through and we'll need to see where we get to. And then there's additional different paths that you can take from there on forward. So we're in the midst of this. So this is also a time point where it's very difficult to sort of give a view on where it may go and we'll need to see kind of how it develops. But overall, you know, very strong support from the physicians and the patients for the product, which is obviously consistent with the experience that we had with Ovicell or Ocatsil in The UK. Speaker 200:23:09And I would say many of the patients that we have treated in our clinical trials were UK patients. So, there is a strong amount of experience, also firsthand experience available, which we believe is helpful. Speaker 700:23:21Thank you for taking our questions. Speaker 200:23:23Thanks a lot, Gil. Operator00:23:24One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Ashtika Gouniwadding with Truist. Your line is open. Speaker 500:23:34Hey, guys. Good morning. I'll echo my congrats on the strong El Capsule launch here that's panning out. A couple of quick financial questions and operational questions, then I got something more bigger picture. So to start with on the you've added about a dozen or so ATCs since your Q1 earnings. Speaker 500:23:54Can you maybe walk us through the plan for bringing on more centers by your end? And is there sort of like a training period as you bring on a new center that would make us kind of think about how productive these centers are as they come on? And then the other quick financial question is, can you quantify the impact of out of spec products in your COGS? Speaker 200:24:24Okay, I'll take the ATC question first and then hand off to Rob on the OS question. So, did add, obviously, you're correct, we added about 12 ATCs that are now active, and we're gonna continue obviously to add to the end of the year. We expect to be at 60 plus by the end of the year. So that progresses very nicely. When we look at the centers, obviously the way that we have weighted the centers was to really look at those centers that have larger patient flows and often actually already have experience very early on and then kept adding to that. Speaker 200:25:01So you start actually with what do you think the centers are that will have a relatively high patient flow, and then gradually actually fill out the network of centers to make sure that patients have a good reach and also wouldn't have too much of a distance to access the therapy. And that's kind of what we're in. So we're at this point in time, we keep on expanding into a geography that we haven't been present in, which we believe is important to make sure we're serving the breadth of The US very well. And we're making good progress on that. And with that also, I think we have an ability to make sure that the therapy actually becomes truly accessible for the vast majority of patients in The US. Speaker 200:25:48So this is when you look at the, you can look at the ADC locator and you see, we have a very significant amount of centers, basically almost in a U shaped form, from Chicago all the way up through the Midwest down to the South and back up again to way up to the West. And there's clearly additional centers that we're opening up in between to make sure that we actually have a very good distribution there. So that's sort of the way we're looking at that and really a clear focus is to make sure that there is access in a reasonable distance. And with that, I think having an attractive network of clinics available for the patients to access. So with that, I think Rob, just to follow-up on the OS question and potential impact overall. Speaker 300:26:46Yep, sure. Thanks Oskar for the question. So let me first comment when you think about out of spec and kind of financially where things land, there's actually two places where this can go and so it's important to understand what drives that. So in certain situations we do have an out of spec protocol that the site can choose to put the patient onto and if the patient does receive the dose even though it's out of spec under that out of spec protocol it actually lands in our R and D expense. What lands in cost of sales is out of spec product that is not administered under that protocol effectively like a scrap charge that goes through across the sales. Speaker 300:27:32So it's very hard to predict where patients will land in those two buckets, but it's fair to say that our experience to date overall in terms of our out of spec rates have been very aligned with the Felix study. And we said in the past that that's gonna land somewhere between a five to 10% kind of range in terms of the experience and to date what we've seen in the commercial launch. Speaker 500:27:58Great. Thanks, guys. And then just a bigger picture question on Europe here on the European rollout. If you decide to launch in a specific country, let's say in The UK, would you expect patients to travel from neighboring countries to receive therapy? Have you seen this happening with other CAR Ts launches in Europe? Speaker 500:28:18And maybe you can talk a little bit about the profile of OLKADSOL that might permit this to take place. Speaker 200:28:25It's a really good question and something we've been looking into. So first of all, what we're seeing from a UK perspective is that there is a certain amount of medical tourism towards The UK for patients to get access. Typically that medical tourism is coming from outside the EU to The UK, but there is a level of that. When we look within the EU, what we do see is that there is cross border treatments that we certainly would see in a lot of the, particularly the border regions where the infrastructure may not be evenly distributed across the border. Some of you know that I'm a Swiss national, I grew up close to Basel, which is very close to obviously Germany and France, literally bordering on both countries. Speaker 200:29:14And it's quite typical that if there are complex cases, children with complex issues or adults with complex issues that they might actually coming from the surrounding areas within Germany or France into the university hospital in Basel across the border to be treated there. And there are also movements the other way if the speciality actually is on the other side of the border. So that actually does happen. And it is probably at this point difficult to quantify, but it clearly is not unusual to actually see that. To what extent that would be applicable for patients with acute leukemia, I do not know, but what we do know, and this is my old experience developing BLINCYTO, we had patients from quite a wide range of countries and certainly during clinical trials to access trials in Germany and try and looking for treatment in Germany. Speaker 200:30:12And we also see that on the, there's also some of that on the commercial side as well. So it is very much, I think it's a possibility and I think it's an area we're looking more into. Obviously this has a lot to do with the nature of the insurance and the payers set up and obviously getting clearance from the payers, which typically for certain emergencies that's clearly happening. And we're looking into to what extent and what breadth this would be applicable here as well. But it is not unusual to see complex therapies to be accessed across the border. Speaker 500:30:47Thanks guys. Operator00:30:49One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Kelly Shee with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 800:30:58Congrats on the progress and thanks for taking my questions. As you're now expanded to 46 treatment centers across The US, Curious if could share learnings, if the early adopters and also with reordering comes from also a high volume centers of Takeda, so all you actually see a different pattern. And also for Germany and The UK, one could we anticipate first revenue recording and also have a follow-up? Thanks. Speaker 200:31:30Okay, very good. Thanks for joining, Kelly. You're right, it's very interesting when we look at our centers in The US, we look at the use pattern across the centers. We have a range of centers that have quite exceeded our expectations in terms of the patients that they treated. And part of that expectation on our side was actually prior knowledge of the level of use of CAR T in this indication in the past. Speaker 200:32:00And clearly that looks changed in a good number of centers. So that's been very encouraging. We're also seeing centers where there are multiple physicians actually administering the product, which is another key metric that we're looking at. So, not only have one physician at a center prescribed, but actually getting the use of the product more broadly distributed across all of the prescribing physicians for this indication. That's a dynamic we're following very carefully. Speaker 200:32:27And I think it's one of the key areas that we're gonna be focusing on for our centers. It's important to understand that most of the patients are in fact being or expect that most of the patients with the relapsedrefractory disease are going to be treated at those give or take 60 centers that we're targeting now. And that gives you clearly a very significant opportunity to focus from a commercial perspective and really build on the relationships, the connections, the experience at the center to actually keep expanding the use so that we are sort of getting to a place where the patients that are eligible for the therapy and can benefit from the therapy actually get access to it. So the dynamic I think we're seeing is very remarkable. Repeat use is one of the key things we're looking at. Speaker 200:33:17We're seeing a very nice adoption of repeat use across all our centers and we're really monitoring that very carefully and it's supporting that process. So this has been very, I think very interesting and the high volume centers have been phenomenal to see kind of the level of engagement and patient flow that resulted from that. And we're clearly building on that and we're sort of gonna take the learnings from those centers also into the other centers. And then with regards to The UK and Germany, obviously those are two different processes from a patient access perspective. We're in the midst of the current process in The UK and I hope that over the next few months, we can actually get to a resolution there. Speaker 200:34:04And then actually, if positive, we would expect to be able to launch in the probably early part end of this year, early part of next year, but it is contingent on obviously getting a reasonable outcome that is economically viable for us. And so that's kind of what we're working towards. And in Germany, we're certainly want to sort of have more engagement on the physician, the patient side, but also with the respective regulatory bodies in Germany. And at the same time, we're looking for more data to also become available over time from the experience, the real world experience in The US, which we hope would also actually be supportive for these conversations. So at this point, we're not guiding to sales in Germany because it ultimately is dependent on where we're gonna end up in those negotiations. Speaker 200:34:59But we're also looking at other European countries and we may change the order of access within Europe based on where we are and what we know at this point. Speaker 800:35:10Super helpful. Thanks so much. And also for autoimmune, curious for the SAR presentation in Q4, what other data points could be included beyond what has been presented in the past? And also, could you share some additional color? Maybe do you have other ongoing translational studies, maybe to tell us more on like a B cell dynamic, or maybe some of the correlation to patient baseline characteristics to guide future development in autoimmune space? Speaker 800:35:46Thank you. Speaker 200:35:47Yeah, very good questions. Thanks, Kelly. So, with regards to the data at ACR, obviously the key update will be related to the longer follow-up of the six patients that we had reported on at the R and D event earlier in Q2. And I think that will give us a good idea of kind of how the product overall actually is performing because we're gonna have six plus months of follow-up with all the patients. So I think that will be, I think probably the key part of the follow-up. Speaker 200:36:17We actually did enroll more patients on the study. So there is also gonna be earlier data from those patients that will be included. And I think that's obviously one of the key areas. We've been looking very carefully at a lot of different parameters for these patients to develop a good understanding of the pharmacodynamics, both of the product, but also and how we're impacting potential disease stations, etcetera. So those are datasets that we're also pulling together and we're gonna be looking at. Speaker 200:36:49We're looking at a range of, obviously I've been evaluating a range of indications. Obviously the first one that we sort of decided to move on is lupus nephritis. That's clearly where we're gonna double down on. And I mentioned the fact that we're obviously we're opening that study and we're making really good progress there and expect to have patients treated still this year. And that gives us, I think will give us a very nice momentum in that study also considering it's a very compact study, will give us a shot to also frankly be first in class in that indication. Speaker 200:37:26And then secondly, we're obviously very interested in seeing the performance of the product in the progressive MS patients. And there's gonna be also a lot of analysis that will be done in those patients, translational type of analysis to understand the impact of the mechanism of action, etcetera, in addition to obviously the actual clinical readouts and the imaging readouts that we're gonna be taking from those patients. So there's quite a lot going on there and there's also obviously additional work that we're doing to look into additional indications options, but obviously for now, very much focused on the indications I just went through. Thank you. Operator00:38:09Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Simon Baker with Rothschild and Company Redburn. Speaker 900:38:19Thank you for taking my questions. Two, if I may, please. Firstly, Christian, just going back to the European launch outlook. For, shall we say, traditional drug launches, there's a fairly established routine of going Germany first because you can set your price and then it gets adjusted and then work your way through the countries ultimately receiving towards the end reimbursement in France. Clearly that's not the same in cell therapy. Speaker 900:38:47I wonder if you could just highlight any areas where there is a markedly different process of seeking reimbursement which affects the order of countries in which you will seek to launch? And then secondly, going back to The UK, at the same time that NICE was saying no to Ocasio, the MHRA introduced the world's first framework for point of care manufacture of cell therapies including CAR T. I just wanted to get your perspectives on the pertinence of that to Autolus and if any other regulators in the world are looking at similar approaches? Thanks so much. Speaker 200:39:26Yes, good question. So the first one is around kind of sequence of launch in Europe. You're correct, for many of more traditional therapies, the sequence of launch tends to be Germany, the least traditionally be to Germany and then you kinda walk through kinda a series of countries to sort of ultimately get the majority of them. That started to actually change somewhat. Obviously Germany is still the single biggest market, but in terms of market access, not necessarily the most attractive country in Europe. Speaker 200:39:57So that's, I think that's, and that we're talking sort of pre the current administration. That's certainly been true. When we look at the current administration, I think there are a few things to keep in mind. First of all, the most favorite nation process obviously is one that actually reference prices in various territories. Now there are two types of prices that tend to be quoted. Speaker 200:40:23One is a list price, the other one is discounted price. Now different countries actually deal with that in different ways. Some countries publish list prices, but not negotiated prices. Some countries publish negotiated prices. And you can imagine in the current environment where there's a lot of uncertainty around what processes are, frankly, what are the rules, what's gonna be applicable and so on and so forth. Speaker 200:40:49That creates, I think a lot of questions for frankly, all pharmaceutical companies looking at launching in Europe because depending on where you are, what you agreed to, etcetera, you may actually have discrepancy to The US price at which point you might actually be having an exposure that may or may not be reasonable to take. So that's one generally across the board, I think something that I think every pharmaceutical company needs to look at, needs to think about because it's a very significant level of uncertainty and very unclear set of rules that ultimately may apply or may not apply. So that's sort of one area to look at. The second part is that, and this has been one of the real challenges in the cell and gene therapy space is that the methodology to actually calculate the prices and sort of provide market access at has been designed for very different type of products and very different types of clinical data. When you look at the cell and gene therapy space, most of the indications we're developing in, we're developing in very high medical need settings in smaller indications, and we're going for very high treatment effects. Speaker 200:41:59The reason what that does is allows us to actually develop and which is what all regulators agree with, to develop with single arm clinical trials for approval and demonstrating very clear cut clinical benefit and risk benefit profile in those indications. And we see that across the board. There's a huge disconnect between the view that we have with the regulators and the methodology that we're seeing for market access, which are all based on classical randomized controlled studies that then also assume you can do a direct comparison to a similar product and quite often. And so that's typically then obviously difficult. You haven't seen CAR T therapies that are being compared in a single trial. Speaker 200:42:46And we're not gonna see that going forward. That's not actually doable. So what's then happening is your next best thing is you've got to kind of compare against some form of standard of care, which varies widely of what that actually is considered to be. And then in the absence of a actual direct comparison and randomized controlled data to your product creates the situation that the model doesn't actually allow you to quantify because the model doesn't can handle the data. And so as a consequence, you get a benefit, which is acknowledged, but it cannot be quantified. Speaker 200:43:21And hence it's called a non quantifiable benefit, which is an oxymoron in English. It kind of works in German where some of those concepts came from. So the problem that that creates is a very significant disconnect that actually the system is not set up to value that. And on top of that, have not in The UK, but for most of Europe, a disconnect between how healthcare actually and healthcare costs are looked at. You have obviously a very significant component that are infrastructure related. Speaker 200:43:53These are your hospitals, your staffing, your basic operation, etcetera, which is a huge chunk of the cost in any healthcare system. Well, in most European countries that is covered by taxes and it's opaque, not actually not transparent, not visible to the public, what that actually costs. What then actually is sort of going into the assessment is in essence what's leftover. And that's mostly the therapeutic diagnostic costs and some very specific procedures. And that's actually what's carried by the payers. Speaker 200:44:25That disconnect is very, very significant and creates a problem because then if you wanna have a full value assessment, you cannot actually properly do that because obviously a big chunk as an example of a one off therapy that gives you curative outcome as a hypothetical example, that has a huge impact on your infrastructure bit and not using, not actually utilizing that infrastructure. That's not covered. That's not part of the model. And hence we do have a huge disconnect in the view of value. And that's where the fundamental disconnect is in the various systems. Speaker 200:45:00And that is sort of why this is more of an actual process to go through and why it leads to kind of quite different types of outcomes and different assessments. So those are, I think a few points there to consider, which are just very different, significant differences in the underlying methodology and the way that frankly healthcare is being paid for. Speaker 1000:45:22Great. Thank you. Operator00:45:23One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Yanan Zhu with Wells Fargo. Speaker 1000:45:34Hi. This is Jeff on for Yanan. Thanks for taking our questions. For the Elcatsa launch in The US, can you provide any detail on how many patients were treated in the second quarter and year to date? And then second question on the longer term SLE readout at ACR in late October. Speaker 1000:45:52It was mentioned that additional patients have been enrolled beyond the initial six. How many patients do you anticipate including in the readout? I believe there were a total of 12 to be dosed in phase one. Have all 12 been treated and were any of them adolescent? Thanks. Speaker 200:46:08Yeah, very good question. So first of all, we have not guided on the number of patients, but you can actually backtrack the numbers, I think reasonably well from knowing the cost of the therapy, but we haven't given a detailed number there. But I think you get very close just by backtracking. The second is related to the number of SLE patients. We obviously continue to dose patients. Speaker 200:46:33We had a small cohort at an elevated dose level of 100,000,000, and we have expanded the trial to include three adolescent patients. We do not expect given the timing for the data cut to actually have adolescent patients in the analysis. The focus will be on the adult patients and we'll sort of give an up to date view on the experience with the 50,000,000 and probably initial experience on 100,000,000. Speaker 1000:47:08Got it. Thank you very much. Operator00:47:09Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Max Dahl with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:47:20Hi. This is Max for Roger and Sharma. Thank you for taking my question. First one is, could you comment on what proportion of your centers are now operational and enrolling patients? And how should we think about the revenue momentum and trajectory? Speaker 1100:47:37Is the growth between 1Q and 2Q a good run rate for the full year? And the second question is about the lupus Phase II trial. Could you talk us through when we could see data from this trial and what you see as the bar for success? Thank you. Speaker 200:47:56Yes. So thanks for joining, Max. So the momentum obviously we're seeing has been very positive first half of the year. As we indicated, we do see an impact from the resolution decision on the pricing because it had an impact on the centers to sort of adjust their actual internal policy and procedures. And during that process, some of the centers were actually not enrolling patients or have to slow down enrollment of patients. Speaker 200:48:26So that has an impact because that obviously then goes through given the time it takes to their manufacturer release and actually ultimately treat the patient. So we're expecting to have an impact in the current quarter. We expect to be outside of any impact related to CMS, the CMS decision in the fourth quarter. So that's kind of where we are. So we're kind of obviously have a very good first half. Speaker 200:48:52I think we had a very good second quarter and we think we're gonna actually overall have a very positive continuation in the second half of the year, but we're not gonna, at this point can give you sort of more guidance than that. With regards to the centers that are active, so out of the 46 centers you see on the access page, the vast majority of those patients actually have treated obviously their patients. There's obviously some very new ones that are actually starting now to actually have are now ready and are ready to actually receive patients. So those are obviously in the process of actually getting their first patient, but the vast majority of the centers that you see on the ADC locator actually have been already treating patients and many of them actually have treated multiple patients. And then the question related to the lupus nephritis study and when to expect data, I think that is premature at this point in time. Speaker 200:49:54We have indicated, I think the regulatory hurdle that the trial is basically designed to sort of take. And as we discussed in the Q and A session at the R and D event, there's obviously a regulatory hurdle, but there was also an expectation that we're probably gonna exceed or would like to set that level to be exceeded. But in terms of data, that is too early to tell. We're starting the study up. We haven't enrolled a single patient at this point. Speaker 200:50:22We expect to have enrolled patients by the end of the year. So, this is premature to actually give guidance on the timeline for enrollment and data. Thank you. Operator00:50:33I'm not showing any further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back to Christian for any further remarks. Speaker 200:50:38Well, first of all, thanks a lot for joining. I would say a great quarter. We're keeping you updated. Obviously, as we go through the third quarter here. We're very pleased with the dynamic we're seeing and the reception of the product. Speaker 200:50:51Keep pushing and we certainly keep pushing our clinical trials and are looking forward to sort of looking for ways to actually making the product available to a larger number of patients beyond adult ALL. And we'll obviously show first data in that regard towards the end of the year, both on the SLE side as well as the pediatric ALL side. With that, I'd like to thank you for joining and wish you a great summer. Thank you. Operator00:51:16Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This does conclude today's presentation. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Autolus Therapeutics Earnings HeadlinesAutolus Therapeutics (NASDAQ:AUTL) Shares Down 3.5% After Analyst DowngradeAugust 14 at 2:41 AM | americanbankingnews.comAutolus Therapeutics Reports Q2 2025 Financial ResultsAugust 13 at 7:55 AM | msn.comOne stock to replace NvidiaInvesting Legend Hints the End May be Near for These 3 Iconic Stocks One company to replace Amazon… another to rival Tesla… and a third to upset Nvidia. These little-known stocks are poised to overtake the three reigning tech darlings in a move that could completely reorder the top dogs of the stock market. Eric Fry gives away names, tickers and full analysis in this first-ever free broadcast. | InvestorPlace (Ad)Autolus Therapeutics PLC (AUTL) Q2 2025 Earnings Call Highlights: Strong Product Sales Amid ...August 13 at 7:55 AM | finance.yahoo.comAutolus Therapeutics: Expanding The Reach Of Its CD19 Therapy, But Still Far From ProfitableAugust 12 at 6:02 PM | seekingalpha.comAutolus Therapeutics plc (AUTL) Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptAugust 12 at 5:08 PM | seekingalpha.comSee More Autolus Therapeutics Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Autolus Therapeutics? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Autolus Therapeutics and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Autolus TherapeuticsAutolus Therapeutics (NASDAQ:AUTL) plc, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company, develops T cell therapies for the treatment of cancer and autoimmune diseases. The company's clinical-stage programs include obecabtagene autoleucel (AUTO1), a CD19-targeting programmed T cell investigational therapy that is in Phase 1b/2 clinical trial for the treatment of adult ALL; AUTO1/22, which is in a Phase 1 clinical trial in pediatric patients with relapsed or refractory ALL; AUTO4, a programmed T cell investigational therapy for the treatment of peripheral T-cell lymphoma targeting TRBC1 and TRBC2; AUTO6NG, a programmed T cell investigational therapy targeting GD2 in development for the treatment of neuroblastoma; and AUTO8, a product candidate to treat multiple myeloma. It focuses on developing AUTO5, a preclinical TRBC2 programmed T cell product candidate for the treatment of peripheral T-cell lymphoma. Autolus Therapeutics plc was incorporated in 2014 and is headquartered in London, the United Kingdom.View Autolus 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 Brinker Serves Up Earnings Beat, Sidesteps Cost PressuresWhy BigBear.ai Stock's Dip on Earnings Can Be an Opportunity CrowdStrike Faces Valuation Test Before Key Earnings ReportPost-Earnings, How Does D-Wave Stack Up Against Quantum Rivals?Why SoundHound AI's Earnings Show the Stock Can Move HigherAirbnb Beats Earnings, But the Growth Story Is Losing AltitudeDutch Bros Just Flipped the Script With a Massive Earnings Beat Upcoming Earnings Palo Alto Networks (8/18/2025)Medtronic (8/19/2025)Home Depot (8/19/2025)Analog Devices (8/20/2025)Synopsys (8/20/2025)TJX Companies (8/20/2025)Lowe's Companies (8/20/2025)Workday (8/21/2025)Intuit (8/21/2025)Walmart (8/21/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Autolus Second Quarter twenty twenty five Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Amanda Cray, Executive Director, Investor Relations. Operator00:00:26Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:29Thank you, Kevin. Good morning or good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today's call. With me are Chief Executive Officer, Doctor. Christian Eitan and Chief Financial Officer, Rob Dolesky. I'd like to remind you that during today's call, we will make statements related to our business that are forward looking under federal securities laws and the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Speaker 100:00:56These may include, but are not limited to, statements regarding status of the ongoing commercial launch of Ocatsol, Autolysis manufacturing, sales and marketing plans for Ocatsol, the market potential for Ocatsol, and the status of clinical trials, development, and or regulatory timelines and market opportunities for OviCel and our other product candidates. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations and reflect our views only as of today. We assume no obligation to update any such forward looking statements. For a discussion of the material risks and uncertainties that could affect our actual results, please refer to the risks identified in today's press release and in our SEC filings, both available on the Investors section of our website. On slide three, you'll see the agenda for today's call. Speaker 100:01:53As usual, Christian will provide an overview of our operational highlights. Rob will then discuss the financial results, and Christian will conclude with upcoming milestones and closing remarks. We'll then take questions. With that, I'll turn it over to Christian. Speaker 200:02:09Thank you, Amanda, and moving to slide four. Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for joining us for the second quarter call. We had an excellent second quarter with good momentum in our launch of a capsule. In the second quarter, we generated $20,900,000 product sales, bringing the first six months of the launch to $29,900,000 The product profile resonates very well with treating physicians and there is a clear unmet medical need. Our supply chain has proven to be robust, reliable, and delivering consistent quality to our customers. Speaker 200:02:44We continue to expand our center presence with now 46 centers authorized for use of a capsule and 90% total US medical lives covered. We're well on track to achieve our year end objective of reaching 60 plus authorized centers. As of July 1, we have permanent HCPCS code effective following a positive CMS decision on April 1. The decision by CMS of a split reimbursement based on the infusion of product was a deviation of precedence. The impact was twofold, a change in revenue recognition for the company and an adjustment of the administrative processes at the medical centers. Speaker 200:03:27The adjustments were made during the second quarter and did slow patient enrollment at those centers. We expect the impact on patients treated to be resolved by Q4. Moving to slide number five, we're very pleased with the progress of our regulatory filings. In April, we received conditional marketing authorization in The UK and in July from the European Commission. We're working on market access in The UK and are interacting with NICE. Speaker 200:03:57In The EU, we are looking at a country by country evaluation. While we aim to get Ocanthol to as many patients as possible, as a small company with limited resources, we also have to be disciplined and make sure to only launch where market access is economically viable. At this stage, we do not expect EU sales in 2025 and 2026. Meanwhile, we continue to engage with physicians and study groups like the German ALL study group to enable ISTs in Europe. In addition, we are broadening our real world experience in The U. Speaker 200:04:34S. With ObiCell, which may provide additional support for our market access conversations elsewhere. Moving to slide number six, the Felix data continued to mature very favorably. At EHA, we presented an update with thirty two point eight months of median follow-up. Importantly, 38% of the responding patients remain in remission without any subsequent treatment. Speaker 200:05:02On slide seven, consistent with this finding, we see median duration of response reached forty two point six months. Slide eight then looks at the overall survival, which shows a plateau forming at around forty percent with most patients beyond two years of observation. A long term outcome together with a favorable safety profile is a strong foundation to build on. Where next with OBI SIL is summarized on slide nine. Our development focus is on expanding the OBI SIL beyond adult patients with relapsedrefractory ALL. Speaker 200:05:40We made good progress with our pediatric study PY1. We expect the Phase one experience to be presented by the year end and are expanding the study from a Phase one to a Phase onetwo study with an intent to expand the age range for our current label. Encouragingly, several of the physicians treating commercial patients expressed an interest in exploring ObiCell in frontline consolidation settings. And we expect to see several ISTs active in 2026. We are also excited about our progress in autoimmune diseases. Speaker 200:06:15Building on the encouraging initial experience in SLE, we are starting up a phase two lupus nephritis study with registrational intent. In addition, our phase one study in progressive multiple sclerosis is open for enrollment now. With that, I'm handing over to Rob for the financial results for the second quarter twenty twenty five. Rob. Speaker 300:06:39Thanks Christian. And good morning or good afternoon to everyone. It's my pleasure to review our financial results for the second quarter twenty twenty five. In the second quarter, net product revenue for the three months ending 06/30/2025 was 20,900,000.0 compared with 9,000,000 in the first quarter. As Christian noted, we continue to be encouraged by Elcatsil's uptake and strong momentum in The US. Speaker 300:07:08Cost of sales in the second quarter totaled 24,400,000.0. As a reminder, this amount includes the cost of all commercial product delivered to the authorized treatment centers, including product delivered but not yet administered to patients. So again, as a reminder, the sales value of these products not yet recorded as product revenue in the P and L is reflected as deferred revenue on the balance sheet and our deferred revenue balance at the end of Q2 was 2,100,000.0. Additionally, cost of sales includes any canceled orders in the period, our patient access program product, third party royalties for certain technologies, as well as idle capacity. As expected, this dynamic will drive cost of sales to be higher at the beginning of the launch as we've experienced versus what we would consider our ultimate target. Speaker 300:08:03Our expectation is to see improvement as volumes increase and as we improve efficiencies in our own manufacturing operations. Moving on to research and development, these expenses decreased to 27,400,000.0 for the three months ending 06/30/2025 that's compared to 36,600,000.0 during the same period in '24. This change was primarily driven by the commercial manufacturing related employee and infrastructure costs that have shifted out of R and D expense into our cost of sales and inventory. Our selling, general and administrative expenses increased to 30,300,000 for the three months ending 06/30/2025 and that's compared to 21,900,000.0 in the same period in '24. This increase was primarily due to salaries and other employee related costs driven by increased headcount supporting our commercialization activities. Speaker 300:09:00Our loss from operations for the three months ending 06/30/2025 was 61,200,000.0 as compared to 58,900,000.0 for the same period in 2024. During the quarter, we also recorded 12,100,000.0 in net interest income and expense. This is primarily driven by a one time non cash adjustment to the liability related to the valuation of future royalties and milestones associated with the Blackstone and BioNTech agreements. The valuation assessment incorporated the revised commercial assumptions already discussed by Christian with respect to the EU launch. And finally net loss was 47,900,000.0 for the three months ending 06/30/2025, reduced from a loss of 58,300,000.0 for the same period in 2024. Speaker 300:09:56Our cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities at Q2 twenty twenty five total 454,300,000 as compared to $588,000,000 at the December 2024. This decrease was primarily driven by net cash use in operating activities and also impacted by a delay cash receipt of approximately 21,700,000.0 in R and D tax credit that we've expected from The UK HMRC, which was expected to receive during the six months ending June 30, but has been delayed. We continue to believe that with our current cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, we are well capitalized to drive the launch and commercialization of OB cell and to obtain data in the LN pivotal trial as well as MS phase one study. I'll now hand back to Christian to wrap things up with a brief outlook on expected milestones for the rest of the year. Christian. Speaker 200:10:57Thanks a lot, Rob. So this gets me to kind of the outlook for the remainder of the year. The two data releases that we're planning, the first one is the updated data from our Phase I in S patients, which we expect to provide the update at the ACR meeting at the October. And then we're aiming to provide a review of the Phase I data of our pediatric ALL experience towards the end of the year. When we look at the clinical trial conduct, we expect first patients to be dosed for our lupus nephritis phase two study, our MS phase one study and the AUTO8 study in amyloidosis, which is also expected to dose the first patient in the second half of the year. Speaker 200:11:43So a lot of progress and I think driving towards a very attractive dynamic on the launch, but also driving hard towards an expanded use of Ovicell beyond the relapsedrefractory adult ALL opportunity. And with that, I think we're in a great spot for the second half of the year. I'm happy for you to actually join us for the Q and A session. Thank you. Operator00:12:08Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. If your question has been answered, you wish to move yourself from the queue, please press star one one again. We will pause for a moment while we compile our Q and A roster. Our first question comes from James Shin with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 400:12:31Good morning, guys. Thank you for the question. First question is for Christian on the Germany launch. Was this originally a green light, call it, but flip to hold based on pricing and reimbursement changes from, say, the MSN undercurrent? And then I guess the second one for Rob is once the split reimbursement is I guess absorbed or embedded by the hospitals, is enrollment and sales expected to accelerate or like what's the recognition pattern or cadence thereafter? Speaker 400:13:05Thank you. Speaker 200:13:06Thanks a lot for joining James. So what I think is important to understand in terms of the market access process in Europe in general, is that the methodologies that are being used for market access are designed to use data from randomized controlled studies. And that has been a challenge, think for, I think many of the CAR T programs and cell and gene therapy programs in general, which are based typically are placed in rare diseases initially typically based on single arm studies. So that's a methodological challenge that we do have across the board and across all of the assessing agencies and bodies. So that's, I think first, the first observation. Speaker 200:13:49So there is a disjointedness and with that an element of a judgment call required. The second is clearly that we have to make sure that we are navigating, I think the various processes such that we do get to play a outcome that is economically reasonable for us and doable for us. What we have seen in the past is that, for certain products were launched below their actual production prices, which obviously is not a good precedent and doesn't really, I think support a sustained business. And as a consequence, we've seen a substantial proportion of cell and gene therapy products actually not being launched in Europe. There's something like eight out of 18 that were not launched. Speaker 200:14:33So that's it, that's the backdrop. So we're gonna do this very methodically gonna go through country by country and are gonna navigating that. What is important to understand as well is obviously in the current environment that there is a number of countries actually do publish the actual negotiated prices and you were pointing to MFN, and you can imagine that also creates obviously a possible tension that may or may not be helpful in the process. So we're gonna take a very disciplined approach. We're gonna engage with the respective countries and we're gonna work through the process, but we're also, we'll certainly make sure that we're gonna get to the right outcomes before launching, which is why we're sort of putting to a longer timeline before we realize any sales in Europe. Speaker 200:15:24And with that, I'm handing over to Rob. Speaker 300:15:27Yeah, hi James. Your question on the revenue recognition. So just to maybe clarify the specifics here. So we moved from the first quarter where all recognized was recognized on the first administration of OB cell to a fiftyfifty split between the first administration and the second administration. At the time, we also called out that obviously this is only for a portion of patients, CMS outpatients, and the time between those two time points was per the label about ten days plus or minus two days I think in the field we've seen about nine days thus far. Speaker 300:16:06So the specific implementation of the revenue recognition change, we said at the time was going to have a very little impact and we kind of see that as this quarter has even played out. The adjustments that Christian referred to certainly that the centers had to make more on the administrative side and then in turn impacting some of the registrations that were happening in that timeframe. We really expect those to resolve themselves kind of a full quarter basis by Q4, but we will see some of that certainly in Q2 and probably early in Q3. Speaker 500:16:49Thank you. Operator00:16:50One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Matt Phipps with William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 600:17:01Hi. Thanks for taking my question and all the updates today. I guess, Robert, quickly then, what happens if a patient only gets the first infusion? I realize this doesn't happen very often, but is there just a eventual time where you can recognize the rest of that? And then just thinking ahead, I'm sure no guidance here, but do you think you can become you can gross profit positive sometime by the end of this year or next year? Speaker 600:17:28Just wondering if how we think about kind of that getting over that fixed cost and getting to kind of capacity levels where you think we at least get to a gross profit level? Thank you. Speaker 200:17:41For joining, I'll take first the first question and hand over to Rob. So when you have the first infusion and only the first infusion, which is actually extremely rare because obviously the only reason why that second infusion wasn't happen is the patient would have an adverse event reaction that wouldn't allow you to actually do second dose. And you remember from our clinical experience, that is exceedingly rare. And in fact, we do see this very, very rarely in the commercial setting. If that happens, then only the first infusion will be recognized. Speaker 200:18:15If the second is not administered, that will not be recognized. So with that, I'm handing over to Rob to address the fixed cost questions. Speaker 300:18:27Yeah, Matt. So on the gross margin front, certainly we saw as you looked quarter to quarter from Q4 even last year where we had to recognize some idle capacity costs and then into Q1 and Q2 certainly trending the right way in terms of that number getting closer to break even. It's really a volume story for this year and so what we've been very focused on is making sure the product is available and we wanna really make sure there's no limitations to the launch. We do expect as certainly the second half of the year will play out and we continue to see volume increases that that'll continue moving in the right direction. No specific timing in terms of guidance and you know kind of when something will flip but we certainly expect in the second half to continue in that direction. Operator00:19:23Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Gil Blum with Needham and Company. Your line is open. Speaker 700:19:33Good morning, everyone, congrats on a strong quarter. Maybe a quick question here as it relates to kind of how is the product being received by the community in The US. Do you have some anecdotal feedback and maybe already some level of reorders? And I have a follow-up. Speaker 200:19:55Well, thanks a lot for joining, Gil. The reception has been very, very positive. What we're seeing is and what we have pointed out in the past is obviously that the safety profile and the manageability was really something that was immediately experienceable and that's been incredibly helpful. And we believe it's one of the key reasons also why we had early, very early on, we started to see actually reorders at the centers for the product. And that actually is developing very nicely across the centers that are active, commercially active at this point. Speaker 200:20:27So this looks very positive and I think has a very nice reinforcing impact. And I think it's in line with frankly, prior experience. What we now see obviously, as we go to the middle of the year is that we start, the physicians start to see the outcome, not just the immediate manageability of the product, but also the outcome in their patients. And we think that's gonna be sort of a second push as we go into the second part of the year. And certainly the Felix data that we update that we presented at strongly, think point in that direction with the long term plateau that we're seeing in the data and the survival data. Speaker 200:21:04And obviously a lot of the patients not requiring additional therapy, which is obviously resonating very well. So we're really pleased with what we're seeing, the dynamic and the feedback we're getting from the product, the experience, but also the experience obviously that the centers have with our commercial team and the reliability on the supply side, on the production side, which I think are really important to sort of actually have a be a real partner, frankly, for these physicians and patients in this space. Speaker 700:21:35Thank you for that. And can you provide any additional color regarding your negotiations with NICE? Speaker 200:21:44So the process is obviously a very regulated process where there's obviously a query for quite a substantial amount of information and health economic assessments that we sort of provide and provide the data behind that. And then it is a process that actually involves to quite an extent the treating physicians with experience with the product and experience with the indication, but also the patients themselves, which do actually have a voice in this process. So there is a dynamic there where there's the company provides information, but we're actually not actively negotiating in that process, in particular interaction with NICE, but it's a process that's actually within that body with obviously information requested from us, but then also support from the physician and patient community. And so this is ongoing. We went through a first step. Speaker 200:22:36There is a second step now that we're running through and we'll need to see where we get to. And then there's additional different paths that you can take from there on forward. So we're in the midst of this. So this is also a time point where it's very difficult to sort of give a view on where it may go and we'll need to see kind of how it develops. But overall, you know, very strong support from the physicians and the patients for the product, which is obviously consistent with the experience that we had with Ovicell or Ocatsil in The UK. Speaker 200:23:09And I would say many of the patients that we have treated in our clinical trials were UK patients. So, there is a strong amount of experience, also firsthand experience available, which we believe is helpful. Speaker 700:23:21Thank you for taking our questions. Speaker 200:23:23Thanks a lot, Gil. Operator00:23:24One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Ashtika Gouniwadding with Truist. Your line is open. Speaker 500:23:34Hey, guys. Good morning. I'll echo my congrats on the strong El Capsule launch here that's panning out. A couple of quick financial questions and operational questions, then I got something more bigger picture. So to start with on the you've added about a dozen or so ATCs since your Q1 earnings. Speaker 500:23:54Can you maybe walk us through the plan for bringing on more centers by your end? And is there sort of like a training period as you bring on a new center that would make us kind of think about how productive these centers are as they come on? And then the other quick financial question is, can you quantify the impact of out of spec products in your COGS? Speaker 200:24:24Okay, I'll take the ATC question first and then hand off to Rob on the OS question. So, did add, obviously, you're correct, we added about 12 ATCs that are now active, and we're gonna continue obviously to add to the end of the year. We expect to be at 60 plus by the end of the year. So that progresses very nicely. When we look at the centers, obviously the way that we have weighted the centers was to really look at those centers that have larger patient flows and often actually already have experience very early on and then kept adding to that. Speaker 200:25:01So you start actually with what do you think the centers are that will have a relatively high patient flow, and then gradually actually fill out the network of centers to make sure that patients have a good reach and also wouldn't have too much of a distance to access the therapy. And that's kind of what we're in. So we're at this point in time, we keep on expanding into a geography that we haven't been present in, which we believe is important to make sure we're serving the breadth of The US very well. And we're making good progress on that. And with that also, I think we have an ability to make sure that the therapy actually becomes truly accessible for the vast majority of patients in The US. Speaker 200:25:48So this is when you look at the, you can look at the ADC locator and you see, we have a very significant amount of centers, basically almost in a U shaped form, from Chicago all the way up through the Midwest down to the South and back up again to way up to the West. And there's clearly additional centers that we're opening up in between to make sure that we actually have a very good distribution there. So that's sort of the way we're looking at that and really a clear focus is to make sure that there is access in a reasonable distance. And with that, I think having an attractive network of clinics available for the patients to access. So with that, I think Rob, just to follow-up on the OS question and potential impact overall. Speaker 300:26:46Yep, sure. Thanks Oskar for the question. So let me first comment when you think about out of spec and kind of financially where things land, there's actually two places where this can go and so it's important to understand what drives that. So in certain situations we do have an out of spec protocol that the site can choose to put the patient onto and if the patient does receive the dose even though it's out of spec under that out of spec protocol it actually lands in our R and D expense. What lands in cost of sales is out of spec product that is not administered under that protocol effectively like a scrap charge that goes through across the sales. Speaker 300:27:32So it's very hard to predict where patients will land in those two buckets, but it's fair to say that our experience to date overall in terms of our out of spec rates have been very aligned with the Felix study. And we said in the past that that's gonna land somewhere between a five to 10% kind of range in terms of the experience and to date what we've seen in the commercial launch. Speaker 500:27:58Great. Thanks, guys. And then just a bigger picture question on Europe here on the European rollout. If you decide to launch in a specific country, let's say in The UK, would you expect patients to travel from neighboring countries to receive therapy? Have you seen this happening with other CAR Ts launches in Europe? Speaker 500:28:18And maybe you can talk a little bit about the profile of OLKADSOL that might permit this to take place. Speaker 200:28:25It's a really good question and something we've been looking into. So first of all, what we're seeing from a UK perspective is that there is a certain amount of medical tourism towards The UK for patients to get access. Typically that medical tourism is coming from outside the EU to The UK, but there is a level of that. When we look within the EU, what we do see is that there is cross border treatments that we certainly would see in a lot of the, particularly the border regions where the infrastructure may not be evenly distributed across the border. Some of you know that I'm a Swiss national, I grew up close to Basel, which is very close to obviously Germany and France, literally bordering on both countries. Speaker 200:29:14And it's quite typical that if there are complex cases, children with complex issues or adults with complex issues that they might actually coming from the surrounding areas within Germany or France into the university hospital in Basel across the border to be treated there. And there are also movements the other way if the speciality actually is on the other side of the border. So that actually does happen. And it is probably at this point difficult to quantify, but it clearly is not unusual to actually see that. To what extent that would be applicable for patients with acute leukemia, I do not know, but what we do know, and this is my old experience developing BLINCYTO, we had patients from quite a wide range of countries and certainly during clinical trials to access trials in Germany and try and looking for treatment in Germany. Speaker 200:30:12And we also see that on the, there's also some of that on the commercial side as well. So it is very much, I think it's a possibility and I think it's an area we're looking more into. Obviously this has a lot to do with the nature of the insurance and the payers set up and obviously getting clearance from the payers, which typically for certain emergencies that's clearly happening. And we're looking into to what extent and what breadth this would be applicable here as well. But it is not unusual to see complex therapies to be accessed across the border. Speaker 500:30:47Thanks guys. Operator00:30:49One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Kelly Shee with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 800:30:58Congrats on the progress and thanks for taking my questions. As you're now expanded to 46 treatment centers across The US, Curious if could share learnings, if the early adopters and also with reordering comes from also a high volume centers of Takeda, so all you actually see a different pattern. And also for Germany and The UK, one could we anticipate first revenue recording and also have a follow-up? Thanks. Speaker 200:31:30Okay, very good. Thanks for joining, Kelly. You're right, it's very interesting when we look at our centers in The US, we look at the use pattern across the centers. We have a range of centers that have quite exceeded our expectations in terms of the patients that they treated. And part of that expectation on our side was actually prior knowledge of the level of use of CAR T in this indication in the past. Speaker 200:32:00And clearly that looks changed in a good number of centers. So that's been very encouraging. We're also seeing centers where there are multiple physicians actually administering the product, which is another key metric that we're looking at. So, not only have one physician at a center prescribed, but actually getting the use of the product more broadly distributed across all of the prescribing physicians for this indication. That's a dynamic we're following very carefully. Speaker 200:32:27And I think it's one of the key areas that we're gonna be focusing on for our centers. It's important to understand that most of the patients are in fact being or expect that most of the patients with the relapsedrefractory disease are going to be treated at those give or take 60 centers that we're targeting now. And that gives you clearly a very significant opportunity to focus from a commercial perspective and really build on the relationships, the connections, the experience at the center to actually keep expanding the use so that we are sort of getting to a place where the patients that are eligible for the therapy and can benefit from the therapy actually get access to it. So the dynamic I think we're seeing is very remarkable. Repeat use is one of the key things we're looking at. Speaker 200:33:17We're seeing a very nice adoption of repeat use across all our centers and we're really monitoring that very carefully and it's supporting that process. So this has been very, I think very interesting and the high volume centers have been phenomenal to see kind of the level of engagement and patient flow that resulted from that. And we're clearly building on that and we're sort of gonna take the learnings from those centers also into the other centers. And then with regards to The UK and Germany, obviously those are two different processes from a patient access perspective. We're in the midst of the current process in The UK and I hope that over the next few months, we can actually get to a resolution there. Speaker 200:34:04And then actually, if positive, we would expect to be able to launch in the probably early part end of this year, early part of next year, but it is contingent on obviously getting a reasonable outcome that is economically viable for us. And so that's kind of what we're working towards. And in Germany, we're certainly want to sort of have more engagement on the physician, the patient side, but also with the respective regulatory bodies in Germany. And at the same time, we're looking for more data to also become available over time from the experience, the real world experience in The US, which we hope would also actually be supportive for these conversations. So at this point, we're not guiding to sales in Germany because it ultimately is dependent on where we're gonna end up in those negotiations. Speaker 200:34:59But we're also looking at other European countries and we may change the order of access within Europe based on where we are and what we know at this point. Speaker 800:35:10Super helpful. Thanks so much. And also for autoimmune, curious for the SAR presentation in Q4, what other data points could be included beyond what has been presented in the past? And also, could you share some additional color? Maybe do you have other ongoing translational studies, maybe to tell us more on like a B cell dynamic, or maybe some of the correlation to patient baseline characteristics to guide future development in autoimmune space? Speaker 800:35:46Thank you. Speaker 200:35:47Yeah, very good questions. Thanks, Kelly. So, with regards to the data at ACR, obviously the key update will be related to the longer follow-up of the six patients that we had reported on at the R and D event earlier in Q2. And I think that will give us a good idea of kind of how the product overall actually is performing because we're gonna have six plus months of follow-up with all the patients. So I think that will be, I think probably the key part of the follow-up. Speaker 200:36:17We actually did enroll more patients on the study. So there is also gonna be earlier data from those patients that will be included. And I think that's obviously one of the key areas. We've been looking very carefully at a lot of different parameters for these patients to develop a good understanding of the pharmacodynamics, both of the product, but also and how we're impacting potential disease stations, etcetera. So those are datasets that we're also pulling together and we're gonna be looking at. Speaker 200:36:49We're looking at a range of, obviously I've been evaluating a range of indications. Obviously the first one that we sort of decided to move on is lupus nephritis. That's clearly where we're gonna double down on. And I mentioned the fact that we're obviously we're opening that study and we're making really good progress there and expect to have patients treated still this year. And that gives us, I think will give us a very nice momentum in that study also considering it's a very compact study, will give us a shot to also frankly be first in class in that indication. Speaker 200:37:26And then secondly, we're obviously very interested in seeing the performance of the product in the progressive MS patients. And there's gonna be also a lot of analysis that will be done in those patients, translational type of analysis to understand the impact of the mechanism of action, etcetera, in addition to obviously the actual clinical readouts and the imaging readouts that we're gonna be taking from those patients. So there's quite a lot going on there and there's also obviously additional work that we're doing to look into additional indications options, but obviously for now, very much focused on the indications I just went through. Thank you. Operator00:38:09Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Simon Baker with Rothschild and Company Redburn. Speaker 900:38:19Thank you for taking my questions. Two, if I may, please. Firstly, Christian, just going back to the European launch outlook. For, shall we say, traditional drug launches, there's a fairly established routine of going Germany first because you can set your price and then it gets adjusted and then work your way through the countries ultimately receiving towards the end reimbursement in France. Clearly that's not the same in cell therapy. Speaker 900:38:47I wonder if you could just highlight any areas where there is a markedly different process of seeking reimbursement which affects the order of countries in which you will seek to launch? And then secondly, going back to The UK, at the same time that NICE was saying no to Ocasio, the MHRA introduced the world's first framework for point of care manufacture of cell therapies including CAR T. I just wanted to get your perspectives on the pertinence of that to Autolus and if any other regulators in the world are looking at similar approaches? Thanks so much. Speaker 200:39:26Yes, good question. So the first one is around kind of sequence of launch in Europe. You're correct, for many of more traditional therapies, the sequence of launch tends to be Germany, the least traditionally be to Germany and then you kinda walk through kinda a series of countries to sort of ultimately get the majority of them. That started to actually change somewhat. Obviously Germany is still the single biggest market, but in terms of market access, not necessarily the most attractive country in Europe. Speaker 200:39:57So that's, I think that's, and that we're talking sort of pre the current administration. That's certainly been true. When we look at the current administration, I think there are a few things to keep in mind. First of all, the most favorite nation process obviously is one that actually reference prices in various territories. Now there are two types of prices that tend to be quoted. Speaker 200:40:23One is a list price, the other one is discounted price. Now different countries actually deal with that in different ways. Some countries publish list prices, but not negotiated prices. Some countries publish negotiated prices. And you can imagine in the current environment where there's a lot of uncertainty around what processes are, frankly, what are the rules, what's gonna be applicable and so on and so forth. Speaker 200:40:49That creates, I think a lot of questions for frankly, all pharmaceutical companies looking at launching in Europe because depending on where you are, what you agreed to, etcetera, you may actually have discrepancy to The US price at which point you might actually be having an exposure that may or may not be reasonable to take. So that's one generally across the board, I think something that I think every pharmaceutical company needs to look at, needs to think about because it's a very significant level of uncertainty and very unclear set of rules that ultimately may apply or may not apply. So that's sort of one area to look at. The second part is that, and this has been one of the real challenges in the cell and gene therapy space is that the methodology to actually calculate the prices and sort of provide market access at has been designed for very different type of products and very different types of clinical data. When you look at the cell and gene therapy space, most of the indications we're developing in, we're developing in very high medical need settings in smaller indications, and we're going for very high treatment effects. Speaker 200:41:59The reason what that does is allows us to actually develop and which is what all regulators agree with, to develop with single arm clinical trials for approval and demonstrating very clear cut clinical benefit and risk benefit profile in those indications. And we see that across the board. There's a huge disconnect between the view that we have with the regulators and the methodology that we're seeing for market access, which are all based on classical randomized controlled studies that then also assume you can do a direct comparison to a similar product and quite often. And so that's typically then obviously difficult. You haven't seen CAR T therapies that are being compared in a single trial. Speaker 200:42:46And we're not gonna see that going forward. That's not actually doable. So what's then happening is your next best thing is you've got to kind of compare against some form of standard of care, which varies widely of what that actually is considered to be. And then in the absence of a actual direct comparison and randomized controlled data to your product creates the situation that the model doesn't actually allow you to quantify because the model doesn't can handle the data. And so as a consequence, you get a benefit, which is acknowledged, but it cannot be quantified. Speaker 200:43:21And hence it's called a non quantifiable benefit, which is an oxymoron in English. It kind of works in German where some of those concepts came from. So the problem that that creates is a very significant disconnect that actually the system is not set up to value that. And on top of that, have not in The UK, but for most of Europe, a disconnect between how healthcare actually and healthcare costs are looked at. You have obviously a very significant component that are infrastructure related. Speaker 200:43:53These are your hospitals, your staffing, your basic operation, etcetera, which is a huge chunk of the cost in any healthcare system. Well, in most European countries that is covered by taxes and it's opaque, not actually not transparent, not visible to the public, what that actually costs. What then actually is sort of going into the assessment is in essence what's leftover. And that's mostly the therapeutic diagnostic costs and some very specific procedures. And that's actually what's carried by the payers. Speaker 200:44:25That disconnect is very, very significant and creates a problem because then if you wanna have a full value assessment, you cannot actually properly do that because obviously a big chunk as an example of a one off therapy that gives you curative outcome as a hypothetical example, that has a huge impact on your infrastructure bit and not using, not actually utilizing that infrastructure. That's not covered. That's not part of the model. And hence we do have a huge disconnect in the view of value. And that's where the fundamental disconnect is in the various systems. Speaker 200:45:00And that is sort of why this is more of an actual process to go through and why it leads to kind of quite different types of outcomes and different assessments. So those are, I think a few points there to consider, which are just very different, significant differences in the underlying methodology and the way that frankly healthcare is being paid for. Speaker 1000:45:22Great. Thank you. Operator00:45:23One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Yanan Zhu with Wells Fargo. Speaker 1000:45:34Hi. This is Jeff on for Yanan. Thanks for taking our questions. For the Elcatsa launch in The US, can you provide any detail on how many patients were treated in the second quarter and year to date? And then second question on the longer term SLE readout at ACR in late October. Speaker 1000:45:52It was mentioned that additional patients have been enrolled beyond the initial six. How many patients do you anticipate including in the readout? I believe there were a total of 12 to be dosed in phase one. Have all 12 been treated and were any of them adolescent? Thanks. Speaker 200:46:08Yeah, very good question. So first of all, we have not guided on the number of patients, but you can actually backtrack the numbers, I think reasonably well from knowing the cost of the therapy, but we haven't given a detailed number there. But I think you get very close just by backtracking. The second is related to the number of SLE patients. We obviously continue to dose patients. Speaker 200:46:33We had a small cohort at an elevated dose level of 100,000,000, and we have expanded the trial to include three adolescent patients. We do not expect given the timing for the data cut to actually have adolescent patients in the analysis. The focus will be on the adult patients and we'll sort of give an up to date view on the experience with the 50,000,000 and probably initial experience on 100,000,000. Speaker 1000:47:08Got it. Thank you very much. Operator00:47:09Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Max Dahl with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:47:20Hi. This is Max for Roger and Sharma. Thank you for taking my question. First one is, could you comment on what proportion of your centers are now operational and enrolling patients? And how should we think about the revenue momentum and trajectory? Speaker 1100:47:37Is the growth between 1Q and 2Q a good run rate for the full year? And the second question is about the lupus Phase II trial. Could you talk us through when we could see data from this trial and what you see as the bar for success? Thank you. Speaker 200:47:56Yes. So thanks for joining, Max. So the momentum obviously we're seeing has been very positive first half of the year. As we indicated, we do see an impact from the resolution decision on the pricing because it had an impact on the centers to sort of adjust their actual internal policy and procedures. And during that process, some of the centers were actually not enrolling patients or have to slow down enrollment of patients. Speaker 200:48:26So that has an impact because that obviously then goes through given the time it takes to their manufacturer release and actually ultimately treat the patient. So we're expecting to have an impact in the current quarter. We expect to be outside of any impact related to CMS, the CMS decision in the fourth quarter. So that's kind of where we are. So we're kind of obviously have a very good first half. Speaker 200:48:52I think we had a very good second quarter and we think we're gonna actually overall have a very positive continuation in the second half of the year, but we're not gonna, at this point can give you sort of more guidance than that. With regards to the centers that are active, so out of the 46 centers you see on the access page, the vast majority of those patients actually have treated obviously their patients. There's obviously some very new ones that are actually starting now to actually have are now ready and are ready to actually receive patients. So those are obviously in the process of actually getting their first patient, but the vast majority of the centers that you see on the ADC locator actually have been already treating patients and many of them actually have treated multiple patients. And then the question related to the lupus nephritis study and when to expect data, I think that is premature at this point in time. Speaker 200:49:54We have indicated, I think the regulatory hurdle that the trial is basically designed to sort of take. And as we discussed in the Q and A session at the R and D event, there's obviously a regulatory hurdle, but there was also an expectation that we're probably gonna exceed or would like to set that level to be exceeded. But in terms of data, that is too early to tell. We're starting the study up. We haven't enrolled a single patient at this point. Speaker 200:50:22We expect to have enrolled patients by the end of the year. So, this is premature to actually give guidance on the timeline for enrollment and data. Thank you. Operator00:50:33I'm not showing any further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back to Christian for any further remarks. Speaker 200:50:38Well, first of all, thanks a lot for joining. I would say a great quarter. We're keeping you updated. Obviously, as we go through the third quarter here. We're very pleased with the dynamic we're seeing and the reception of the product. Speaker 200:50:51Keep pushing and we certainly keep pushing our clinical trials and are looking forward to sort of looking for ways to actually making the product available to a larger number of patients beyond adult ALL. And we'll obviously show first data in that regard towards the end of the year, both on the SLE side as well as the pediatric ALL side. With that, I'd like to thank you for joining and wish you a great summer. Thank you. Operator00:51:16Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This does conclude today's presentation. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by