Isis Reports Strong Financial Results and Highlights for Second Quarter of 2009
2009年8月6日 - 8:00PM
PRニュース・ワイアー (英語)
- Conference Call Webcast Thursday, August 6, 08:30 a.m. EDT at
www.isispharm.com CARLSBAD, Calif., Aug. 6 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/
-- Isis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:ISIS) today announced its
financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2009. During 2009
Isis has continued to successfully execute its business strategy
and as a result reported $669,000 of pro forma net income for the
quarter ended June 30, 2009, a significant improvement over the
same period in 2008. Isis also reported a pro forma net operating
loss of $1.3 million for the second quarter compared to pro forma
net operating income of $4.6 million for the same period in 2008.
Maintaining its strong cash position, Isis ended the quarter with
$637.5 million of cash and remains on track to end 2009 with more
than $550 million of cash. Isis also remains on track to meet its
guidance of more than $145 million of pro forma net income and a
pro forma net operating loss in the low to mid $20 million range,
in both cases excluding non-cash stock compensation expense. "Our
strong financial performance is a direct result of the success of
our technology platform and business strategy. We and our partners
are advancing our large and growing pipeline of 19 drugs in
development. Our partnership strategy not only allows our drugs to
move forward effectively toward the market but also provides us
with significant short and intermediate term financial benefits
that enable us to continue to advance the technology and fill the
pipeline with more exciting new drugs," said B. Lynne Parshall, COO
and CFO of Isis. Upcoming Key Milestones -- Report full data from a
Phase 3 study evaluating mipomersen in homozygous Familial
Hypercholesterolemia (FH) patients; positive top line data was
reported in May 2009 -- Report data from additional mipomersen
studies in other patient populations -- Report data from a Phase 2
study evaluating ISIS 113715 in combination with sulfonylureas in
patients with type 2 diabetes -- Begin clinical trials on at least
one additional drug in 2009; clinical trials already initiated on
three drugs this year -- Expand pipeline by moving at least two
additional drugs into development in 2009; one new drug has already
moved into development this year Financial Results On a GAAP basis,
Isis reported a loss from operations of $4.8 million and $5.5
million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2009,
respectively, compared to income from operations of $1.1 million
and a loss from operations of $5.2 million for the three and six
months ended June 30, 2008, respectively. Additionally, Isis
reported a net loss of $2.9 million and net income of $168.9
million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2009,
respectively, compared to its net loss of $3.7 million and $9.5
million for the same periods in 2008. Isis' financial results in
2009 reflect higher expenses associated with the expansion of the
Company's programs as discussed in more detail in the "Operating
Expenses" section below, offset in part, by an increase in revenue
recognized in 2009 from Isis' corporate partnerships compared to
2008. Also, Ibis' revenue and expense are included in Isis' 2008
financial results as discontinued operations and are not included
in Isis' 2009 financial results. In addition, Isis' 2009 financial
results reflect the sale of Ibis. Please refer to the
reconciliation of pro forma and GAAP measures, which is explained
later in this release. As a result of selling Isis' diagnostic
subsidiary, Ibis Biosciences, to Abbott Molecular Inc. (AMI) in the
first quarter of 2009, Isis is reporting Ibis' financial results as
discontinued operations. Accordingly, Isis has presented all
periods of Ibis' operating results in Isis' financial statements
separately as discontinued operations. The discontinued operations
line in the first six months of 2009 also includes the $171.8
million gain that Isis recognized on the sale net of taxes. A
reconciliation summarizing the adjustments made to reflect the
changes to Isis' 2008 historical statement of operations appears
later in this release. Revenue Revenue for the three and six months
ended June 30, 2009 was $31.0 million and $62.6 million compared to
$29.7 million and $48.1 million in the same periods of 2008. The
substantial increase in Isis' revenue is primarily due to an
increase in revenue from the Company's collaboration with Genzyme
because the three and six months ended June 30, 2008 only included
one month of amortization of the $175 million license fee that Isis
received in June 2008. Isis' satellite companies also contributed
to the increase in the Company's revenue: -- Regulus Therapeutics
earned revenue from its strategic alliance with GlaxoSmithKline
(GSK), including a $500,000 discovery milestone payment. -- Isis
entered into a license agreement with Alnylam, which provided an
$11 million license fee plus research funding. Isis began
amortizing the license fee into revenue in the second quarter. --
Isis received a $375,000 milestone payment from Alnylam for
initiation of clinical trials on ALN-VSP. -- Isis earned $1.4
million of revenue when Isis sold drug to OncoGenex
Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Isis' revenue fluctuates based on the nature
and timing of payments under agreements with the Company's
partners, including license fees, milestone-related payments and
other payments, such as the bulleted items above. Assuming no new
transactions, the Company's revenue will decrease when the $50
million upfront payment Isis received from Ortho-McNeil-Janssen in
2007 is fully amortized in the third quarter of this year.
Operating Expenses On a pro forma basis, operating expenses for the
three and six months ended June 30, 2009 were $32.3 million and
$61.8 million compared to $25.1 million and $46.4 million for the
same periods in 2008. Consistent with Isis' guidance, the higher
expenses in 2009 were primarily due to the expansion of the
Company's clinical development programs, including additional
expenses associated with the broad Phase 3 clinical program for
mipomersen, the lead drug in Isis' cardiovascular franchise,
expenses for Regulus as it builds its core team and expenses
related to the Company's expansion of its drug discovery activities
into new therapeutic areas. On a GAAP basis, Isis' operating
expenses from continuing operations for the three and six months
ended June 30, 2009 were $35.8 million and $68.0 million compared
to $28.6 million and $53.2 million for the same periods in 2008,
including non-cash compensation expense related to stock options of
$3.6 million and $6.3 million for the three and six months ended
June 30, 2009 and $3.5 million and $6.8 million for the same
periods in 2008. During the remainder of 2009, Isis' operating
expenses will increase modestly as Isis continues its research and
development activities described above. Interest Expense In 2009,
Isis adopted FASB Staff Position No. APB 14-1 (FSP 14-1) for its 2
5/8% convertible notes, which required Isis to assign a value to
its convertible debt without considering the conversion feature. As
a result, Isis is recording its convertible debt at a discount,
which Isis is amortizing over the expected life of the debt as
additional non-cash interest expense. FSP 14-1 required
retrospective application to all periods presented. Accordingly,
the amount of interest expense Isis recorded in its statement of
operations for the three and six months ended June 30, 2009
increased by $1.7 million and $3.3 million compared to an increase
of $1.5 million and $3.0 million for the same periods in 2008. This
new standard did not impact Isis' cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments but decreased the carrying value of Isis'
$162.5 million convertible notes to $121.5 million and $118.0
million at June 30, 2009 and December 31, 2008, respectively, with
corresponding increases to shareholders' equity. A reconciliation
summarizing the adjustments made to reflect the changes to Isis'
2008 historical statement of operations appears later in this
release. Net Income (Loss) from Continuing Operations, Net of
Income Tax Benefit Net loss from continuing operations for the
second quarter of 2009 was $3.8 million compared to net income from
continuing operations of $463,000 for the same period in 2008. For
the six months ended June 30, 2009 and 2008, net loss from
continuing operations was $4.6 million and $5.6 million,
respectively. Even though Isis finished the first six months of
2009 with a net loss from continuing operations, Isis had taxable
income, which is primarily a result of the significant upfront
payments that the Company received from its strategic alliance with
Genzyme in 2008 and the gain it recognized on the sale of Ibis to
AMI earlier this year. Accounting rules require Isis to record an
income tax benefit of $656,000 on a line called "Income Tax
Benefit" as part of its financial results from continuing
operations because it will be using the tax benefits generated from
its current year loss from continuing operations to offset a
portion of its taxable income. Isis' net loss from continuing
operations also included a $2.5 million gain on investments that
Isis recognized in the second quarter of 2009 when it sold the
stock it held in OncoGenex. OncoGenex' stock price increased
significantly in the second quarter of 2009 after announcing
encouraging data from its clinical studies of OGX-011 and OGX-427.
This gain further demonstrates the value that Isis is recognizing
from its satellite company strategy. Net Income (Loss) from
Discontinued Operations The net income (loss) from discontinued
operations represents the operating results of Ibis that are
presented separately in Isis' financial statements as a result of
the sale of Ibis to AMI in January 2009. Net income from
discontinued operations in the first six months of 2009 primarily
consists of the $202.5 million gain less income taxes. Accounting
rules require Isis to allocate its 2009 tax expense between
discontinued operations and continuing operations in its
Consolidated Statement of Operations. Since the sale of Ibis to AMI
was a discrete event that occurred in the first quarter of 2009,
the accounting rules required Isis to record the total amount of
its estimated income tax expense for discontinued operations in the
first quarter of this year. Further, Isis was required to gross up
this amount by the projected annual tax benefit it expects to
record as part of its loss from continuing operations in 2009,
which is described above. This means that in addition to the tax
expense for the gain on the sale of Ibis, discontinued operations
also includes the tax expense for other timing differences, which
principally consists of the timing difference associated with the
upfront funding Isis received from Genzyme. Accordingly, Isis
recorded tax expense of $30.7 million in discontinued operations in
the first quarter of 2009. A reconciliation summarizing the
adjustments made to reflect the changes to Isis' 2008 historical
statement of operations appears later in this release. Net Income
(Loss) Isis reported a net loss of $2.9 million for the three
months ended June 30, 2009 and net income of $168.9 million for the
six months ended June 30, 2009, compared to a net loss of $3.7
million and $9.5 million in the three and six months ended June 30,
2008. Basic and diluted net loss per share for the three months
ended June 30, 2009 was $0.03 per share compared to $0.04 per share
for the same period in 2008. Basic and diluted net income per share
for the six months ended June 30, 2009 was $1.73 per share and
$1.56 per share, respectively, compared to basic and diluted net
loss per share of $0.10 for the same period in 2008. The
improvement in Isis' net income and net income per share for the
first half of 2009 over the same period in 2008 was primarily due
to the gain Isis recognized when it sold Ibis to AMI. Balance Sheet
As of June 30, 2009, Isis had cash, cash equivalents and short-term
investments of $637.5 million compared to $491.0 million at
December 31, 2008 and had consolidated working capital of $519.7
million at June 30, 2009 compared to $393.7 million at December 31,
2008. Isis received $175 million from AMI in the first quarter of
2009 for its sale of Ibis, which resulted in the significant
increases in both of these amounts. In addition, during the first
half of 2009, Isis received more than $31 million in cash from its
corporate partnerships, including the $11 million upfront license
fee that Isis received from its recently announced licensing and
collaboration agreement with Alnylam. Regulus Therapeutics Regulus'
revenue for the three and six months ended June 30, 2009 was $1.1
million and $1.8 million compared to $656,000 and $748,000 for the
same periods in 2008. The increase was primarily related to revenue
from its collaboration with GSK, including the $500,000 discovery
milestone payment that Regulus received from GSK for demonstrating
a pharmacological effect in immune cells by specific microRNA
inhibition. Excluding non-cash compensation expense related to
stock options, operating expenses for Regulus were $2.7 million and
$5.5 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2009
compared to $1.7 million and $2.8 million for the same periods in
2008. The increase is primarily related to Regulus' continued
efforts to build its team to support its internal microRNA programs
and its GSK collaboration. Regulus generated a loss from
operations, excluding non-cash compensation expense related to
stock options, of $1.6 million and $3.8 million for the three and
six months ended June 30, 2009 compared to $1.1 million and $2.1
million for the same periods in 2008. Business Highlights "During
the last quarter, we and Genzyme made great progress regarding
mipomersen on two important fronts, advancing the clinical
development program and refining our regulatory strategy. We
reported positive top-line results from a Phase 3 study of
mipomersen in the largest, placebo-controlled Phase 3 study in
homozygous FH patients. We reported that the study met its primary
endpoint with a 25% reduction in LDL-C after 26 weeks of treatment
with mipomersen versus 3% for placebo and all of its secondary
endpoints in a highly statistically significant manner. We are very
pleased with the performance of mipomersen in this study. These
data are a significant milestone in the clinical development of
mipomersen and support our efforts to make the drug available to
patients in need," said Ms. Parshall. "In addition to reporting
data from the first of our Phase 3 trials for mipomersen, we and
Genzyme refined and communicated the regulatory path for mipomersen
in the United States and Europe. While the strategy continues to
evolve, Genzyme plans to file the first NDA for mipomersen in the
U.S. for homozygous FH in the second half of 2010, with a similar
filing in Europe shortly afterwards. Data from our Phase 3 study in
severe hypercholesterolemia patients should be available at the
time of these U.S. submissions and may provide the basis for a
broader indication. A potential second filing in Europe will
involve a broader patient population, namely heterozygous FH
patients. This strategy ensures that mipomersen will reach the
patients who need the drug the most first, and provide commercial
experience with mipomersen as we broaden our indication to larger
patient populations, such as heterozygous FH patients. We have now
completed enrollment in the mipomersen Phase 3 study in
heterozygous FH patients, the second of our four Phase 3 studies,
and we expect to report the data from this study in the first half
of 2010," continued Ms. Parshall. "During the last quarter, we and
our partners participated prominently in several scientific
conferences, including ASCO and ADA, highlighting the versatility
and broad applicability of antisense drugs to inhibit targets that
could offer new avenues to treat disease, including cancer and type
2 diabetes. In addition to our clinical programs, we have active
programs in many different therapeutic areas as well as established
academic relationships with industry and academic leaders that
expand our research capabilities. With the efficiency of our drug
discovery technology we can broadly evaluate and conduct
preliminary research on a vast array of new targets, so that we can
add new drugs to our pipeline each year," added Ms. Parshall. "In
summary, it has been an eventful and promising first half of the
year. Our financial position ensures that we can continue to invest
our resources in filling the pipeline and continuing to move our
drugs forward toward the market. We have the technology, the
expertise and the momentum to realize the full potential of
antisense as a drug discovery technology," concluded Ms. Parshall.
Drug Development Highlights Mipomersen, the most advanced drug in
Isis' cardiovascular pipeline, is being evaluated in a broad Phase
3 program in patients who cannot adequately control their
cholesterol levels with current therapies and who need new
treatment options. -- Isis and Genzyme reported positive top-line
mipomersen Phase 3 data in patients with homozygous FH. The study
met its primary endpoint, with a 25% reduction in LDL-C after 26
weeks of treatment, vs. 3% for placebo (p