UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
Form 10-K
(Mark One)
 
þ
ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2018
 
OR
o
PERIODIC REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
 
For the transition period from     to             

Commission file number: 001-11993
BIOSCRIPLOGOA09.JPG
BioScrip, Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware
05-0489664
(State of incorporation)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
1600 Broadway, Suite 700, Denver, Colorado
80202
(Address of principal executive offices)
(Zip Code)

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code:
720-697-5200
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class
Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock, $0.0001 par value per share
Nasdaq Global Market

Securities registered pursuant to section 12(g) of the Act: None

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.  Yes  o      No  þ

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.  Yes  o      No  þ

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.  Yes  þ      No  o

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§ 232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).  Yes þ  No £

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K (§ 229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K.   o

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See definition of “large accelerated filer”, “accelerated filer”, “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

Large accelerated filer  o      Accelerated filer  þ      Non-accelerated filer  o       Smaller reporting company  o Emerging growth company  o

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).  Yes  o      No  þ

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.

The aggregate market value of the registrant’s Common Stock held by non-affiliates of the registrant as of June 30, 2018, the last business day of the registrant’s most recently completed second fiscal quarter, was approximately $373,541,920 based on the closing price of the registrant’s Common Stock on the Nasdaq Global Market on such date.

As of March 7, 2019 , there were 128,155,291 shares of the registrant’s Common Stock outstanding.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

Portions of the registrant’s definitive proxy statement for its 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) within 120 days after the close of the registrant’s fiscal year are incorporated by reference into Part III of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.




TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
 
Page
Number
PART I
 
 
 
  5
  16
  29
  30
  30
  30
 
 
 
  PART II
 
 
 
  33
  41
  42
  70
  70
  72
 
 
 
PART III
 
 
 
  72
  72
  72
  72
  72
 
 
 
  PART IV  
 
 
 
  73
  73
 
  80
  81

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CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This Annual Report on Form 10-K (“Annual Report”) contains statements that are not purely historical and which may be considered “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), including statements regarding our expectations, beliefs, future plans and strategies, anticipated events or trends concerning matters that are not historical facts or that necessarily depend upon future events. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “could,” “would,” “expect,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “project,” “predict,” “potential” and similar expressions. Specifically, this Annual Report contains, among others, forward-looking statements about:

our ability to make principal and interest payments on our debt and unsecured notes and satisfy the other covenants contained in our Notes Facilities (as defined below);
our high level of indebtedness;
our expectations regarding financial condition or results of operations in future periods;
our future sources of, and needs for, liquidity and capital resources;
our expectations regarding economic and business conditions;
our expectations regarding legislative and regulatory changes impacting the level of reimbursement received from the Medicare and state Medicaid programs;
periodic reviews and billing audits of payments from governmental reimbursement programs and private payors;
our expectations regarding the size and growth of the market for our products and services;
our business strategies and our ability to grow our business;
the implementation or interpretation of current or future regulations and legislation, particularly governmental oversight of our business;
our expectations regarding the outcome of litigation;
our ability to maintain contracts and relationships with our customers;
our ability to avoid delays in payment from our customers;
sales and marketing efforts;
status of material contractual arrangements, including the negotiation or re-negotiation of such arrangements;
future capital expenditures;
our ability to hire and retain key employees;
our ability to execute our strategy;
our ability to successfully integrate businesses we may acquire.

Investors are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance, involve risks and uncertainties and that actual results may differ materially from those possible results discussed in the forward-looking statements as a result of various factors. Important factors that could cause such differences include, among other things:

risks associated with increased and complex government regulation related to the health care and insurance industries in general, and more specifically, home infusion providers;
our ability to comply with debt covenants in our Notes Facilities and unsecured notes indenture;
risks associated with our issuance of Preferred Stock and PIPE Warrants to the PIPE Investors and the 2017 Warrants (as defined below);
risks associated with the retention or transition of executive officers and key employees;
our expectation regarding the interim and ultimate outcome of commercial disputes, including litigation;
unfavorable economic and market conditions;
disruptions in supplies and services resulting from force majeure events such as war, strike, riot, crime, or “acts of God” such as hurricanes, flooding, blizzards or earthquakes;
delays or suspensions of federal and state payments for services provided;
efforts to reduce healthcare costs and alter health care financing, which may involve reductions in reimbursement for our products and services;
effects of the 21 st Century Act (the “Cures Act”);
the effect of health reform efforts including the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (together the “Affordable Care Act”), and value-based payment initiatives, including accountable care organizations (“ACOs”);
availability of financing sources;
declines and other changes in revenue due to the expiration of short-term contracts;
network lockouts and decisions to in-source by health insurers including lockouts with respect to acquired entities;
unforeseen contract terminations;
difficulties in the implementation and ongoing evolution of our operating systems;

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difficulties with the implementation of our growth strategy and integrating businesses we have acquired or will acquire;
increases or other changes in our acquisition cost for our products;
increased competition from competitors having greater financial, technical, reimbursement, marketing and other resources could have the effect of reducing prices and margins;
disruptions in our relationship with our primary supplier of prescription products;
the level of our indebtedness and its effect on our ability to execute our business strategy and increased risk of default under our debt obligations;
introduction of new drugs, which can cause prescribers to adopt therapies for patients that are less profitable to us;
changes in industry pricing benchmarks, which could have the effect of reducing prices and margins; and
other risks and uncertainties described from time to time in our filings with the SEC.

We make these forward-looking statements in reliance on the safe harbor protections provided under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. You should not place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements as they speak only as of the date they are made. Except as required by law, we assume no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement even if experience or future changes make it clear that any projected results expressed or implied therein will not be realized.





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PART I
Item 1.
Business

Overview

BioScrip, Inc. (“BioScrip”, “we”, “us”, “our” or the “Company”) is a national provider of infusion and home care management solutions. We partner with physicians, hospital systems, payors, pharmaceutical manufacturers and skilled nursing facilities to provide patients access to post-acute care services. We operate with a commitment to bring customer-focused pharmacy and related healthcare infusion therapy services into the home or alternate-site setting. By collaborating with the full spectrum of healthcare professionals and the patient, we aim to provide cost-effective care that is driven by clinical excellence, customer service and values that promote positive outcomes and an enhanced quality of life for those whom we serve.

Our platform provides nationwide service capabilities and the ability to deliver clinical management services that offer patients a high-touch, community-based and home-based care environment. Our core services are provided in coordination with, and under the direction of, the patient’s physician. Our multidisciplinary team of clinicians, including pharmacists, nurses, dietitians and respiratory therapists, work with the physician to develop a plan of care suited to each patient’s specific needs. Whether in the home, physician office, ambulatory infusion center, skilled nursing facility or other alternate sites of care, we provide products, services and condition-specific clinical management programs tailored to improve the care of individuals with complex health conditions such as gastrointestinal abnormalities, infectious diseases, cancer, multiple sclerosis, organ and blood cell transplants, bleeding disorders, immune deficiencies and heart failure.

We were incorporated in Delaware in 1996 as MIM Corporation, with our primary business and operations at the time consisting of pharmacy benefit management services.

On September 9, 2016, we acquired substantially all of the assets and assumed certain liabilities of HS Infusion Holdings, Inc. and its subsidiaries pursuant to an Asset Purchase Agreement dated June 11, 2016, by and among Home Solutions, a Delaware corporation, certain subsidiaries of Home Solutions, the Company and HomeChoice Partners, Inc., a Delaware corporation. Home Solutions, a privately held company, provided home infusion and home nursing products and services to patients suffering from chronic and acute medical conditions.

On August 27, 2015, we completed the sale of substantially all of our pharmacy benefit management services segment. We used the net proceeds from the PBM Sale to pay down a portion of our outstanding debt.

Our Strengths

Our company has a number of competitive strengths, including:

Local Competitive Market Position within Our National Platform and Infrastructure

As of December 31, 2018 , we had a total of 68  service locations in 27  states. Our model combines local presence with comprehensive clinical programs for multiple therapies and specific delivery technologies (infusible and injectable). We have the capabilities and payor relationships to dispense prescriptions to all 50 states. We have relationships with approximately 1,000 payors, including Managed Care Organizations (“MCOs”), government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid and commercial insurers (“Third Party Payors”). We believe payors generally favor fully integrated vendors that can provide high-touch pharmacy solutions to their patients. We believe we are one of a limited number of pharmacy providers that can offer a truly national, integrated and comprehensive approach to managing a patient’s chronic or acute conditions.

Diversified and Favorable Payor Base

We provide prescription drugs, infusion therapy and clinical management services for a broad range of commercial and governmental payors. Approximately 81% of our payor base is comprised of commercial payors that operate at a national, regional or local level. Aetna Health Management, LLC accounted for approximately 10% of consolidated net revenue during the year ended December 31, 2018 and UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company accounted for 18% and 24% of consolidated net revenue during the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016. Government payors, including Medicare, state Medicaid and other government payors, accounted for 18% of consolidated revenue during the year ended December 31, 2018 . For the year ended December 31, 2018 , Medicare accounted for 8% of our consolidated net revenue.

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The costs savings realized by administering infusion therapies in the home versus hospitals, skilled nursing facilities or other post-acute care facilities positions our business to benefit from healthcare reform initiatives that focus on cost savings. Medicare currently offers limited reimbursement for home infusion therapy products and services. Although the Cures Act significantly reduced the level of reimbursement for certain of the therapies that we provide, we believe that home infusion and other low-cost in-home therapeutic alternatives will be impacted favorably by health reform initiatives focused on cost-reduction. Significant health plan cost savings per infusion can be achieved when therapy is provided at an alternative treatment site compared to other patient settings.

Effective Care Management Clinical Programs that are Designed to Produce Positive Clinical Outcomes and Reduce Readmissions

Our diversified and comprehensive clinical programs, which span numerous therapeutic areas, are designed to improve patient outcomes. Our home infusion business provides traditional infusion therapies for acute conditions with accompanying clinical management and home care. Our infusion product offerings and services are also designed to treat patients with chronic infusion needs. Chronic conditions require long-term treatment, ongoing caregiver and patient counseling and education, and ongoing monitoring and communication with physicians to encourage patients to follow therapies prescribed by their physicians.

Our Centers of Excellence focus on interdisciplinary teams to provide clinical excellence with outstanding personal service. Externally qualified by a panel of leading industry experts, these centers employ evidence-based standards of care, policies and procedures built on industry-recognized best practices. They are led by specialists with advanced certifications and training who are dedicated to developing, improving and sustaining clinical services to achieve optimal patient outcomes and exceed the expectations of patients and referral sources.

Our clinical management programs in multiple disease-state therapy provide us opportunities to cross-sell services. We believe we have earned a positive reputation among patients, physicians, payors and pharmaceutical manufacturers by providing quality service and favorable clinical outcomes. We believe our platform provides the necessary programs and services for better and more efficient clinical outcomes for our patients.

Services

We are one of the largest providers of home infusion services in the United States. Home infusion involves the preparation, delivery, administration and clinical monitoring of pharmaceutical treatments that are administered to a patient via intravenous (into the vein), subcutaneous (into the fatty layer under the skin), intramuscular (into the muscle), intra-spinal (into the membranes around the spinal cord) and enteral (into the gastrointestinal tract) methods. These methods are employed when a physician determines that the best outcome can be achieved through utilization of one or more of the therapies provided through the routes of administration described above.

Our home infusion services primarily involve the intravenous administration of medications to treat a wide range of acute and chronic conditions, such as infections, nutritional deficiencies, various immunologic and neurologic disorders, cancer, pain and palliative care. Our services are usually provided in the patient’s home but may also be provided at outpatient clinics, skilled nursing facilities, physician offices or at one of our ambulatory infusion centers. We receive payment for our home infusion services and medications, pursuant to provider agreements with government sources, such as Medicare and Medicaid programs, MCOs and Third Party Payors.

We provide a wide array of home infusion products and services to meet the diverse needs and preferences of physicians, patients and payors. Diseases commonly requiring infusion therapy include infections that are unresponsive to oral antibiotics, cancer and cancer-related pain, dehydration and gastrointestinal diseases or disorders that require IV fluids, parenteral or enteral nutrition. Other conditions that may be treated with infusion therapies include chronic diseases such as heart failure, Crohn’s disease, hemophilia, immune deficiencies, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, growth disorders and genetic enzyme deficiencies, such as Gaucher’s or Pompe’s disease. The therapies and products most commonly provided are listed below:


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Therapy Type
Description
Parenteral Nutrition (PN)
Provide intravenous nutrition customized to the nutritional needs of the patient.  PN is used in patients that cannot meet their nutritional needs via other means due to disease process or as a complication of a disease process, surgical procedure or congenital anomaly.  PN may be used short term or chronically.
Enteral Nutrition (EN)
Provide nutrition directly to the stomach or intestine in patients who cannot chew or swallow nutrients in the usual manner.  EN may be delivered via a naso-gastric tube or a tube placed directly into the stomach or intestine.  EN may be used short term or chronically.
Antimicrobial Therapy (AT)
Provide intravenous antimicrobial medications used in the treatment of patients with various infectious processes such as: wound infections, pneumonia, osteomyelitis, cystic fibrosis, Lyme disease and cellulitis.  AT may also be used in patients with disease processes or therapies that may lead to infections when oral antimicrobials are not effective.
Chemotherapy
Provide injectable and/or infused medications in the home or the prescriber’s office for the treatment of cancer.  Adjuvant medications may also be provided to minimize the side effects associated with chemotherapy.
Immune Globulin (IG) Therapy
Provide immune globulins intravenously or subcutaneously on an as-needed basis in patients with immune deficiencies or auto-immune diseases.  This therapy may be chronic based on the etiology of the immune deficiency.
Pain Management
Provide analgesic medications intravenously, subcutaneously or epidurally.  This therapy is generally administered as a continuous infusion via an internal or external infusion pump to treat severe pain associated with diseases such as COPD, cancer and severe injury.
Blood Factor Therapies
Provide medications to patients with one of several inherited bleeding disorders in which a patient does not manufacture the clotting factors necessary, or use the clotting factors their liver makes, appropriately in order to halt an external or internal bleed in response to a physical injury or trauma.
Inotropes Therapy
Provide intravenous inotropes in the home for the treatment of heart failure, either in anticipation of cardiac transplant or to provide palliation of heart failure symptoms. Inotropes increase the strength of weak heart muscles to pump blood. The therapy is only started in late phase heart failure when alternative therapies proved inadequate.
Respiratory Therapy/Home Medical Equipment
Provide oxygen systems, continuous or bi-level positive airway pressure devices, nebulizers, home ventilators, respiratory devices, respiratory medications and other medical equipment.

Patients generally are referred to us by physicians, hospital discharge planners, MCOs and other referral sources. Our medications are compounded and dispensed under the supervision of a registered pharmacist in a state licensed pharmacy that is accredited by an independent accrediting organization. We compound pursuant to a patient specific prescription and do so consistently with U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention (“USP”) 797 standards. A national accrediting organization surveys our pharmacies for compliance with the USP 797 standards for sterile drug compounding pharmacies and has confirmed that we operate consistently with those standards. Therapies are typically administered in the patient’s home by a registered nurse or trained caregiver. Depending on the preferences of the patient or the payor, these services may also be provided at one of our ambulatory infusion centers, a physician's office or another alternate site of administration.

We currently have relationships with a large number of MCOs and other Third Party Payors to provide home infusion services. These relationships are at a national, regional or local level. A key element of our business strategy is to leverage our relationships, geographic coverage, clinical expertise and reputation in order to gain contracts with payors. Our infusion service contracts typically provide for us to receive a fee for preparing and delivering medications and related equipment to patients in their homes or in Ambulatory Infusion Sites (“AIS”). Pricing for pharmaceutical products is typically negotiated in advance on the basis of Average Wholesale Price (“AWP”) minus some percentage of contractual discount, or Average Sales Price (“ASP”) plus some percentage. In addition, we typically receive a per diem payment for additional services and supplies provided to patients in connection with infusion services. An additional payment is made for nursing services when services are provided.

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Sales and Marketing

We have over 260 sales and marketing representatives and approximately 1,000 payor relationships including MCOs, Medicare Part D pharmacy networks, other government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid and other Third Party Payors. Our sales and marketing efforts are focused on payors, healthcare systems and physician prescribers and are driven by dedicated managed care and physician sales teams as well as home health care consultants. Our sales and marketing strategies include the development of strong relationships with key referral sources, such as physicians, hospital discharge planners, case managers, long-term care facilities and other healthcare professionals, primarily through regular contact with the referral sources and by fulfilling the care and service expectations of our many customers. Contracts with Third Party Payors, including MCOs, are an integral component for sales success.

Intellectual Property

We own and use a variety of trademarks, trade names and service marks, including without limitation “BioScrip”, “BioScrip Infusion Services”, “BioScrip Nursing Services”, “BioScrip Pharmacy Services”, “CarePoint Partners”, “HomeChoice Partners”, “InfuScience”, “InfusionCare”, “Infusion Partners”, “Infusion Solutions”, “New England Home Therapies”, “Option Health”, “Professional Home Care Services”, “Wilcox Home Infusion”, and “Home Solutions”, each of which has either been registered at the state or federal level or is being used pursuant to common law rights. We are recognized in local markets by several of these trade names, but we do not consider the marks material to our business.

Competition

The home infusion services market is highly competitive and includes a limited number of national providers and numerous local and regional companies. Providers strive to differentiate their services based on their responsiveness to patient needs, quality of care, reputation, outcomes, and cost of service. Our Centers of Excellence offer a high touch, high service approach to care on a local basis, which we believe differentiates our service.

Our competitors within the home infusion market include Option Care, Coram CVS/specialty infusion services (a division of CVS Health), Accredo Health Group, Inc. (a unit of Cigna), Briova (a subsidiary of OptumRx, which is a unit of the UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company) and various regional and local providers of alternate site healthcare services such as hospitals and physician practices.

Government Regulation

The healthcare industry is subject to extensive regulation by a number of governmental entities at the federal, state and local level. Laws and regulations in the healthcare industry are extremely complex and, in many instances, the industry does not have the benefit of significant regulatory or judicial interpretation. Our business is impacted not only by those laws and regulations that are directly applicable to us but also by certain laws and regulations that are applicable to our payors, vendors and referral sources. While our management believes we are in substantial compliance with all of the existing laws and regulations applicable to us, such laws and regulations are subject to rapid change and often are uncertain in their application and enforcement. Further, to the extent we engage in new business initiatives, we must continue to evaluate whether new laws and regulations are applicable to us. There can be no assurance that we will not be subject to scrutiny or challenge under one or more of these laws or that any enforcement actions would not be successful. Any such challenge, whether or not successful, could have a material adverse effect upon our business and consolidated financial statements.

Among the various federal and state laws and regulations that may govern or impact our current and planned operations are the following:

Medicare and Medicaid Reimbursement

Many of the products and services that we provide are reimbursed by Medicare and state Medicaid programs and are therefore subject to extensive government regulation.

Medicare is a federally funded program that provides health insurance coverage for qualified persons age 65 or older, some disabled persons, and persons with end-stage renal disease and persons with Lou Gehrig’s disease. Medicaid programs are jointly funded by the federal and state governments and are administered by states under approved plans.


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Medicaid provides medical benefits to eligible people with limited income and resources and people with disabilities, among others. Although the federal government establishes general guidelines for the Medicaid program, each state sets its own guidelines regarding eligibility and covered services. Some individuals, known as dual eligibles, may be eligible for benefits under both Medicare and a state Medicaid program. Reimbursement under the Medicare and Medicaid programs is contingent on the satisfaction of numerous rules and regulations, including those requiring certification and/or licensure. Congress often enacts legislation that affects the reimbursement rates under government healthcare programs.

Approximately 18% of our revenue for the year ended December 31, 2018 was derived directly from Medicare, Medicaid or other government-sponsored healthcare programs. Also, we indirectly provide services to beneficiaries of Medicare, Medicaid and other government-sponsored healthcare programs through managed care entities. Should there be material changes to federal or state reimbursement methodologies, regulations or policies, our direct reimbursements from government-sponsored healthcare programs, as well as service fees that relate indirectly to such reimbursements, could be adversely affected.

Medicare

We receive reimbursement for infusion therapy under the Medicare program, which has four parts. Medicare Part A generally covers inpatient hospital, skilled nursing facility, home nursing and hospice services; Medicare Part B covers physicians' services, outpatient services, items and services provided by medical suppliers and a limited number of prescription drugs; Medicare Part C allows beneficiaries to enroll in private healthcare plans (known as Medicare Advantage plans); and Medicare Part D provides for a voluntary prescription drug benefit.

Medicare fee-for-service programs, Part A and Part B, generally cover infusion therapy provided in hospitals and hospital outpatient departments, skilled nursing facilities, and physician offices. Part A covers infusion therapy services under the home health benefit if the services are rendered by a Medicare-certified home health agency and the beneficiary meets criteria for homebound status. Part B generally does not cover the full range of services for infusion therapies in a patient’s home but it covers a limited number of drugs administered using an external infusion pump under the durable medical equipment (“DME”) benefit. Although Medicare Part D covers payment for drugs (including many not covered under Part B) and a retail-based dispensing fee, Part D does not cover infusion-related services, equipment and supplies. For eligible Medicare beneficiaries, the cost of equipment and supplies associated with infused drugs covered under Medicare Part D may be reimbursed on a limited basis under Part A or Part B, and the cost of associated professional services may be reimbursed on a limited basis under Medicare Part A. CMS has attempted to clarify the relationship of Part B and Part D with regard to coverage of infused drugs. CMS has stated that coverage is generally determined by the diagnosis and the method of drug delivery.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”), Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”) and CMS continue to issue regulations and guidance with regard to the Medicare Part D program and compliance by Medicare Part D sponsors and their subcontractors. The receipt of funds made available through Medicare Part D is subject to compliance with government laws and regulations and provisions in contracts with prescription drug plans. There are many uncertainties about the financial and regulatory risks of participating in the Medicare Part D program, and these risks could negatively impact our business in future periods.

Medicare Advantage

Under Medicare Part C, also known as Medicare Advantage, beneficiaries can choose to enroll in a health insurance plan administered by an MCO. Medicare Advantage plans are required to offer the benefits covered under Medicare Part A and Part B, with the exception of hospice care, and may include additional benefits. To serve Medicare Advantage beneficiaries, a provider must contract with a Medicare Advantage plan. Reimbursement and other requirements imposed on the provider are governed by the agreement with the Medicare Advantage plan rather than by statute or regulation and as such vary from plan to plan. Medicare Advantage plans are permitted to cover certain services that fee-for-service Medicare does not cover. Home infusion therapy services are covered under many Medicare Advantage plans. We currently have contracts with a number of Medicare Advantage plans.

Changes to Medicare Reimbursement

In recent years, legislative and regulatory changes have resulted in limitations and reductions in reimbursement under government healthcare programs. For example, the Cures Act, which Congress passed in December of 2016, changed the payment methodology for certain infusion drugs under the Part B DME benefit. Significant reductions to the amount paid by Medicare for many infusion drugs took effect January 1, 2017. In addition, the Cures Act provides for the implementation of a clinical services payment under Part B for “qualified home infusion therapy suppliers.” Under this new payment system, Medicare will reimburse home infusion therapy suppliers based on a single, all-inclusive rate. The services payment provision does not take effect until

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January 1, 2021. However, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 provides for temporary transitional benefit payments, starting January 1, 2019, for Medicare Part B home infusion services. CMS finalized a rule in October 2018 to implement this temporary benefit, which will continue until January 1, 2021 when the services payment in the Cures Act takes effect. We have taken steps to mitigate the impact of the Cures Act on our business, but the Act has had a material negative impact on our revenues and profitability.

Medicaid

Medicaid coverage of infusion therapy varies by state. We are sensitive to possible changes in state Medicaid programs. Budgetary concerns in many states have resulted in, and may continue to result in, reductions to Medicaid reimbursement and delays in payment of outstanding claims. In addition, many states have implemented or are considering strategies to reduce coverage, restrict eligibility, or enroll Medicaid recipients in managed care programs. As of January 1, 2018, all pharmacies participating in a Medicaid managed care program must be registered with the state Medicaid agency. Any reductions to or delays in collecting amounts reimbursable by state Medicaid programs for our products or services, or changes in regulations governing such reimbursements, could cause our revenue and profitability to decline and increase our working capital requirements. Effective January 1, 2018, CMS limited Medicaid reimbursement for DME to no more than Medicare payment rates. For further discussion on state Medicaid reductions, refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in Part II, Item 7.

In addition, some Medicaid programs only allow for reimbursement to pharmacies residing in the state or in a border state. While we believe we can service our current Medicaid patients through our existing infusion pharmacies, there can be no assurance that additional states will not enact in-state dispensing requirements for their Medicaid programs. To the extent such requirements are enacted, certain therapeutic pharmaceutical reimbursements could be adversely affected.

State Legislation and Other Matters Affecting Drug Prices

Many states have adopted “most favored nation” legislation, which limits the amount a pharmacy participating in the state Medicaid program is paid based on the pharmacy’s prices applicable to third party plans, or in some instances, self-pay patients. Because of these limitations, we may not receive the full Medicaid fee schedule amounts in some instances. There is wide variation in drafting, interpretation and enforcement of state “most favored nation” legislation. Our management carefully considers these laws and believes that each of our respective companies is in material compliance with them; however, we cannot predict whether the regulators will disagree with our interpretation or change their interpretation of the laws or their enforcement priorities.

Pricing benchmarks in the pharmacy industry are published by third-parties such as First DataBank, Medi-Span, Micromedex, RJ Health, and CMS. The Average Wholesale Price (“AWP”) is one of the most commonly used benchmarks. Although various payors have discussed establishing a new benchmark and First DataBank ceased publication of the AWP, the industry has not yet developed a viable generally accepted alternative to the AWP benchmark. See “Risk Factors - Risks Related to Our Business - Changes in industry pricing benchmarks could adversely affect our financial performance.”

Healthcare Reform

In recent years, federal and state governments have considered and enacted policy changes designed to reform the healthcare industry. The most prominent of these healthcare reform efforts, the Affordable Care Act, has resulted in sweeping changes to the U.S. system for the delivery and financing of health care. As currently structured, the Affordable Care Act increases the number of persons covered under government programs and private insurance; furnishes economic incentives for measurable improvements in health care quality outcomes; promotes a more integrated health care delivery system and the creation of new health care delivery models; revises payment for health care services under the Medicare and Medicaid programs; and increases government enforcement tools and sanctions for combating fraud and abuse. In addition, the Affordable Care Act reduced cost sharing for Medicare beneficiaries under the Part D prescription drug benefit program and expanded medication therapy management services for individuals with chronic conditions.

However, the future of the Affordable Care Act is uncertain. The Affordable Care Act has been subject to legislative and regulatory changes and court challenges, and the presidential administration and certain members of Congress have expressed their intent to repeal or make additional significant changes to the Affordable Care Act, its implementation or interpretation. The president has signed an executive order that directs agencies to minimize “economic and regulatory burdens” of the Affordable Care Act. Final rules issued in 2018 expand the availability of association health plans and allow the sale of short-term, limited-duration health plans, neither of which are required to cover all of the essential health benefits mandated by the Affordable Care Act. Effective January 1, 2019, Congress eliminated the financial penalty associated with the individual mandate. These changes may affect the number of individuals electing to purchase health insurance or the scope of such coverage, if purchased. Further, because the financial penalty associated with individual mandate was eliminated, a federal court in Texas ruled in December 2018

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that the entire Affordable Care Act was unconstitutional. However, the law remains in place pending appeal. The impact of these developments or repeal of or further changes to the Affordable Care Act, as well as the impact of any alternative provisions, on the healthcare industry and our business is unknown. Members of Congress have also proposed measures that would expand government-funded coverage, such as single-payor proposals. Other industry participants, such as private payors and large employer groups and their affiliates, may also introduce financial or delivery system reforms. We are unable to predict the nature and success of such initiatives.

Regulation of the Pharmacy Industry

For each physical pharmacy location in a state, laws require maintenance of an in-state pharmacy license to dispense pharmaceuticals. Pharmacy and controlled substances laws often address the qualifications of personnel, the adequacy of prescription fulfillment and inventory control practices and the adequacy of facilities. We believe our pharmacy locations materially comply with all state licensing laws applicable to their practice. If our pharmacy locations become subject to additional licensure requirements, are unable or otherwise fail to maintain their required licenses or if states place overly burdensome restrictions or limitations on pharmacies, our ability to operate in some states would be limited, which could have an adverse impact on our business. We believe the impact of any such requirements would be mitigated by our ability to shift business among our numerous locations.

Many states, as well as the federal government, are considering imposing, or have already begun to impose, more stringent requirements on compounding pharmacies including the Drug Quality and Security Act (“DQSA”) (see Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act below). We believe that our compounding is done in safe environments with clinically appropriate policies and procedures in place. Those compounding pharmacies adhere to rigorous safety and quality standards for compounded sterile preparations and only fill prescriptions for individually identified patients pursuant to a valid prescription from a prescriber. All compounding is done consistently with USP 797 standards.

Many of the states into which we deliver pharmaceuticals have laws and regulations that require out-of-state pharmacies to register with or be licensed by the boards of pharmacy or similar regulatory bodies in those states. These states generally permit the dispensing pharmacy to follow the laws of the state within which the dispensing pharmacy is located. However, various state pharmacy boards have enacted laws and/or adopted rules or regulations directed at restricting or prohibiting the operation of out-of-state pharmacies by, among other things, requiring compliance with all laws of the states into which the out-of-state pharmacy dispenses medications, whether or not those laws conflict with the laws of the state in which the pharmacy is located, or requiring the pharmacist-in-charge to be licensed in that state. To the extent that such laws or regulations are applicable to our operations, we believe we comply with them. To the extent that the foregoing laws or regulations prohibit or restrict the operation of out-of-state pharmacies and are found to be applicable to us, they could have an adverse effect on our operations.

Laws enforced by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) require each of our pharmacy locations to register with the DEA in order to handle and dispense controlled substances. A separate registration is required at each principal place of business where we dispense controlled substances. Federal and state laws also require us to follow specific labeling, reporting and record-keeping requirements for controlled substances. We maintain federal and state controlled substance registrations for each of our facilities that require such registration and follow procedures intended to comply with all applicable federal and state requirements regarding controlled substances. These laws can change from time to time. We continuously review these changes to laws and believe we are in material compliance with the applicable federal and state controlled substances laws. If any of our pharmacy locations is deemed to be out of compliance, it could have an adverse impact on our business.

Many states in which we operate also require home infusion companies to be licensed as home health agencies. We believe we are compliant with these laws in all material respects. If our infusion locations become subject to new licensure requirements, are unable to maintain required licenses or if states place burdensome restrictions or limitations on home health agencies or home nursing agencies, our infusion locations’ ability to provide nursing services in some states would be limited, which could have an adverse impact on our business.

Each of our pharmacies and infusion locations are eligible to participate in Medicare and Medicaid programs. If any provider were to lose its Medicare or Medicaid certification, the provider would be unable to receive reimbursement from federal healthcare programs. The conditions for Medicare and Medicaid participation vary depending on the type of facility, but, in general, require our facilities to meet specified standards relating to licensure, personnel, patient rights, patient care, patient records, physical site, administrative reporting and legal compliance. The requirements for certification are subject to change and, in order to remain qualified, it may become necessary for us to make changes in our facilities, equipment, personnel and services. For example, in October 2018, CMS finalized a rule that implements quality standards for home infusion suppliers.


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The requirements for licensure, certification and accreditation also include notification or approval in the event of the transfer or change of ownership or certain other changes. Failure to provide required notifications or obtain necessary approvals in these circumstances can result in the inability to complete an acquisition or change of ownership, loss of licensure, lapses in reimbursement or other penalties.

Professional Licensure

Nurses, pharmacists and certain other professionals employed by us are required to be individually licensed and/or certified under applicable state law. We perform criminal and other background checks on employees to the extent allowed by state law and confirm that our employees possess all licenses and certifications required in order to provide healthcare-related services. We believe our employees comply with applicable licensure laws.

Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act

Pharmacy operations

Certain provisions of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (“FDCA”) govern the preparation, handling, storage, marketing and distribution of pharmaceutical products. Many of the pharmaceuticals and medical devices we dispense are exempt from certain federal requirements as long as they are not adulterated or misbranded and are dispensed in accordance with, and pursuant to, a valid prescription.

The FDA directly regulates outsourcing facilities, but does not directly regulate non-outsourcing facilities or pharmacies. Outsourcing facilities are pharmacies that are engaged in sterile compounding of drugs that are not for an individually identifiable patient. Outsourcing facilities are subject to standards relating to sterilization and the physical facility including the Current Good Manufacturing Practice (“cGMP”) regulations. Because our compounding activities are limited to products compounded pursuant to valid prescriptions for individually identifiable patients, we do not qualify as an outsourcing facility, and therefore, should not be required to comply with the cGMP standards. The FDA has been conducting inspections of pharmacies that engage in compounding, including ours, and has been attempting to apply the cGMP standards even though those pharmacies are not outsourcing facilities. While the FDA has issued reports following their surveys, to date, no enforcement action has been taken against us. We cannot predict what further actions the FDA may take. We believe our operations are in compliance with applicable laws and that the requirements for outsourcing facilities are not applicable to our operations. We cannot predict the impact of increased scrutiny on or new regulation of compounding pharmacies.

In addition, the FDCA governs pharmaceutical products’ movement in interstate commerce. The FDA has begun scrutinizing more closely compounding pharmacies’ operations and compounded pharmaceuticals’ movement in interstate commerce. Specifically, the FDA has proposed regulations that could have the effect of limiting our ability to ship prescriptions out of state by pharmacies that hold valid licenses but do not comply with cGMP standards. We do not know if these regulations, as proposed, will be adopted, but if they are, we will likely need to modify our operations to comply. While we cannot predict changes to the regulatory environment under the DQSA, we believe we comply in all material respects with all applicable requirements of a non-outsourcing-facility pharmacy.

Infusion services

The FDA regulates certain medical devices (e.g., infusion pumps) essential to the Company’s infusion services. An infusion pump, like any medical device, is subject to failure. Since 2010, due to the relatively large number of adverse events associated with the use of infusion pumps, FDA has increased its oversight of infusion pumps. Changes have included higher levels of scrutiny, intensifying manufacturer engagement and bolstering user education and adverse event reporting. The shifting regulatory climate around infusion pumps; the requirement to maintain high levels of proficiency in using and training patients in the safe use of infusion pumps; cybersecurity issues, including modification and misuse of infusion pumps, and unauthorized use of information that is stored on or accessed from infusion pumps; and, finally, the need to stay current in infusion pump design and “best practices,” present elements of risk. Nevertheless, we believe we comply in all material respects with all applicable requirements and that our employees are adequately trained and equipped to use these devices.

Fraud and Abuse Laws

Anti-Kickback Laws

The federal Anti-Kickback Statute makes it a felony for a person or entity to knowingly and willfully offer, pay, solicit, or receive any remuneration with the intent of inducing the referral of an individual or the purchase, lease or order (or the arranging

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for or recommending of the purchase, lease or order) of healthcare items or services paid for in whole or in part by a federal healthcare program such as Medicare or Medicaid. Courts have held that there is a violation of the statute even if only one purpose of a payment arrangement is to induce referrals, even if there are other lawful purposes. Violations of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute could subject us to criminal and/or civil penalties, including suspension or exclusion from Medicare and Medicaid programs and other government-funded healthcare programs. In addition, submission of a claim for items or services generated in violation of the Anti-Kickback Statute may also be the basis of liability under the federal False Claims Act (“False Claims Act”).

The federal Anti-Kickback Statute has been interpreted broadly by courts, the OIG and other administrative bodies. For example, although the term “remuneration” is not defined in the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, it has been broadly interpreted to include anything of value, including for example, gifts, donations, the furnishing of supplies or equipment, credit arrangements, payments of cash, waivers of payment, ownership interests and providing any item, service, or compensation for something other than fair market value. Because of the broad scope of the statute, there are several statutory exceptions to the law, and federal regulations establish certain safe harbors from liability. For example, there are safe harbors relating to certain discounts received from vendors, investment interests, group purchasing organizations, managed care and waivers of copayment obligations. A practice that does not fall within a safe harbor is not necessarily unlawful, but may be subject to increased scrutiny and challenge by government enforcement authorities.

Governmental entities have investigated pharmacies and their dealings with pharmaceutical manufacturers concerning, among other things, retail distribution, sales and marketing practices and product conversion or product switching programs. Governmental entities have also investigated pharmacies with respect to their relationships with physicians and other referral sources, including marketing practices. There can be no assurance that we will not receive subpoenas or be requested to produce documents in pending investigations or litigation from time to time. In addition, we may be the target or subject of one or more such investigations or named parties in corresponding actions.

In 2003, the OIG released Compliance Program Guidance for Pharmaceutical Manufacturers (the “Guidance”), which provides voluntary, nonbinding guidance in devising effective compliance programs to assist companies that develop, manufacture, market and sell pharmaceutical products or biological products. The Guidance sets forth the fundamental elements of a pharmaceutical manufacturer’s compliance program and principles that should be considered when creating, implementing, and maintaining an effective compliance program. While we are not a manufacturer, we believe that many aspects of it are useful to our business and therefore we currently maintain a compliance program that includes the key compliance program elements described in the Guidance. We believe the fundamental elements of our compliance programs are consistent with the principles, policies and intent of the Guidance.

A number of states have enacted anti-kickback laws that may apply not only to state-sponsored healthcare programs, but also to items or services that are paid for by private insurance and self-pay patients. State anti-kickback laws can vary considerably in their applicability and scope and sometimes have fewer statutory and regulatory exceptions than does the federal law. Our management carefully considers the importance of such anti-kickback laws when structuring each company’s operations and believes that each of our respective companies is in compliance therewith.

The Stark Laws

The federal physician self-referral law, commonly known as the “Stark Law,” prohibits physicians from referring Medicare and Medicaid patients for “designated health services” to an entity with which the physician, or an immediate family member of the physician, has a direct or indirect financial relationship, unless the financial relationship is structured to meet an applicable exception. Designated health services include outpatient prescription drugs, DME and supplies, parenteral and enteral nutrient, equipment and supplies, and home health services. An entity that bills Medicare or Medicaid for designated health services that result from a prohibited referral is required to refund amounts collected pursuant to the prohibited referral on a timely basis. Penalties for violation of the Stark Law include denial of payment, civil monetary penalties and exclusion from federal healthcare programs. A knowing violation of the Stark Law can also constitute a violation of the federal False Claims Act. Our management carefully considers the Stark Law and its accompanying regulations in structuring our financial relationships with physicians and believes we are in compliance therewith.

We are also subject to state statutes and regulations that prohibit self-referral arrangements. The laws and exceptions or safe harbors may vary from the federal Stark Law and vary significantly from state to state. Some of these state statutes mirror the federal Stark Law while others are broader. For example, some state statutes and regulations apply to services reimbursed by governmental as well as private payors, and some extend to providers other than physicians. Violation of these laws may result in prohibition of payment for services rendered, loss of pharmacy or health provider licenses, fines and criminal penalties. The state laws are often vague and, in many cases, have not been widely interpreted by courts or regulatory agencies. We believe we are in compliance with such laws.

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Statutes Prohibiting False Claims and Fraudulent Billing Activities

A range of federal civil and criminal laws target the submission of false claims and fraudulent billing activities. One of the most significant of these laws is the federal False Claims Act, which provides for liability of treble damages and civil penalties for knowingly making or causing to be made false claims in order to secure reimbursement from government-sponsored programs, such as Medicare and Medicaid. Investigations or actions commenced under the False Claims Act may be brought either by the government or by private individuals on behalf of the government, through a “whistleblower” or “qui tam” action. The False Claims Act authorizes the payment of a portion of any recovery to the individual bringing suit. Such actions are initially required to be filed under seal pending their review by the Department of Justice. If the government intervenes in the lawsuit and prevails, the whistleblower (or plaintiff filing the initial complaint) may share with the federal government in any settlement or judgment. If the government does not intervene in the lawsuit, the whistleblower plaintiff may pursue the action independently. The False Claims Act may result in substantial financial penalties for small billing errors that are replicated in a large number of claims, as each individual claim could be deemed to be a separate violation of the False Claims Act. Significantly, the Affordable Care Act amended the False Claims Act to impose liability for knowing failures to return overpayments which, under the Affordable Care Act’s 60-Day Rule, include failures to report and return an overpayment to the government within 60 days after it is identified.

The False Claims Act has been used by the federal government and private whistleblowers to bring enforcement actions under fraud and abuse laws like the federal Anti-Kickback Statute and the Stark Law, increasing potential financial exposure for alleged violations. Such actions are based on the theory that when an entity submits a claim, it either expressly or impliedly certifies that it has provided the underlying services in compliance with material laws, including the Anti-Kickback Statute or Stark Law. Liability may result even if the claims are otherwise billed accurately for appropriate and medically necessary services. These actions are costly and time-consuming to defend.

Some states also have enacted statutes similar to the False Claims Act, which may include criminal penalties, substantial fines, and treble damages, and some allow individuals to bring qui tam actions. Federal law provides an incentive to states to enact false claims laws comparable to the federal False Claims Act.

In recent years, federal and state governments have launched several initiatives aimed at uncovering practices that violate false claims or fraudulent billing laws. We have experienced increasing audit activity by enforcement entities, and we may be the subject of future audits. We believe we have procedures in place to ensure the accuracy of our claims. While we believe we are in compliance with Medicaid and Medicare billing rules and requirements, there can be no assurance that regulators would agree with the methodology employed by us in billing for our products and services. A material disagreement with governmental agencies on the manner in which we provide or bill for products or services could have a material adverse effect on our business and Consolidated Financial Statements.

Civil Monetary Penalties Act

The Civil Monetary Penalties Law authorizes the U.S. Secretary of HHS to impose civil money penalties, assessments and program supervision or exclusion for various forms of fraud and abuse involving the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Penalties of up to $100,000 for each violation may be imposed, depending on the specific misconduct involved. These penalties are updated annually based on changes to the consumer price index. In some cases, violations of the Civil Monetary Penalty Law may result in penalties of up to three times the remuneration offered, paid, solicited or received, and may also result in exclusion from government healthcare programs. The availability of the Civil Money Penalties Law to enforce alleged fraud and abuse violations has increased the potential for enforcement actions, as it requires a lower burden of proof than some criminal statutes, and it has increased the potential financial exposure for such actions. These actions are costly and time-consuming to defend.

Other Fraud & Abuse Laws

We are also subject to additional fraud and abuse laws, including federal criminal statutes that prohibit, among other actions, knowingly and willfully executing, or attempting to execute, a scheme to defraud any healthcare benefit program, including private third-party payors, and knowingly and willfully falsifying, concealing or covering up a material fact or making any materially false, fictitious or fraudulent statement in connection with the delivery of or payment for healthcare benefits, items or services. Federal enforcement authorities may exclude from Medicare and Medicaid any business entities and any investors, officers and managing employees associated with business entities that have committed health care fraud. Officers and managing employees may be excluded even if they had no knowledge of the fraud.

We may also be subject to laws promoting transparency of financial relationships with providers and other potential referral sources. For example, the Physician Payment Sunshine Act requires pharmaceutical, biological, device, and medical supply

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manufacturers to report payments or other transfers of value to physicians and teaching hospitals, as well as physician ownership and investment interests. These initiatives may result in increased scrutiny by government enforcement authorities or impact our public reputation.

Confidentiality, Privacy and HIPAA

Many of our activities involve the receipt, use and/or disclosure of confidential medical, pharmacy or other health-related information concerning individual patients, including the disclosure of such confidential information to an individual's health plan.

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (“HIPAA”) and its implementing regulations, as amended, give people greater control over the privacy of their medical information. The federal privacy regulations (the “Privacy Regulations”) are designed to protect health-related information that could be used to identify an individual, also known as protected health information (“PHI”). Among numerous other requirements, the Privacy Regulations: (i) limit permissible uses and disclosures of PHI; (ii) limit most uses and disclosures of PHI to the minimum necessary to accomplish the intended purpose; (iii) require patient authorization for uses and disclosures of PHI unless an exception applies; and (iv) guarantee patients the right to access their medical records and to receive an accounting of certain disclosures. The federal security regulations (the “Security Regulations”) set certain standards regarding the storage, utilization of, access to and transmission of electronic PHI. The federal breach notification regulations (the “Breach Notification Regulations”) require notification to individuals, the federal government and, in some cases, the media in the event of a breach of unsecured PHI.

These regulations apply to “covered entities,” which include most healthcare providers and health plans, and some of these regulations apply to “business associates,” which are persons or entities that perform or assist in performing services or activities for or on behalf of a covered entity, if the performance of those services or activities involves the creation, receipt, maintenance or transmission of PHI. HIPAA also requires that a covered entity and its business associates enter into written contracts whereby the business associate agrees to restrict its use and disclosure of PHI. We provide a varied line of services to patients and other entities. When we are acting as a pharmacy or health care provider, we function as a covered entity. There may also be situations when we act on behalf of another covered entity as a business associate.

The requirements imposed by HIPAA are extensive, and it has required substantial cost and effort to assess and implement measures to comply with those requirements. We have taken and intend to continue to take steps that we believe are reasonably necessary to ensure our policies and procedures are in compliance with the Privacy Regulations, the Security Regulations and the Breach Notification Regulations. The requirements imposed by HIPAA have increased our burden and costs of regulatory compliance (including our health improvement programs and other information-based products), altered our reporting and reduced the amount of information we can use or disclose if patients do not authorize such uses or disclosures.

Some federal and state privacy-related laws are more restrictive than HIPAA and could result in additional penalties. For example, the Federal Trade Commission uses its consumer protection authority to initiate enforcement actions in response to data breaches. In addition, most states have enacted privacy and security laws, including laws that protect particularly sensitive medical information (such as HIV status or mental health records) and breach notification laws that may impose an obligation to notify persons if their personal information has or may have been accessed by an unauthorized person. Some of these laws apply to our business and have increased and will continue to increase our burden and costs of privacy and security-related regulatory compliance.

Employees

As of December 31, 2018 , we had 1,657  full-time, 47  part-time and 339  per diem employees. Per diem employees are defined as those available on an as-needed basis. None of our employees are represented by any union and, in our opinion, relations with our employees are satisfactory.

Available Information

Our principal executive offices are located at 1600 Broadway, Suite 700, Denver, CO 80202, our telephone number is 720-697-5200, and our Internet address is www.bioscrip.com. The information contained on our website is not incorporated by reference into this Annual Report and should not be considered part of this report. Our Annual Reports on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K, and our Proxy Statements are available through our website, free of charge, as soon as reasonably practicable after they are filed with or furnished to the SEC.

The SEC maintains a website that contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding issuers that file electronically with the SEC at www.sec.gov.

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Item 1A.
Risk Factors

Risks Related to Our Business

Delays in reimbursement may adversely affect our liquidity, cash flows and operating results.

The reimbursement process for the services we provide is time consuming and complex, resulting in delays between the time we bill for a service and receipt of payment that can be significant. Reimbursement and procedural issues often require us to resubmit claims several times and respond to multiple administrative requests before payment is remitted. The collection of accounts receivable is a significant challenge, requires constant focus and involvement by management and ongoing enhancements to information systems and billing center operating procedures. While management believes that our controls and processes are satisfactory, there can be no assurance that collections of accounts receivable will continue at historical rates. The risks associated with third-party payors and the inability to collect outstanding accounts receivable could have a material adverse effect on our liquidity, cash flows and operating results.

Pressures relating to downturns in the economy could adversely affect our business and consolidated financial statements.

Medicare and other federal and state payors account for a significant portion of our revenues. During economic downturns and periods of stagnant or slow economic growth, federal and state budgets are typically negatively affected, resulting in reduced reimbursements or delayed payments by the federal and state government health care coverage programs in which we participate, including Medicare, Medicaid, and other federal or state assistance plans. Government programs could also slow or temporarily suspend payments, negatively impacting our cash flow and increasing our working capital needs and interest payments. We have seen, and believe we will continue to see, Medicare and state Medicaid programs institute measures aimed at controlling spending growth, including reductions in reimbursement rates.

Higher unemployment rates and significant employment layoffs and downsizings may lead to lower numbers of patients enrolled in employer-provided plans. Adverse economic conditions could also cause employers to stop offering, or limit, healthcare coverage, or modify program designs, shifting more costs to the individual and exposing us to greater credit risk from patients or the discontinuance of therapy.

Existing and new government legislative and regulatory action could adversely affect our business and financial results.

Our business is subject to numerous federal, state and local laws and regulations. See “Business - Government Regulation.” These laws and regulations, and their interpretations, are subject to change. Changes in these existing laws and regulations may require extensive changes to our systems and, or their interpretations, or the enactment of new laws or regulations could have a material adverse effect on our business and consolidated financial condition, results of operations, and cash flows.

These changes may be difficult to implement. Further, we cannot predict the timing or impact of any future legislative, rulemaking, or other regulatory actions. Untimely compliance or noncompliance with applicable laws and regulations could adversely affect the continued operation of our business as a result of civil or criminal penalties, including, but not limited to: imposition of monetary penalties; suspension of payments from government programs; loss of required government certifications or approvals; suspension or exclusion from participation in government reimbursement programs; or loss of licensure. Reductions in reimbursement by Medicare, Medicaid and other governmental payors could adversely affect our business as well. The law and regulations to which we are subject include, but are not limited to, the federal Anti-Kickback Statute and Stark Law, and state counter-parts; HIPAA; False Claims Act; Civil Monetary Penalties Act; regulations promulgated by the FDA, U.S. Federal Trade Commission, DEA, HHS and CMS, and regulations of individual state regulatory authorities. In that regard, our business and consolidated financial statements could be affected by one or more of the following:

federal and state laws and regulations governing the purchase, distribution, management, compounding, dispensing and reimbursement of prescription drugs and related services, including state and federal controlled substances laws and regulations;
rules and regulations issued pursuant to HIPAA and HITECH; and other federal and state laws affecting the use, disclosure and transmission of health information, such as state security breach notification laws and state laws limiting the use and disclosure of prescriber information;
administration of Medicare and state Medicaid programs, including legislative changes and/or rulemaking and interpretation;
federal and state laws and regulations that require reporting and public dissemination of payments to and between various health care providers and other industry participants;
government regulation of the development, administration, review and updating of formularies and drug lists;

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managed care reform and plan design legislation, including state laws regarding out-of-network charges and participation;
states’ restrictions on new home infusion care entrants into their market via licensing, certificating, and permitting requirements; and
federal or state laws governing our relationships with physicians or others in a position to refer to us.

The Affordable Care Act and other healthcare reform efforts could have a material adverse effect on our business.

In recent years, healthcare reform efforts at federal and state levels of government have resulted in sweeping changes to the delivery and financing of health care. The Affordable Care Act is the most prominent of these efforts. However, there is substantial uncertainty regarding its net effect and its future. The Affordable Care Act has been subject to legislative and regulatory changes and court challenges. The presidential administration and certain members of Congress continue to attempt to repeal or make significant changes to the Affordable Care Act, its implementation and its interpretation. Effective January 2019, Congress eliminated the financial penalty associated with the individual mandate to maintain health insurance coverage. Because the penalty associated with the individual mandate was eliminated, a federal court in Texas ruled in December 2018 that the entire Affordable Care Act was unconstitutional. However, the law remains in place pending appeal. It is impossible to predict the full impact of the Affordable Care Act and related regulations or the impact of its modification on our operations in light of the uncertainty regarding whether, when or how the law will be changed and what alternative reforms, such as single-payor proposals, may be enacted. Health reform efforts may adversely affect our customers, which may cause them to reduce or delay use of our products and services. As such, we cannot predict the impact of the Affordable Care Act on our business, operations or financial performance.

Federal actions and legislation may reduce reimbursement rates from governmental payors and adversely affect our results of operations.

In recent years, Congress has passed legislation reducing payments to health care providers. The Budget Control Act of 2011, as amended, requires automatic spending reductions to reduce the federal deficit, including Medicare spending reductions of up to 2% per fiscal year that extend through 2027. CMS began imposing a 2% reduction on Medicare claims on April 1, 2013. The Affordable Care Act provides for material reductions in the growth of Medicare program spending. More recently, the Cures Act significantly reduced the amount paid by Medicare for drug costs, while delaying the implementation of a clinical services payment, although Congress also passed a temporary transitional service payment that takes effect January 1, 2019. In addition, from time to time, CMS revises the reimbursement systems used to reimburse health care providers, which may result in reduced Medicare payments.

Because most states must operate with balanced budgets and because the Medicaid program is often a state’s largest program, some states have enacted or may consider enacting legislation designed to reduce their Medicaid expenditures. Further, many states have taken steps to reduce coverage and/or enroll Medicaid recipients in managed care programs. The current economic environment has increased the budgetary pressures on many states, and these budgetary pressures have resulted, and likely will continue to result, in decreased spending, or decreased spending growth, for Medicaid programs and the Children’s Health Insurance Program in many states.

In some cases, Third Party Payors rely on all or portions of Medicare payment systems to determine payment rates. Changes to government healthcare programs that reduce payments under these programs may negatively impact payments from Third Party Payors. Current or future healthcare reform and deficit reduction efforts, changes in other laws or regulations affecting government healthcare programs, changes in the administration of government healthcare programs and changes by Third Party Payors could have a material, adverse effect on our financial position and results of operations.

In addition, many Third Party Payors are increasingly considering new metrics as the basis for reimbursement rates. It is possible that the pharmaceutical industry or regulators may evaluate and/or develop an alternative pricing reference to replace average wholesale price. Future changes to the pricing benchmarks used to establish pharmaceutical pricing, including changes in the basis for calculating reimbursement by third-party payers, could adversely affect us.

We face periodic reviews and billing audits by governmental and private payors, and these audits could have adverse findings that may negatively impact our business .

As a result of our participation in the Medicare and Medicaid programs, we are subject to various governmental reviews and audits to verify our compliance with these programs and applicable laws and regulations. We also are subject to audits under various government programs in which third party firms engaged by CMS conduct extensive reviews of claims data and medical and other records to identify potential improper payments under the Medicare program. Third Party Payors may also conduct audits. Disputes with payors can arise from these reviews. Payors can claim that payments based on certain billing practices or

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billing errors were made incorrectly. If billing errors are identified in the sample of reviewed claims, the billing error can be extrapolated to all claims filed which could result in a larger overpayment than originally identified in the sample of reviewed claims. Our costs to respond to and defend claims, reviews and audits may be significant and could have a material adverse effect on our business and consolidated financial condition, results of operations and cash flows. Moreover, an adverse claim, review or audit could result in:

required refunding or retroactive adjustment of amounts we have been paid by governmental payors or Third Party Payors;
state or federal agencies imposing fines, penalties and other sanctions on us;
suspension or exclusion from the Medicare program, state programs, or one or more Third Party Payor networks; or
damage to our business and reputation in various markets.

These results could have a material adverse effect on our business and consolidated financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

If any of our pharmacies fail to comply with the conditions of participation in the Medicare program, that pharmacy could be terminated from Medicare, which could adversely affect our consolidated financial statements.

Our pharmacies must comply with the extensive conditions of participation in the Medicare program. If a pharmacy fails to meet any of the Medicare supplier standards, that pharmacy could be terminated from the Medicare program. We respond in the ordinary course to deficiency notices issued by surveyors, and none of our pharmacies has ever been terminated from the Medicare program for failure to comply with the supplier standards. Any termination of one or more of our pharmacies from the Medicare program for failure to satisfy the Medicare supplier standards could adversely affect our consolidated financial statements.

We cannot predict the impact of changing requirements on compounding pharmacies.

Compounding pharmacies are closely monitored by federal and state governmental agencies. We believe that our compounding is done in safe environments and we have clinically appropriate policies and procedures in place. We only compound pursuant to a patient-specific prescription and do so in compliance with USP 797 standards. In 2013, Congress passed the DQSA, which creates a new category of compounders called outsourcing facilities, which are regulated by the FDA. We do not believe that our current compounding practices qualify us as an outsourcing facility and therefore we continue to operate consistently with USP 797 standards. Should state regulators or the FDA disagree, or should our business practices change to qualify us as an outsourcing facility, there is a risk of regulatory action and/or increased resources required to comply with federal requirements imposed pursuant to the DQSA on outsourcing facilities that could significantly increase our costs or otherwise affect our results of operations. Furthermore, we cannot predict the overall impact of increased scrutiny on compounding pharmacies.

Competition in the healthcare industry may adversely affect our business.

The healthcare industry is very competitive. Our competitors include large and well-established companies that may have greater financial, marketing and technological resources than we do. As a result, they may be better able to compete for market share, even in areas in which our services may be superior.

Some of our competitors have vertically integrated business models with commercial payers, or are under common control with, or owned by, pharmaceutical wholesalers and distributors, managed care organizations, pharmacy benefit managers or retail pharmacy chains and may be better positioned with respect to the cost-effective distribution of pharmaceuticals. In addition, some of our competitors may have secured long-term supply or distribution arrangements for prescription pharmaceuticals necessary to treat certain chronic disease states on price terms substantially more favorable than the terms currently available to us. As a result of such advantageous pricing, we may be less price competitive than some of these competitors with respect to certain pharmaceutical products. ACOs and other clinical integration models may result in lower reimbursement rates. Some of our competitors may negotiate exclusivity provisions with managed care plans or otherwise interfere with the ability of managed care companies to contract with us. Increasing consolidation in the payer and supplier industries, including vertical integration efforts among insurers, providers, and suppliers, and cost-reduction strategies by large employer groups and their affiliates may limit our ability to negotiate favorable terms and conditions in our contracts and otherwise intensify competitive pressure. In addition, our competitive position could be adversely affected by any inability to obtain access to new biotech pharmaceutical products.


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If we are unable to maintain relationships with existing patient referral sources, our business and consolidated financial condition, results of operations, and cash flows could be materially adversely affected.

Our success depends on referrals from physicians, hospitals, and other sources in the communities we serve and on our ability to maintain good relationships with existing referral sources. Our referral sources are not contractually obligated to refer patients to us and may refer their patients to other providers. Our growth and profitability depends, in part, on our ability to establish and maintain close working relationships with these patient referral sources, and to increase awareness and acceptance of the benefits of home infusion by our referral sources and their patients. Our loss of, or failure to maintain, existing relationships or our failure to develop new referral relationships could have a material adverse effect on our business and consolidated financial condition, results of operations, and cash flows.

If we are unable to maintain our corporate reputation, our business may suffer.

Our success depends on our ability to maintain our corporate reputation, including our reputation for providing quality patient care and for compliance with Medicare requirements and the other laws to which we are subject. Adverse publicity surrounding any aspect of our business, including the death or disability of any of our patients due to our failure to provide proper care, or due to any failure on our part to comply with Medicare requirements or other laws to which we are subject, could negatively affect our Company’s overall reputation and the willingness of referral sources to refer patients to us.

Changes in the case mix of patients, as well as payment methodologies, payor mix or pricing could adversely affect our consolidated financial statements .

The sources and amounts of our patient revenue are determined by a number of factors, including the mix of patients and the rates of reimbursement among payors. Changes in the case mix of the patients, payment methodologies, payor mix or pricing among private pay, Medicare and Medicaid may significantly affect our consolidated financial statements, results of operations, and cash flows.

Changes in industry pricing benchmarks could adversely affect our financial performance.

Contracts within our business generally use certain published benchmarks to establish pricing for the reimbursement of prescription medications dispensed by us. These benchmarks include AWP, wholesale acquisition cost, and average manufacturer price. Many of our contracts utilize the AWP benchmark. Publication of the AWP benchmark was expected to cease in 2011 as a result of the settlement of class-action lawsuits brought against First DataBank and Medi-Span, third-party publishers of various pricing benchmarks. However, Medi-Span continues to publish the AWP benchmark and has indicated that it will continue to do so until a new benchmark is widely accepted. Several industry participants have explored establishing a new benchmark but there is not currently a viable generally accepted alternative to the AWP benchmark. Without a suitable pricing benchmark in place, many of our contracts will have to be modified and could potentially change the economic structure of our agreements.

Contract renewals, or lack thereof, with key revenue sources and key business relationships could result in less favorable pricing, loss of exclusivity and/or reduced distribution and access to customers, which could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

We have contractual and business relationships with key revenue sources, including Third Party Payors. Our future growth and success depends on our ability to maintain these relationships and renew such contracts on acceptable terms. However, we may not be able to continue to maintain these relationships. We may have disputes with Third Party Payors regarding these contractual relationships; these disputes may also disrupt our ongoing contractual relationships with these payors. Any break in these key business relationships could result in lost contracts and reduce our access to certain customers and distribution channels. Further, when these contracts near expiration, we may not be able to successfully renegotiate acceptable terms. Any increase in pricing or loss of exclusivity could result in reduced margins. Accordingly, it is possible that our ongoing efforts to renew contracts and business relationships with such key revenue sources as Third Party Payors could result in less favorable pricing or even reduced access to customers and distribution channels, any of which could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations. In addition, even when such contracts are renewed, they may be renewed for only a short term or may be terminable on relatively short notice.

We and certain of our former directors and executive officers were named as defendants in a derivative complaint and we may be subject to similar lawsuits in the future.

Certain of our current and former directors and executive officers were named as defendants in a derivative complaint (the “Derivative Complaint”) that generally alleged that certain defendants breached their fiduciary duties with respect to the Company’s

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public disclosures, oversight of Company operations, secondary stock offerings, and stock sales. The Company was also named as a nominal defendant in the Derivative Complaint. The Derivative Complaint also contended that certain defendants aided and abetted those alleged breaches. On April 18, 2017, the Court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss, and on November 27, 2017, the Delaware Supreme Court affirmed the dismissal. Additional demands and lawsuits related to the same facts and circumstances, however, could be pursued in the future.

In that event, there is no assurance that any defenses will be successful or that insurance will be available or adequate to fund any settlement, judgment or litigation costs associated with this action. Certain of the defendants may also seek indemnification from the Company pursuant to certain indemnification agreements, for which there may be no insurance coverage.

Any conclusion in this matter or in any related manner adverse to us would have an adverse effect on our financial condition and business and the Company. We could incur substantial costs not covered by our directors’ and officers’ liability insurance, suffer a significant adverse impact on our reputation and divert management’s attention and resources from other priorities, including the execution of business plans and strategies that are important to our ability to grow our business, any of which could have an adverse effect on our business.

Pending and future litigation could subject us to significant monetary damages and/or require us to change our business practices.

We are subject to risks relating to asserted claims, litigation and other proceedings in connection with our operations. We are or may face claims or become a party to a variety of legal actions that affect our business, including breach of contract actions, employment and employment discrimination-related suits, employee benefit claims, stockholder suits and other securities laws claims, and tort claims. . Due to the nature of our business, we, through our employees and caregivers who provide services on our behalf, may be the subject of medical malpractice claims. A court could find these individuals should be considered our agents, and, as a result, we could be held liable for their acts or omissions.

We may incur substantial expenses in defending such claims or litigation, regardless of merit, and such claims or litigation could result in a significant diversion of the efforts of our management personnel. Successful claims against us may result in monetary liability or a material disruption in the conduct of our business. Similarly, if we settle such legal proceedings, it may affect how we operate our business. See Item 3-Legal Proceedings for a description of material proceedings pending against us. We believe that these suits are without merit and, to the extent not already concluded, intend to contest them vigorously. However, an adverse outcome in one or more of these suits may have a material adverse effect on our consolidated results of operations, consolidated financial position, and/or consolidated cash flow from operations, or may require us to make material changes to our business practices.

We periodically respond to subpoenas and requests for information from governmental agencies. To our knowledge, we are not a target or a potential subject of a criminal investigation, but we cannot predict with certainty whether we may in the future become a target or potential target of an investigation or the subject of further inquiries or ultimately settlements with respect to the subject matter of any subpoenas. In addition to potential monetary liability arising from suits and proceedings, from time to time we incur costs in providing documents to government agencies. Current pending claims and associated costs may be covered by our insurance, but certain other costs are not insured. Such costs may increase and/or continue to be material to our performance in the future.

In addition, as we continue our strategic assessment and cost reduction efforts, there is an increased risk of employment and workers’ compensation-related litigation and/or administrative claims brought against us. We would defend against any and all such litigation and claims, as appropriate. Such claims could have a material adverse effect on our consolidated financial statements in any particular reporting period.

Our acquisition strategy exposes us to a variety of operational and financial risks.

A principal element of our historic business strategy has been to grow by acquiring other companies and assets in the home infusion and complementary businesses. Growth, especially rapid growth, through acquisitions exposes us to a variety of operational and financial risks. We summarize the most significant of these risks below.


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Integration risks . We must integrate our acquisitions with our existing operations. This process includes the integration of the various components of our business (including the following) and of the businesses we have acquired or may acquire in the future:

health care professionals and employees who are not familiar with our policies and procedures;
clients who may terminate their relationships with us;
key employees who may seek employment elsewhere;
patients who may elect to switch to another health care provider;
regulatory compliance programs; and
disparate operating, information and record keeping systems and technology platforms.

Integrating an acquisition could be expensive and time consuming and could disrupt our ongoing business, negatively affect cash flow and distract management and other key personnel from day-to-day operations.

We may not be able to combine successfully the operations of acquired companies with our operations, and, even if such integration is accomplished, we may never realize the potential benefits of the acquisition. The integration of acquisitions requires significant attention from management, may impose substantial demands on our operations or other projects and may impose challenges on the combined business including, but not limited to, consistencies in business standards, procedures, policies and business cultures. If we fail to complete ongoing integration efforts, we may never fully realize the potential benefits of the related acquisitions.

Benefits may not materialize . When evaluating potential acquisition targets, we identify potential synergies and cost savings that we expect to realize upon the successful completion of the acquisition and the integration of the related operations. We may, however, be unable to achieve or may otherwise never realize the expected benefits. Our ability to realize the expected benefits from improvements to companies we acquire are subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are beyond our control, such as changes to government regulation governing or otherwise impacting our industry, reductions in reimbursement rates from Third Party Payors, reductions in service levels under our contracts, operating difficulties, client preferences, changes in competition and general economic or industry conditions. If we are unsuccessful in implementing these improvements or if we do not achieve our expected results, it may adversely impact our results of operations.

Assumptions of unknown liabilities . Companies that we acquire may have unknown or contingent liabilities, including, but not limited to, liabilities for failure to comply with healthcare laws and regulations. We may incur material liabilities for the past activities of acquired operations. Such liabilities and related legal or other costs and/or resulting damage to our reputation could negatively impact our business through lower-than-expected operating results, charges for impairment of acquired intangible assets or otherwise.

Competing for acquisitions . We face competition for acquisition candidates primarily from other home infusion and other healthcare companies. Some of our competitors have greater resources than we do. As a result, we may pay more to acquire a target business or may agree to less favorable deal terms than we would have otherwise. Accurately assessing the value of acquisition candidates is often very challenging. Also, suitable acquisitions may not be available due to unfavorable terms.

Further, the cost of an acquisition could result in a dilutive effect on our results of operations, depending on various factors, including employee severance costs, certain legal and professional fees, training costs, redundant wage costs, impacts recorded from the change in contingent consideration obligations, and other costs related to contract terminations and closed branches/offices.

Improving financial results . Some of the operations we have acquired or may acquire in the future may have had significantly lower operating margins than our current operations. If we fail to improve the operating margins of the companies we acquire, operate such companies profitably or effectively integrate the operations of the acquired companies, our results of operations could be negatively impacted.

Acquisitions, strategic investments and strategic relationships involve certain risks.

We may pursue opportunistic acquisitions, strategic investments in, or strategic relationships with businesses and technologies. Acquisitions may entail numerous risks, including difficulties in assessing values for acquired businesses, intangible assets and technologies, difficulties in the assimilation of acquired operations and products, diversion of management’s attention from other business concerns, assumption of unknown material liabilities of acquired companies, amortization of acquired intangible assets which could reduce future reported earnings, and potential loss of clients or key employees of acquired companies. We may not be able to successfully fully integrate the operations, personnel, services or products that we have acquired or may acquire in the

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future. Strategic investments may also entail some of the risks described above. If these investments are unsuccessful, we may need to incur charges against earnings. We may also pursue a number of strategic relationships. These relationships and others we may enter into in the future may be important to our business and growth prospects. We may not be able to maintain these relationships or develop new strategic alliances.

We may incur significant costs in connection with our evaluation of new business opportunities and suitable acquisition candidates.

Our management intends to identify, analyze and evaluate potential new business opportunities, including possible acquisition and merger candidates. We may incur significant costs, such as due diligence and legal and other professional fees and expenses, as part of these efforts. Notwithstanding these efforts and expenditures, we may not be able to identify an appropriate new business opportunity, or any acquisition opportunity, in the near term, or at all.

We may be subject to liability claims for damages and other expenses that are not covered by insurance.

As a result of operating in the home infusion industry, our business entails an inherent risk of claims, losses and potential lawsuits alleging incidents involving our employees that are likely to occur in a patient’s home. We maintain professional liability insurance to provide coverage to us and our subsidiaries against these risks. A successful product or professional liability claim in excess of our insurance coverage could harm our consolidated financial statements. Various aspects of our business may subject us to litigation and liability for damages. For example, a prescription drug dispensing error could result in a patient receiving the wrong or incorrect amount of medication, leading to personal injury or death. Our business and consolidated financial statements could suffer if we pay damages or defense costs in connection with a claim that is outside the scope of any applicable contractual indemnity or insurance coverage.

Our insurance coverage also includes fire, property damage and general liability with varying limits. We cannot assure you that the insurance we maintain will satisfy claims made against us or that insurance coverage will continue to be available to us at commercially reasonable rates, in adequate amounts or on satisfactory terms. Any claims made against us, regardless of their merit or eventual outcome, could damage our reputation and business.

Changes in our relationships with pharmaceutical suppliers, including changes in drug availability or pricing, could adversely affect our business and financial results.

We have contractual relationships with pharmaceutical manufacturers to purchase the drugs that we dispense. Any changes to these relationships, including, but not limited, to loss of a manufacturer relationship, drug shortages or changes in pricing, could have an adverse effect on our business and financial results.

We purchase a majority of our pharmaceutical products from one vendor and a disruption in our purchasing arrangements could adversely impact our business.

We purchase a majority of our prescription products, subject to certain minimum periodic purchase levels and excluding purchases of therapeutic plasma products, from a single wholesaler, AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation (“ABDC”), pursuant to a prime vendor agreement. The term of this agreement extends until December 2019, subject to extension for up to two additional years. Any significant disruption in our relationship with ABDC, or in ABDC’s supply and timely delivery of products to us, would make it difficult and possibly costlier for us to continue to operate our business until we are able to execute a replacement wholesaler agreement. If that were to occur, we may not be able to find a replacement wholesaler on a timely basis. Further, such wholesaler may not be able to fulfill our demands on similar financial terms and service levels. If we are unable to identify a replacement on substantially similar financial terms and/or service levels, our consolidated financial statements may be materially and adversely affected.

A disruption in supply could adversely impact our business.

We also source pharmaceuticals, medical supplies and equipment from other manufacturers, distributors and wholesalers. Most of the pharmaceuticals that we purchase are available from multiple sources, and we believe they are available in sufficient quantities to meet our needs and the needs of our patients. We keep safety stock to ensure continuity of service for reasonable, but limited, periods of time. Should a supply disruption result in the inability to obtain especially high margin drugs and compound components necessary for patient care, our consolidated financial statements could be negatively impacted.


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Prescription volumes may decline, and our net revenues and profitability may be negatively impacted, when products are withdrawn from the market or when increased safety risk profiles of specific drugs result in utilization decreases.

We dispense significant volumes of prescription medications from our pharmacies. Our dispensing volume is the principal driver of revenue and profitability. When products are withdrawn by manufacturers, or when increased safety risk profiles of specific drugs or classes of drugs result in utilization decreases, physicians may cease writing or reduce the numbers of prescriptions written for these higher-risk drugs. Additionally, negative media reports regarding drugs with higher safety risk profiles may result in reduced consumer demand for such drugs. In cases where there are no acceptable prescription drug equivalents or alternatives for these prescription drugs, our prescription volumes, net revenues, profitability and cash flows may decline.

Home infusion joint ventures formed with hospitals could adversely affect our financial results.

The home infusion industry is currently seeing renewed activity in the formation of equity-based infusion joint ventures formed with hospitals. This activity stems, in part, from hospitals seeking to position themselves for new paradigms in the delivery of coordinated healthcare and new methods of payment, including an emerging interdisciplinary care model known as ACOs. These organizations are encouraged by the Affordable Care Act. These entities are designed to save money and improve quality of care by better integrating care, with the healthcare provider possibly sharing in the financial benefits of the new efficiencies.

Participation in equity-based joint ventures offer hospitals and other providers an opportunity to more efficiently transfer patients to less expensive care settings, while keeping the patient within its network. Additionally, it provides many hospitals with a mechanism to invest accumulated profits in a growing sector with attractive margins.

If these home infusion joint ventures continue to expand, then we could lose referrals and our consolidated financial statements could be adversely affected. Also, there are risks and costs associated with joint venture participation. We consider joint ventures with hospitals from time to time.

A shortage of qualified registered nursing staff, pharmacists and other professionals could adversely affect our ability to attract, train and retrain qualified personnel and could increase operating costs.

Our business relies significantly on its ability to attract and retain nursing staff, pharmacists and other professionals who possess the skills, experience and licenses necessary to meet the requirements of their job responsibilities. From time to time and particularly in recent years, there have been shortages of nursing staff, pharmacists and other professionals in certain local and regional markets. As a result, we are often required to compete for personnel with other healthcare systems and our competitors. Our ability to attract and retain personnel depends on several factors, including our ability to provide them with engaging assignments and competitive salaries and benefits. We may not be successful in any of these areas.

In addition, where labor shortages arise in markets in which we operate, we may face higher costs to attract personnel, and we may have to provide them with more attractive benefit packages than originally anticipated or are being paid in other markets where such shortages don’t exist at the time. In either case, such circumstances could cause our profitability to decline. Finally, if we expand our operations into geographic areas where healthcare providers historically have unionized or unionization occurs in our existing geographic areas, negotiating collective bargaining agreements may have a negative effect on our ability to timely and successfully recruit qualified personnel and on our financial results. If we are unable to attract and retain nursing staff, pharmacists and other professionals, the quality of our services may decline and we could lose patients and referral sources, which could have a material adverse effect on our business and consolidated financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

Introduction of new drugs or accelerated adoption of existing lower margin drugs could cause us to experience lower revenues and profitability when prescribers prescribe these drugs for their patients or they are mandated by third party payors.

The pharmaceutical industry pipeline of new drugs includes many drugs that over the long term may replace older, more expensive therapies. As a result of such older drugs going off patent and being replaced by generic substitutes, new and less expensive delivery methods (such as when an infusion or injectable drug is replaced with an oral drug) or additional products are added to a therapeutic class, thereby increasing price competition among competing manufacturer’s products in that therapeutic category. In such cases, manufacturers have the ability to increase drug acquisition costs or lower the selling price of replaced products. This could have the effect of lowering our revenues and/or margins.


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Acts of God such as major weather disturbances could disrupt our business.

We operate in a network of prescribers, providers, patients and facilities that can be negatively impacted by local weather disturbances and other force majeure events. For example, in anticipation of major weather events, patients with impaired health may be moved to alternate sites. After a major weather event, availability of electricity, clean water and transportation can impact our ability to provide service in the home. Similarly, such events could impact key suppliers or vendors, disrupting the services or materials they provide us. In addition, acts of God and other force majeure events may cause a reduction in our business or increased costs, such as increased costs in our operations as we incur overtime charges or redirect services to other locations, delays in our ability to work with payors, hospitals, physicians and other strategic partners on new business initiatives, and disruption to referral patterns as patients are moved out of facilities affected by such events or are unable to return to sites of service in the home.

Failure to develop new services or adapt to changes and trends within the industry may adversely affect our business.

We operate in a highly competitive environment. We develop new services from time to time to assist our clients. If we are unsuccessful in developing innovative services, our ability to attract new clients and retain existing clients may suffer.

Technology, including the ability to capture and report outcomes, is also an important component of our business as we continue to utilize new and better channels to communicate and interact with our clients, members and business partners. If our competitors are more successful than us in employing this technology, our ability to attract new clients, retain existing clients and operate efficiently may suffer. Any significant shifts in the structure of the healthcare products and services industry in general could alter the industry dynamics and adversely affect our ability to attract or retain clients. Our failure to anticipate or appropriately adapt to changes in the industry could negatively impact our competitive position and adversely affect our business and results of operations.

Cybersecurity risks could compromise our information and expose us to liability, which may harm our ability to operate effectively and may cause our business and reputation to suffer.

Cybersecurity refers to the combination of technologies, processes and procedures established to protect information technology systems and data from unauthorized access, attack, or damage. We rely on our information systems to provide security for processing, transmission and storage of confidential information about our patients, customers and personnel, such as names, addresses and other individually identifiable information protected by HIPAA and other privacy laws. Cyber incidents can result from deliberate attacks or unintentional events. Cyber-attacks are increasingly more common, including in the health care industry. The regulatory environment surrounding information security and privacy is increasingly demanding, with the frequent imposition of new and changing requirements. Compliance with changes in privacy and information security laws and with rapidly evolving industry standards may result in our incurring significant expense due to increased investment in technology and the development of new operational processes.

We have not experienced any known attacks on our information technology systems that compromised any confidential information. We maintain our information technology systems with safeguard protection against cyber-attacks including passive intrusion protection, firewalls and virus detection software. However, these safeguards do not ensure that a significant cyber-attack could not occur. Although we have taken steps to protect the security of our information systems and the data maintained in those systems, it is possible that our safety and security measures will not prevent the systems’ improper functioning or damage or the improper access or disclosure of personally identifiable information such as in the event of cyber-attacks.

Security breaches, including physical or electronic break-ins, computer viruses, attacks by hackers and similar breaches can create system disruptions or shutdowns or the unauthorized use or disclosure of confidential information. If personal information or protected health information is improperly accessed, tampered with or disclosed as a result of a security breach, we may incur significant costs to notify and mitigate potential harm to the affected individuals, and we may be subject to sanctions and civil or criminal penalties if we are found to be in violation of the privacy or security rules under HIPAA or other similar federal or state laws protecting confidential personal information. In addition, a security breach of our information systems could damage our reputation, subject us to liability claims or regulatory penalties for compromised personal information and could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

The success of our business depends on maintaining a well-secured and up to date business and technology infrastructure.

We are dependent on our infrastructure, including our information systems, for many aspects of our business operations. A fundamental requirement for our business is the secure storage and transmission of protected health information and other confidential data. Our business and operations may be harmed if we do not maintain our business processes and information

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systems in a secure manner, and maintain and continually improve the integrity of our confidential information. Although we have developed systems and processes that are designed to protect information against security breaches, failure to protect our confidential information or mitigate harm caused by such breaches may adversely affect our operating results. Malfunctions in our business processes, breaches of our information systems or the failure to maintain effective and up-to-date information systems could disrupt our business operations, result in customer and member disputes, damage our reputation, expose us to risk of loss or litigation, result in regulatory violations and related costs and penalties, increase administrative expenses or lead to other adverse consequences.

Our business is dependent on the services provided by third party information technology vendors.

Our information technology infrastructure includes hosting services provided by third parties. While we believe these third parties are high-performing organizations with secure platforms and customary certifications, they could suffer a security breach or business interruption which in turn could impact our operations negatively. In addition, changes in pricing terms charged by our technology vendors may adversely affect our financial performance.

Our ability to use net operating loss carryforwards to offset future taxable income for U.S. federal tax purposes is subject to limitation and risk that could further limit our ability to utilize our net operating losses.

Under U.S. federal income tax law, a corporation’s ability to utilize its net operating losses (“NOLs”) to offset future taxable income may be significantly limited if it experiences an “ownership change” as defined in Section 382 of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended. In general, an ownership change will occur if there is a cumulative change in a corporation’s ownership by “5-percent shareholders” that exceeds 50 percentage points over a rolling three-year period. A corporation that experiences an ownership change will generally be subject to an annual limitation on the use of its pre-ownership change NOLs equal to the value of the corporation immediately before the ownership change, multiplied by the long-term tax-exempt rate (subject to certain adjustments). The annual limitation for a taxable year generally is increased by the amount of any “recognized built-in gains” for such year and the amount of any unused annual limitation in a prior year. On December 22, 2017, a law commonly known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (“TCJA”) was enacted in the United States. Certain provisions of the TCJA impact the ability to utilize NOLs generated in 2018 and forward; any limitation to our annual use of NOLs could require us to pay a greater amount of U.S. federal (and in some cases, state) income taxes, which could reduce our after-tax income from operations for future taxable years and adversely impact our financial condition.

Changes to federal and state income tax laws and regulations could adversely affect our position or income taxes and estimated income liabilities.

We are subject to both state and federal income taxes in the U.S. and various state jurisdictions and our operations, plans and results are affected by tax and other initiatives. The TCJA impacted our financial results in 2018. Among other things, the TCJA reduced the U.S. corporate income tax rate to 21% , this reduction resulted in changes in the valuation of our deferred tax asset and liabilities.

We are also subject to regular reviews, examinations, and audits by the Internal Revenue Service and other taxing authorities with respect to our taxes. There are uncertainties and ambiguities in the application of the TCJA and it is possible that the IRS could issue subsequent guidance or take positions on audit that differ from our interpretations and assumptions. Although we believe our tax estimates are reasonable, if a taxing authority disagrees with the positions we have taken, we could face additional tax liability, including interest and penalties. Our effective tax rate could be adversely affected by changes in the mix of earnings in states with different statutory tax rates, changes in the valuation of deferred tax assets and liabilities, changes in tax laws and regulations, changes in our interpretations of tax laws, including the TCJA. Unanticipated changes in our tax rates or exposure to additional income tax liabilities could affect our profitability. There can be no assurance that payment of such additional amounts upon final adjudication of any disputes will not have a material impact on our results of operations and financial position.

The issuance of shares of our Preferred Stock reduced the percentage interests of our other stockholders, and any future exercise of the Class A and Class B Warrants or the 2017 Warrants will further reduce the percentage interests of our other stockholders.

On March 9, 2015, we entered into a securities purchase agreement (the “Purchase Agreement”) with Coliseum Capital Partners, L.P., Coliseum Capital Partners II, L.P., and Blackwell Partners, LLC, Series A (collectively, the “PIPE Investors”). Pursuant to the terms of the Purchase Agreement, we issued and sold to the PIPE Investors in a private placement an aggregate of (a) 625,000 shares of Series A Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $0.0001 per share (the “Series A Preferred Stock”), at a purchase price per share of $100.00 , (b) 1,800,000 Class A warrants (the “Class A Warrants”), and (c) 1,800,000 Class B warrants (the “Class B Warrants” and, together with the Class A Warrants, the “PIPE Warrants”), for gross proceeds of $62.5 million . We

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also conducted a Rights Offering (as described below) pursuant to which we sold an additional 10,822 shares of Series A Preferred Stock along with the PIPE Warrants. On June 10, 2016, in order to facilitate the 2016 Equity Offering, the Company and the PIPE Investors agreed to exchange 614,177 shares of the existing Series A Preferred Stock for an identical number of shares of Series B Preferred Stock. On June 14, 2016, in order to facilitate the 2016 Equity Offering, the Company and the PIPE Investors agreed to exchange 614,177 shares of the Series B Preferred Stock for an identical number of shares of Series C Preferred Stock (the Series C Preferred Stock, together with the Series A Preferred Stock, the “Preferred Stock”). As a result of these exchanges, there are currently (a) 21,630 shares of Series A Preferred Stock outstanding, of which 10,823 shares are owned by the PIPE Investors, (b) no shares of Series B Preferred Stock outstanding, and (c) 614,177 shares of Series C Preferred Stock outstanding, all of which are owned by the PIPE Investors.

In addition, in connection with the Second Lien Note Facility, the Company also issued the 2017 Warrants to the purchasers of the Second Lien Notes pursuant to the Warrant Purchase Agreement. The 2017 Warrants entitle the purchasers of the 2017 Warrants to purchase shares of Common Stock, representing at the time of any exercise of the 2017 Warrants an equivalent number of shares equal to 4.99% of the Common Stock of the Company on a fully diluted basis, subject to the terms of the Warrant Agreement.

As of the date of this Annual Report, if all holders of the Preferred Stock converted their shares in full, and exercised the PIPE Warrants and the 2017 Warrants in full, the Common Stock issued in respect of such conversions and exercises would represent approximately 19.6% of our outstanding Common Stock. The issuance of the Preferred Stock to the PIPE Investors reduced the relative voting power and percentage ownership interests of our other current stockholders. The future exercise of the PIPE Warrants by the holders of those securities will cause a further reduction in the relative voting power and percentage ownership interests of our other stockholders.

The PIPE Investors may exercise influence over us, including through their ability to influence matters requiring the approval of holders of our Common Stock or Preferred Stock.

Holders of the Preferred Stock are entitled to vote on an as-converted basis upon all matters upon which holders of our Common Stock have the right to vote. The shares of Preferred Stock owned by the PIPE Investors currently represent approximately 13% of the voting rights in respect of our share capital on an as-converted basis, and accordingly the PIPE Investors may have the ability to significantly influence the outcome of most matters submitted for the vote of our stockholders. The PIPE Investors are currently the beneficial owners of 625,000 of the 635,807 shares of our Series A and Series C Preferred Stock.

Further, so long as shares of the Series C Preferred Stock represent at least 5% of our outstanding voting stock (on an as converted into Common Stock basis), the holders of our Series C Preferred Stock are entitled to designate one member of the Board by a majority of the voting power of the outstanding shares of Series C Preferred Stock. The PIPE Investors are currently the beneficial owners of all 614,177 issued and outstanding shares of our Series C Preferred Stock.

The PIPE Investors’ majority ownership of our Series A and Series C Preferred Stock will limit the ability of any current or future holders of such series of Preferred Stock to influence corporate matters requiring the approval of the holders of such series of Preferred Stock, including the right, voting as a separate class, to elect one director to our Board, and to approve certain amendments to our certificate of incorporation, or certain other changes, that would adversely affect the holders of the series of Preferred Stock. The PIPE Investors’ voting power of the Preferred Stock may also delay, defer or even prevent an acquisition by a third party or other change of control of our company to the extent that the consideration that would be received by the PIPE Investors and other holders of Preferred Stock in such acquisition or change of control is less than their liquidation preference, and may make some transactions more difficult or impossible without the support of the PIPE Investors, even if such events are in the best interests of our other stockholders. Accordingly, the ownership position and the governance rights of the PIPE Investors could discourage a third party from proposing a change of control or other strategic transaction with us. In any of these matters, the interests of the PIPE Investors may differ from or conflict with the interests of our other stockholders.

In addition, the PIPE Investors are in the business of making investments in companies and may, from time to time, acquire interests in businesses that directly or indirectly compete with our business, as well as businesses that are significant existing or potential customers.

Changes in future business conditions could cause business investments and/or recorded goodwill to become further impaired, and our financial condition, and results of operations could suffer if there is an additional impairment of goodwill or other intangible assets with indefinite lives.

We are required to test intangible assets with indefinite lives, including goodwill, annually and on an interim basis if an event

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occurs or there is a change in circumstance to indicate that the carrying value of goodwill or indefinite-lived intangible assets may no longer be recoverable. When the carrying value of a reporting unit’s goodwill exceeds its fair value, a charge to operations is recorded. If the carrying amount of an intangible asset with an indefinite life exceeds its fair value, a charge to operations is recognized. Either event would result in incremental expenses for that quarter, which would reduce any earnings or increase any loss for the period in which the impairment was determined to have occurred.

During 2015, we recorded a $251.9 million non-cash impairment charge related to goodwill associated with our Infusion Services business. The estimated impairment took into consideration our updated business outlook, pursuant to which we updated our future cash flow assumptions and calculated updated estimates of fair value. The estimated impairment loss was equal to the excess of the assets' carrying amount over its fair value as determined by an analysis of discounted future cash flows. In connection with our annual assessment of possible goodwill impairment during the fourth quarter of 2018, we concluded no further impairment charge was needed.

Our goodwill impairment analysis is sensitive to changes in key assumptions used in our analysis, such as the degree of volatility in equity and debt markets and our stock price. If the assumptions used in our analysis are not realized, it is possible that an additional impairment charge may need to be recorded in the future. We cannot accurately predict the amount and timing of any impairment of goodwill or other intangible assets. Further, as we continue to work towards a turnaround of our business, we will need to continue to evaluate the carrying value of our goodwill. Any additional impairment charges that we may take in the future could be material to our results of operations and financial condition.

Failure to maintain effective internal control over our financial reporting could have an adverse effect on our ability to report our financial results on a timely and accurate basis.

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting, as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”), and is required to evaluate the effectiveness of these controls and procedures on a periodic basis and publicly disclose the results of these evaluations and related matters in accordance with the requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.  Effective internal control over financial reporting is necessary for us to provide reliable financial reports, to help mitigate the risk of fraud and to operate successfully. However, testing and maintaining our internal control over financial reporting can be expensive and divert our management's attention from other business matters. Any failure to implement and maintain effective internal controls could result in material weaknesses or material misstatements in our consolidated financial statements.

If we fail to maintain effective internal control over financial reporting, or our independent registered public accounting firm is unable to provide us with an unqualified attestation report on our internal control, we may be required to take corrective measures or restate the affected historical financial statements. In addition, we may be subjected to investigations and/or sanctions by federal and state securities regulators, and/or civil lawsuits by security holders. Any of the foregoing could also cause investors to lose confidence in our reported financial information and in our company and would likely result in a decline in the market price of our stock and in our ability to raise additional financing if needed in the future.

New accounting pronouncements or new interpretations of existing standards could require us to make adjustments in our accounting policies that could affect our financial statements.

We prepare our consolidated financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”). The Financial Accounting Standards Board, the SEC, or other accounting organizations or governmental entities frequently issue new pronouncements or new interpretations of existing accounting standards. Changes in accounting standards, how the accounting standards are interpreted, or the adoption of new accounting standards can have a significant effect on our reported results, and could even retroactively affect previously reported transactions, and may require that we make significant changes to our systems, processes and controls.

Changes resulting from these new standards may result in materially different financial results and may require that we change how we process, analyze and report financial information and that we change financial reporting controls. Such changes in accounting standards may have an adverse effect on our business, financial position, and income, which may negatively impact our financial results.

In February 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-02-Leases (Topic 842), requiring lessees to recognize a right-of-use asset and a lease liability on the balance sheet for all leases with the exception of short-term leases. For lessees, leases will continue to be classified as either operating or finance leases in the income statement. The Company is evaluating the effect that the updated standard will have on its consolidated financial statements.


27


Risks Related to Our Indebtedness

We have incurred substantial indebtedness, which imposes operating and financial restrictions on us that, together with the resulting debt service obligations, may significantly limit our ability to execute our business strategy and may increase the risk of default under our debt obligations.

On June 29, 2017, the Company entered into (i) a first lien note purchase agreement, among the Company, which is the issuer under the agreement, the financial institutions and note purchasers from time to time party to the agreement, pursuant to which the Company issued first lien senior secured notes in an aggregate principal amount of $200.0 million; and (ii) a second lien note purchase agreement among the Company, which is the issuer under the agreement, the financial institutions and note purchasers from time to time party to the agreement, pursuant to which the Company (a) issued second lien senior secured notes in an aggregate initial principal amount of $100.0 million and (b) had the ability to draw upon the Second Lien Note Facility and issue second lien delayed draw senior secured notes in an aggregate initial principal amount of $10.0 million for a period of 18 months after the closing date, subject to certain terms and conditions. The Company exercised the draw on the additional $10 million during June 2018. The Company used the proceeds of the sale of the First Lien Notes and the Initial Second Lien Notes to repay in full all amounts outstanding under the Prior Credit Agreements and extinguished the liability. Each of the Prior Credit Agreements was terminated following such repayment. The Notes accrue interest, payable monthly in arrears, at a floating rate. The First Lien Notes will amortize in equal quarterly installments equal to 0.625% of the aggregate principal amount of the First Lien Note Facility, commencing on September 30, 2019, and on the last day of each third month thereafter, with the balance payable at maturity. The First Lien Notes mature on August 15, 2020, provided that if the Company’s 2021 Notes (defined below) are refinanced prior to August 15, 2020, then the scheduled maturity date of the First Lien Notes shall be June 30, 2022. Our indebtedness includes many covenants and restrictions that may significantly limit the types of strategic relationships and our ability to execute our business strategy.

In addition, we have issued $200.0 million in aggregate principal amount of 8.875% senior notes due 2021 (the “2021 Notes”). See “Item 7 - Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Liquidity and Capital Resources.” The 2021 Notes are our senior unsecured obligations and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by all existing and future subsidiaries of the Company. Interest is payable semi-annually on February 15 and August 15.

The operating and financial restrictions and covenants of our debt instruments, including the Notes Facilities and the indenture governing the 2021 Notes, may adversely affect our ability to finance our future operations or capital needs or engage in other business activities that may be in our interest. The terms of the Notes Facilities require us to comply with certain financial covenants.

In addition, subject to a number of important exceptions, the Notes Facilities contain certain covenants and restrictions impacting our ability to, among other things:

incur or guarantee additional indebtedness or issue certain preferred stock;
transfer or sell assets;
make certain investments and loans;
pay dividends or distributions, redeem subordinated indebtedness, or make other restricted payments;
create or incur liens;
incur dividend or other payment restrictions affecting certain subsidiaries;
issue capital stock of our subsidiaries;
enter into hedging transactions or sale and leaseback transactions;
consummate a merger, consolidation or sale of all or substantially all of our assets or the assets of any of our subsidiaries; and
enter into transactions with affiliates.

The indenture governing the 2021 Notes contains similar restrictions. Our ability to comply with these covenants, including the financial covenants, may be affected by events beyond our control. Therefore, in order to engage in some corporate actions, we may need to seek permission from our lenders or the note holders, whose interests may be different from ours. We cannot guarantee that we will be able to obtain consent from these parties when needed. If we do not comply with the restrictions and covenants in our Notes Facilities, we may not be able to finance our future operations, make acquisitions or pursue business opportunities. The restrictions contained in our Notes Facilities may prevent us from taking actions that we believe would be in the best interest of our business and may make it difficult for us to successfully execute our business strategy or effectively compete with companies that are not similarly restricted.

A breach of any of these covenants or the inability to comply with the required financial ratio could result in a default under the Notes Facilities. If any such default occurs, the lenders under the respective Notes Facilities may elect to declare all of their

28


respective outstanding debt, together with accrued interest and other amounts payable thereunder, to be immediately due and payable. Under such circumstances, we may not have sufficient funds or other resources to satisfy all of our obligations. In addition, the limitations imposed on our ability to incur additional debt and to take other corporate actions might significantly impair our ability to obtain other financing.

There can be no assurance that we will be granted future waivers or amendments to the restrictions in the Notes Facilities if for any reason we are unable to comply with such restrictions or that we will be able to refinance our debt on terms acceptable to us, or at all.

The lenders under the Notes Facilities also have the right in these circumstances to terminate any commitments they have to provide further borrowings. If we were unable to pay such amounts, the lenders under the Notes Facilities could recover amounts owed to them by foreclosing against the collateral pledged to them. We have pledged a substantial portion of our assets to the lenders under the Notes Facilities, including the equity of all of the Company’s subsidiaries.

In addition, the degree to which we are leveraged could:

make us more vulnerable to general adverse economic, regulatory and industry conditions;
limit our flexibility in planning for, or reacting to, changes and opportunities in the markets in which we compete;
place us at a competitive disadvantage compared to our competitors that have less debt;
require us to dedicate a substantial portion of our cash flow to service our debt, reducing the availability of our cash flow and such proceeds to fund working capital, capital expenditures and other general corporate purposes; or
restrict us from making strategic acquisitions or exploiting other business opportunities.

To service our indebtedness and other obligations, we will require a significant amount of cash. Our ability to generate cash depends on many factors beyond our control, and any failure to meet our debt obligations could harm our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

Our ability to make payments on and to refinance our indebtedness, including the First Lien Note Facility, for which principal payments are required beginning in 2019, the Second Lien Note Facility, and the 2021 Notes, and to fund working capital needs and planned capital expenditures will depend on our ability to generate cash in the future. A significant reduction in our operating cash flows resulting from changes in economic conditions, changes in government reimbursement rates or methods, increased competition or other events beyond our control could increase the need for additional or alternative sources of liquidity and could have a material adverse effect on our business, consolidated financial statements, prospects and our ability to service our debt and other obligations.

We cannot assure you that our business will generate sufficient cash flows from operations or that future borrowings will be available to us under the Note Facilities or otherwise in an amount sufficient to enable us to pay our indebtedness, including our indebtedness under the First Lien Note Facility, the Second Lien Note Facility, and the 2021 Notes, or to fund our other liquidity needs. Our inability to pay our debts would require us to pursue one or more alternative strategies, such as selling assets, refinancing all or a portion of our indebtedness or selling equity capital. However, our alternative strategies may not be feasible at the time or may not provide adequate funds to allow us to pay our debts as they come due and fund our other liquidity needs. In addition, some alternative strategies are likely to require the prior consent of our Notes Facilities lenders, which we may not be able to obtain.

Despite our substantial indebtedness, we may still need to incur significantly more debt. This could exacerbate the risks associated with our substantial leverage.

We may need to incur substantial additional indebtedness, including additional secured indebtedness, in the future, in connection with future acquisitions, strategic investments and strategic relationships. Although the First Lien Note Facility, the Second Lien Note Facility and the indenture governing the 2021 Notes contain covenants and restrictions on the incurrence of additional debt, these restrictions are subject to a number of qualifications and exceptions and, under certain circumstances, debt incurred in compliance with these restrictions, including secured debt, could be substantial. Adding additional debt to current debt levels could exacerbate the leverage-related risks described above.

Item 1B.
Unresolved Staff Comments

None.

29


Item 2.
Properties

We currently lease all of our properties from third parties under various lease terms expiring over periods extending through 2029 , in addition to a number of non-material month-to-month leases. Our properties mainly consist of infusion pharmacies equipped with clean room and compounding capabilities. Some infusion pharmacies are co-located with an ambulatory infusion center where patients receive infusion treatments. As of December 31, 2018 our property locations, all in support of our infusion services business, were as follows:

Birmingham, AL
 
Alexandria, LA
 
Omaha, NE
 
Duncan, SC
Burbank, CA
 
Baton Rouge, LA
 
Bedford, NH
 
Mount Pleasant, SC
Irvine, CA
 
Covington, LA
 
Morris Plains, NJ
 
Knoxville, TN
Ontario, CA
 
Hammond, LA
 
Somers Point, NJ
 
Memphis, TN
Cromwell, CT (first)
 
Houma, LA
 
Elmsford, NY
 
Austin, TX
Cromwell, CT (second)
 
Lafayette, LA
 
Forest Hills, NY
 
Houston, TX
Coral Springs, FL
 
Lake Charles, LA
 
Lake Success, NY
 
Richardson, TX
Jacksonville, FL
 
Metairie, LA
 
Canfield, OH
 
Annandale, VA
Melbourne, FL
 
Monroe, LA
 
Canton, OH
 
Ashland, VA
Tampa, FL
 
Shreveport, LA
 
Cincinnati, OH
 
Chantilly, VA
Albany, GA
 
Southborough, MA
 
Dublin, OH
 
Newport News, VA
Augusta, GA
 
Auburn, ME
 
Sylvania, OH
 
Norfolk, VA
Norcross, GA
 
Eagan, MN
 
Audubon, PA
 
Roanoke, VA
Savannah, GA
 
Chesterfield, MO
 
Dunmore, PA
 
Richmond, VA
Elmhurst, IL
 
Pearl, MS
 
York, PA
 
Rutland, VT
Silvis, IL
 
Charlotte, NC
 
Southampton, PA
 
Charleston, WV
Lexington, KY
 
Fayetteville, NC
 
Smithfield, RI
 
Fairmount, WV

Item 3.
Legal Proceedings

The information set forth under Note 14, “Commitments and Contingencies,” in the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements under the caption “Legal Proceedings” included in Part II, Item 8 of this Annual Report is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 4.
Mine Safety Disclosures
Item not applicable.

30


PART II
Item 5.
Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

Common Stock

Our Common Stock, par value $0.0001 per share, is traded on the Nasdaq Global Market under the symbol “BIOS”.
 
Holders of Record

As of March 7, 2019 , there were 180 stockholders of record of our Common Stock.

Dividend Policy

We have never paid cash dividends on our Common Stock and do not anticipate doing so in the foreseeable future. Our Notes Facilities contain covenants and restrictions impacting our ability to pay dividends.

Securities Authorized for Issuance under Equity Compensation Plans

Information regarding securities authorized for issuance under our equity compensation plans required by this Item 5 is included in our definitive proxy statement to be filed with the SEC on or before April 30, 2019 in connection with our 2019 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and is hereby incorporated by reference.

Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities and Use of Proceeds

The information disclosed in Note 8 - Preferred Stock and Stockholders’ Deficit under the headings “First Quarter 2017 Private Placement,” “Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement” and “2017 Warrants” is hereby incorporated by reference. The Company relied on Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act for the issuance of the 2017 Warrants and the Common Shares issued in both the First Quarter 2017 Private Placement and the Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement.


31


Stock Performance Graph

The following graph compares our total cumulative return to holders of our Common Stock with the total cumulative returns of the Nasdaq Composite Index and the Nasdaq Health Services Index for the five-year period from December 31, 2013 through December 31, 2018 . The graph shows the performance of a $100 investment in our Common Stock and in each index as of December 31, 2013 .
CHART-D23C997338FA5089B47.JPG
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2013
 
2014
 
2015
 
2016
 
2017
 
2018
BioScrip, Inc.
$
100.00

 
$
94.46

 
$
23.65

 
$
14.05

 
$
39.32

 
$
48.24

Nasdaq Composite Index
$
100.00

 
$
113.40

 
$
119.89

 
$
128.89

 
$
165.29

 
$
158.87

Nasdaq Health Services Index
$
100.00

 
$
128.47

 
$
137.28

 
$
114.06

 
$
138.36

 
$
132.59


* $100 invested on December 31, 2013 in stock or index including reinvestment of dividends.

Item 6. Selected Financial Data

The selected consolidated financial data presented below should be read in conjunction with, and is qualified in its entirety by reference to, Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and our Consolidated Financial Statements and the Notes thereto appearing elsewhere in this Annual Report. Acquisitions during the periods below include Home Solutions beginning September 2016. Divestitures during the periods below include the sale of the Home Health Business in March 2014, and the sale of the PBM Business in August 2015. All historical amounts have been restated to reclassify amounts directly associated with these divested operations as discontinued operations. The amounts below are not necessarily indicative of what the actual results would have been if the Home Health Business and the PBM Business were divested at the beginning of the period.


32


 
December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 
2015
 
2014
 
(in thousands)
Consolidated Balance Sheets Data:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Working capital (1)
$
67,389

 
$
81,463

 
$
43,180

 
$
29,574

 
$
25,347

Total assets (2)
$
583,938

 
$
603,092

 
$
604,985

 
$
528,416

 
$
801,204

Total debt
$
504,674

 
$
480,588

 
$
451,934

 
$
418,121

 
$
423,803

Stockholders’ equity (deficit)
$
(144,004
)
 
$
(84,752
)
 
$
(33,621
)
 
$
(81,515
)
 
$
216,589

Total assets of discontinued operations
$

 
$

 
$

 
$

 
$
22,294


 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 
2015
 
2014
 
(in thousands, except per share amounts)
Consolidated Statements of Operations Data:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Net revenue
$
708,903

 
$
817,190

 
$
935,589

 
$
982,223

 
$
922,654

Operating income (loss) (3)
$
10,903

 
$
2,260

 
$
(10,989
)
 
$
(289,413
)
 
$
(98,025
)
Loss from continuing operations, before income taxes
$
(51,024
)
 
$
(67,433
)
 
$
(34,157
)
 
$
(326,351
)
 
$
(138,943
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Loss per common share:
 

 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
Loss from continuing operations, basic and diluted
$
(0.49
)
 
$
(0.59
)
 
$
(0.48
)
 
$
(4.58
)
 
$
(2.19
)
Weighted average common shares outstanding, basic and diluted
127,942

 
123,791

 
93,740

 
68,710

 
68,476


(1)
Working capital calculation excludes current assets and liabilities of discontinued operations and includes the impact of applying the retrospective adoption of ASU 2015-17 Balance Sheet Classification of Deferred Taxes , which requires that all deferred tax assets and liabilities be presented as non-current.
(2)
Total assets exclude total assets of discontinued operations as of December 31, 2014.
(3)
Operating loss for the year ended December 31, 2015 includes goodwill impairment of $251.9 million.
Item 7.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

The following Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations is designed to assist the reader in understanding our Consolidated Financial Statements, the changes in certain key items in those financial statements from year-to-year and the primary factors that accounted for those changes, as well as how certain accounting principles affect our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Except for the historical information contained herein, the following discussion contains forward-looking statements that are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause our actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. We discuss such risks, uncertainties and other factors throughout this Annual Report and specifically under the caption “Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements” and under “ Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report. In addition, the following discussion of financial condition, and results of operations should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial Statements and Notes thereto appearing elsewhere in this Annual Report.

Business Overview

We are a national provider of infusion and home care management solutions. We partner with physicians, hospital systems, payors, pharmaceutical manufacturers and skilled nursing facilities to provide patients access to post-acute care services. We operate with a commitment to bring customer-focused pharmacy and related healthcare infusion therapy services into the home or alternate-site setting. By collaborating with the full spectrum of healthcare professionals and the patient, we aim to provide cost-effective care that is driven by clinical excellence, customer service and values that promote positive outcomes and an enhanced quality of life for those whom we serve. As of December 31, 2018 , we had a total of 68 service locations in 27  states.


33


Our platform provides nationwide service capabilities and the ability to deliver clinical management services that offer patients a high-touch, community-based and home-based care environment. Our core services are provided in coordination with, and under the direction of, the patient’s physician. Our multidisciplinary team of clinicians, including pharmacists, nurses, dietitians and respiratory therapists, work with the physician to develop a plan of care suited to each patient’s specific needs. Whether in the home, physician office, ambulatory infusion center, skilled nursing facility or other alternate sites of care, we provide products, services and condition-specific clinical management programs tailored to improve the care of individuals with complex health conditions such as gastrointestinal abnormalities, infectious diseases, cancer, multiple sclerosis, organ and blood cell transplants, bleeding disorders, immune deficiencies and heart failure.

Segments

We operate in one segment, infusion services. On an ongoing basis we will not report operating segment information unless a change in the business necessitates the need to do so.

Strategic Assessment and Transactions

We continually perform strategic assessments of our business and operations. The assessments examine our market strengths and opportunities and compare our position to that of our competitors. As a result of these ongoing assessments, we have focused our growth on investments in the infusion services business, which remains the primary driver of our growth strategy. Recent transactions which represent execution of the strategic assessments include:

On September 9, 2016, we acquired substantially all of the assets and assumed certain liabilities of Home Solutions and its subsidiaries (the “Home Solutions Transaction”) pursuant to an Asset Purchase Agreement dated June 11, 2016 (as amended, the “Home Solutions Agreement”), by and among Home Solutions, a Delaware corporation, certain subsidiaries of Home Solutions, the Company and HomeChoice Partners, Inc., a Delaware corporation. Home Solutions, a privately held company, provided home infusion and home nursing products and services to patients suffering from chronic and acute medical conditions. The aggregate consideration paid by the Company in the Transaction was equal to (i) $67.5 million in cash (the “Cash Consideration); plus (ii) (a) 3,750,000 shares of Company common stock (the “Transaction Closing Equity Consideration”) and (b) the right to receive contingent equity securities of the Company, in the form of restricted shares of Company common stock (the “RSUs”), issuable in two tranches, Tranche A and Tranche B, with different vesting conditions (collectively, the “Contingent Shares”).

On August 27, 2015, we completed the sale of substantially all of our pharmacy benefit management services segment (the “PBM Business”) pursuant to an Asset Purchase Agreement dated as of August 9, 2015 (the “PBM Asset Purchase Agreement”), by and among the Company, BioScrip PBM Services, LLC and ProCare Pharmacy Benefit Manager Inc. (the “PBM Buyer”). Under the PBM Asset Purchase Agreement, the PBM Buyer agreed to acquire substantially all of the assets used solely in connection with the PBM Business and to assume certain PBM Business liabilities (the “PBM Sale”). On the closing date, pursuant to the terms of the PBM Asset Purchase Agreement, we received total cash consideration of approximately $24.6 million, including an adjustment for estimated closing date net working capital. On October 20, 2015, we finalized working capital adjustment negotiations in relation to the PBM Sale whereby we agreed to repay approximately $1.0 million to the PBM Buyer. We used the net proceeds from the PBM Sale to pay down a portion of our outstanding debt.

Regulatory Matters Update

Approximately 18% of revenue for the year ended December 31, 2018 was derived directly from Medicare, state Medicaid programs and other government payors. We also provide services to beneficiaries of Medicare, Medicaid and other government-sponsored healthcare programs through managed care entities. Medicare Part D, for example, is administered through managed care entities. In the normal course of business, we and our customers are subject to legislative and regulatory changes impacting the level of reimbursement received from the Medicare and state Medicaid programs.

State Medicaid Programs

Over the last several years, increased Medicaid spending, combined with slow state revenue growth, led many states to institute measures aimed at controlling spending growth. Spending cuts have taken many forms including reducing eligibility and benefits, eliminating certain types of services, and provider reimbursement reductions. In addition, some states have been moving beneficiaries to managed care programs in an effort to reduce costs.


34


Each individual state Medicaid program represents less than 5% of our consolidated revenue for the year ended December 31, 2018 and no individual state Medicaid reimbursement reduction is expected to have a material effect on our Consolidated Financial Statements. We are continually assessing the impact of the state Medicaid reimbursement cuts as states propose, finalize and implement various cost-saving measures. These measures may include strategies to reduce coverage, restrict enrollment, or enroll more beneficiaries in managed care programs.

Given the reimbursement pressures, we continue to improve operational efficiencies and reduce costs to mitigate the impact on results of operations where possible. In some cases, reimbursement rate reductions may result in negative operating results, and we would likely exit some or all services where rate reductions result in unacceptable returns to our stockholders.

Medicare

Medicare currently covers home infusion therapy for selected therapies primarily through the durable medical equipment benefit. The Cures Act changed the new payment system for certain home infusion therapy services paid under Medicare Part B. The Cures Act significantly reduced the amount paid by Medicare for the drug costs, and also provides for the implementation of a clinical services payment. Under the Cures Act, the services payment does not take effect until 2021. However, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 provides for a temporary transitional payment, starting January 1, 2019, for Medicare Part B home infusion services. CMS issued a final rule in October 2018 implementing this temporary benefit, which will continue until January 1, 2021, when the services payment in the Cures Act takes effect. We have taken steps to mitigate the impact of the Cures Act on our business, but the Act has had material negative impact on our revenues and profitability.

Approximately 8% and 7% of revenue for the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017 , respectively, was derived from Medicare.

Critical Accounting Estimates

Our Consolidated Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with United States GAAP. In preparing our financial statements, we are required to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting period. We evaluate our estimates and judgments on an ongoing basis. We base our estimates and judgments on historical experience and on various other factors that we believe to be reasonable under the circumstances, the results of which form the basis for making judgments about the carrying values of assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses for the period presented. Our actual results may differ from these estimates, and different assumptions or conditions may yield different estimates. The following discussion highlights what we believe to be the critical accounting estimates and judgments made in the preparation of our Consolidated Financial Statements.

The following discussion is not intended to be a comprehensive list of all the accounting policies, estimates or judgments made in the preparation of our financial statements. A discussion of our significant accounting policies, including further discussion of the accounting policies described below, can be found in Note 2,  Summary of Significant Accounting Policies , within the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report.

Revenue Recognition

We generate revenue principally through the provision of home infusion services to provide clinical management services and the delivery of cost effective prescription medications. Refer to Revenue Recognition within Note 2, Summary of Significant Accounting Policies within the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements for full discussion of our revenue recognition policy.

Net revenue is initially recorded net of estimates of variable consideration, consisting of (i) implicit price concessions resulting from differences between rates charged for services performed and expected reimbursements, and (ii) retroactive revenue adjustments due to audits or reviews by our third-party payors. We regularly update our estimates of price concessions based on historical collection experience with similar payor classes, aged accounts receivable by payor class, terms of payment agreements, correspondence from payors related to revenue audits or reviews, our historical settlement activity of audited and reviewed claims and current economic conditions.

Significant changes to our mix of payors, terms of payment agreements, changes to government programs, new legislation or current economic conditions could impact our estimates of variable consideration in future periods.

 

35


2017 Warrants

The Company estimated the fair value of the 2017 Warrants using a valuation model that considered attributes of the Company’s common stock, including the number of outstanding shares, share price and volatility. The model further considers the exercise period of the warrants and the characteristics of other convertible instruments in estimating the number of shares that will be issued upon the exercise of the warrants. The model considers key assumptions that a market participant would use in pricing the warrants when acting in their best economic interest.

Changes to the estimated fair value of the warrants are primarily driven by changes to the Company’s stock price. A 1.0% change in the Company’s stock price would change the estimate of the fair value of the warrants by approximately $0.3 million. Refer to 2017 Warrants presented within Note 8 - Preferred Stock and Stockholders’ Deficit in the accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for further discussion of the 2017 Warrants.

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

As of December 31, 2018 , we did not have any off-balance sheet arrangements that have, or are reasonably likely to have, a current or future effect on our financial condition, changes in financial condition, revenue or expenses, results of operations, liquidity, capital expenditures or capital resources that are material.

Results of Operations

Our analysis presented below is organized to provide the information we believe will facilitate an understanding of our historical performance and relevant trends going forward, and should be read in conjunction with our Consolidated Financial Statements, including the notes thereto, in Part II, Item 8 of this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

Net Revenue

The following table summarizes our net revenue, gross profit and gross margin for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 (in thousands):

 
Year Ended December 31,
 
Change
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 
2018 v. 2017
 
2017 v. 2016
Net revenue
$
708,903

 
$
817,190

 
$
935,589

 
$
(108,287
)
 
(13.3
)%
 
$
(118,399
)
 
(12.7
)%
Gross profit, excluding depreciation expense
$
243,038

 
$
269,242

 
$
262,082

 
$
(26,204
)
 
(9.7
)%
 
$
7,160

 
2.7
 %
Gross margin
34.3
%
 
32.9
%
 
28.0
%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Net Revenue. Net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2018 decreased primarily due to the impact of the UnitedHealthcare contract transition effective September 30, 2017 and lower patient volumes in certain product lines, including the impact of temporary closures of Company branches due to inclement winter weather during the first quarter of 2018. Additionally, implementation of ASC 606 during 2018 resulted in the recognition of amounts previously recorded as bad debt expense as a reduction to revenue of $29.9 million . Net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2017 decreased primarily due to the Company’s shift in strategy to focus on growing its core revenue mix, including the impact of the UnitedHealthcare contract transition effective September 30, 2017, the impact of the Cures Act, and the impact of the Company’s exit from the Hepatitis C market in 2016, partially offset by additional revenues resulting from the acquisition of Home Solutions.

Gross Profit. Gross profit consists of net revenue less cost of revenue (excluding depreciation expense). The cost of revenue primarily includes the costs of prescription medications, medical supplies, nursing services, shipping and other direct and indirect costs. The decrease in gross profit during 2018 as compared to 2017 was primarily driven by the decrease in revenue of $29.9 million associated with the impact of implementation of ASC Topic 606 (see Revenue Recognition within Note 2 - Summary of Significant Accounting Policies), lower revenues from the impact of the UnitedHealthcare contract transition effective September 30, 2017, and lower patient volumes in certain product lines, including the impact of temporary closures of Company branches due to inclement winter weather during the first quarter of 2018, partially offset by higher gross profit margins due to higher core mix and lower costs of prescription medications. The increase in gross profit during 2017 as compared to 2016 was primarily driven by the Home Solutions acquisition, an improved mix of higher margin core therapy revenues versus lower margin non-core therapy revenues, and a decreased cost of prescription medicines and medical supplies as a result of improved supply chain

36


management, partially offset by the Company’s shift in strategy to focus on growing its core revenue mix, including the UnitedHealthcare contract transition effective September 30, 2017.

Operating Expenses

The following tables summarize our operating expenses, and percentages of net revenue, for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 (in thousands):
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
As a Percentage of Net Revenue
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Service location operating expenses
$
154,813

 
$
163,273

 
$
169,781

 
21.8
%
 
20.0
%
 
18.1
%
General and administrative expenses
47,264

 
39,625

 
38,798

 
6.7
%
 
4.8
%
 
4.1
%
Depreciation and amortization expense
23,601

 
27,725

 
22,025

 
3.3
%
 
3.4
%
 
2.4
%
Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses
6,457

 
12,662

 
15,859

 
0.9
%
 
1.5
%
 
1.7
%
Bad debt expense

 
23,697

 
26,608

 
%
 
2.9
%
 
2.8
%
Total operating expenses
$
232,135

 
$
266,982

 
$
273,071

 
32.7
%
 
32.6
%
 
29.1
%

 
Year Ended December 31,
 
Change
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 
2018 v. 2017
 
2017 v. 2016
Service location operating expenses
$
154,813

 
$
163,273

 
$
169,781

 
$
(8,460
)
 
(5.2
)%
 
$
(6,508
)
 
(3.8
)%
General and administrative expenses
47,264

 
39,625

 
38,798

 
7,639

 
19.3
 %
 
827

 
2.1
 %
Depreciation and amortization expense
23,601

 
27,725

 
22,025

 
(4,124
)
 
(14.9
)%
 
5,700

 
25.9
 %
Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses
6,457

 
12,662

 
15,859

 
(6,205
)
 
(49.0
)%
 
(3,197
)
 
(20.2
)%
Bad debt expense

 
23,697

 
26,608

 
(23,697
)
 
(100.0
)%
 
(2,911
)
 
(10.9
)%
Total operating expenses
$
232,135

 
$
266,982

 
$
273,071

 
$
(34,847
)
 
(13.1
)%
 
$
(6,089
)
 
(2.2
)%

Service Location Operating Expenses. Service location operating expenses consist primarily of wages and benefits, travel expenses, and professional service and field office expenses for our healthcare professionals engaged in providing infusion services to our patients. Service location operating expenses for the year ended December 31, 2018 decreased due to lower wage, benefit, and other employee costs as a result of the UnitedHealthcare contract transition and integration, restructuring, and other workforce optimization efforts. Service location operating expenses for the year ended December 31, 2017 decreased primarily as the result of restructuring and other workforce optimization efforts.

General and Administrative Expenses . General and administrative expenses consist of wages and benefits for corporate overhead personnel and certain corporate level professional service fees, including legal, accounting, investor relations and IT fees. General and administrative expenses for the year ended December 31, 2018 increased primarily from increases in legal, accounting and other professional fees of $2.3 million, stock-based compensation expense of $1.9 million, travel related costs of $1.8 million, health and general corporate insurance costs of $1.5 million, marketing of $0.6 million, IT expenses of $0.4 million and facility rent of $0.3 million, offset by decreased payroll and benefits of $1.2 million. General and administrative expenses for the year ended December 31, 2017 increased primarily due to increased wages and benefits expense, primarily incentive based compensation expense.

Depreciation and Amortization Expense. Depreciation and amortization expense includes the depreciation of property and equipment and the amortization of intangible assets such as customer relationships, managed care contracts, licenses, trade names, and non-compete agreements with estimable lives. The decrease in depreciation expense in 2018 is attributable to the timing of placing assets in service and assets becoming fully depreciated. The decrease in amortization expense in 2018 as compared to 2017 is attributable to full amortization of certain intangible assets reducing expense by $1.1 million. The increase in amortization expense in 2017 as compared to 2016 is attributable to a $5.6 million increase in intangible asset amortization associated with the acquisition of Home Solutions in the third quarter of 2016.


37


Restructuring, Acquisition, Integration, and Other Expenses. Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses include non-recurring costs associated with restructuring, acquisition and integration initiatives such as employee severance costs, certain legal and professional fees, training costs, redundant wage costs, impacts recorded from the change in contingent consideration obligations, and other costs related to contract terminations and closed branches/offices. Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses, decreased during the year ended December 31, 2018 primarily due to the completion of Home Solutions integration activities in 2017. Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses decreased during the year ended December 31, 2017 primarily due to lower expenses related to the Home Solutions acquisition and integration, partially offset by restructuring and other workforce optimization efforts during 2017.

Bad Debt Expense. Bad debt expense decreased during the year ended December 31, 2018 as compared to 2017 as a result of the implementation of ASC Topic 606 (see Revenue Recognition within Note 2 - Summary of Significant Accounting Policies) which resulted in the recognition of all of the Company’s bad debt expense as a reduction to revenue for the year ended December 31, 2018 . Bad debt expense for the year ended December 31, 2017 decreased primarily due to improved collections of accounts receivable.

The following table summarizes our other expenses and income and income taxes for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 (in thousands):
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
Change
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 
2018 v. 2017
 
2017 v. 2016
Interest expense, net
$
57,433

 
$
52,072

 
$
37,572

 
$
5,361

 
10.3
 %
 
$
14,500

 
38.6
 %
Change in fair value of equity linked liabilities
4,836

 
3,587

 
(10,450
)
 
1,249

 
34.8
 %
 
14,037

 
(134.3
)%
Loss (gain) on dispositions
(342
)
 
581

 
(3,954
)
 
(923
)
 
(158.9
)%
 
4,535

 
(114.7
)%
Loss on extinguishment of debt

 
13,453

 

 
(13,453
)
 
(100.0
)%
 
13,453

 
 %
Total other expenses
$
61,927

 
$
69,693

 
$
23,168

 
$
(7,766
)
 
(11.1
)%
 
$
46,525

 
200.8
 %
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Income taxes:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Income tax benefit (expense)
$
(568
)
 
$
4,130

 
$
(2,015
)
 
$
(4,698
)
 
(113.8
)%
 
$
6,145

 
(305.0
)%

Interest Expense, Net . Interest expense, net consists of interest expense and amortization of deferred financing costs offset by an immaterial amount of interest income. During the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, we recorded $1.3 million , $1.3 million and $3.6 million of amortization of deferred financing costs, respectively. The increase in interest expense in 2018 as compared to 2017 is primarily the result of increasing variable interest rates on the First and Second Lien Note Facilities and an increase to the principal balance of the Second Lien Note Facility of $17.8 million as a result of an additional $10.0 million borrowing during June 2018 and $7.8 million of paid-in-kind interest being capitalized as principal during the second half of 2018. The increase in interest expense in 2017 as compared to 2016 is the result of the changes in our debt structure (see Note 7 - Debt), which also resulted in a higher effective interest rate specific to the amortization of the discount associated with the 2017 Warrants.

Change in Fair Value of Equity Linked Liabilities. The increases in the change in fair value of equity linked liabilities during the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017, represents the mark-to-market adjustment to the estimated fair value of the 2017 Warrants. The increases were primarily driven by an increase in the Company’s stock price. During the year ended December 31, 2016 there was a gain on the reversal of a liability recorded in connection with contingent equity securities, in the form of restricted shares of Company common stock, issuable in connection with the Home Solutions Transaction.

Loss on Extinguishment of Debt. The loss on extinguishment of debt during the year ended December 31, 2017 is attributable to the Company’s entry into the Notes Facilities and the associated extinguishment of the Senior Credit Facilities and the Prior Credit Agreements (see Note 7 - Debt).
Income Tax Benefit (Expense). Our income tax provision for the year ended December 31, 2018 reflects expense of $0.6 million , compared to a benefit of $4.1 million during the year ended December 31, 2017 . The 2018 income tax expense of $0.6 million includes a federal tax benefit of $10.7 million and a state tax benefit of $1.5 million, a $10.2 million adjustment related to deferred tax asset valuation allowances and other adjustments of $2.6 million. Our income tax provision for the year ended December 31, 2017 reflects a $4.1 million benefit, compared to a provision of $2.0 million during the year ended December 31, 2016. The primary driver of the change was the reversal of the valuation allowance, which created an income tax benefit in 2017. The reversal of the valuation allowance was the result of new federal NOL carryforward rules enacted under TCJA, which prescribe an indefinite federal NOL carryforward period for NOLs generated in 2018 and beyond (subject to a 20% reduction). The 2017

38


income tax benefit includes a federal tax benefit of $23.7 million and a state tax benefit of $4.6 million, a $41.6 million adjustment related to deferred tax asset valuation allowances and other adjustments of $2.0 million, offset by a $67.7 million adjustment associated with the impact of the change in the corporate tax rate brought about by the enactment of the TCJA. The 2016 income tax expense includes a federal tax benefit of $11.9 million and a state tax benefit of $1.4 million at statutory tax rates, offset by a $14.7 million adjustment related to deferred tax asset valuation allowances and other adjustments of $0.7 million.

Non-GAAP Measures   

The following table reconciles GAAP loss from continuing operations, net of income taxes to Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA. Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA is net loss from continuing operations, net of income taxes, adjusted for interest expense, net, loss on extinguishment of debt, gain (loss) on dispositions, income tax benefit (expense), depreciation and amortization expense, stock-based compensation expense, and change in fair value of equity linked liabilities. Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA also excludes restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses, including associated non-recurring costs such as employee severance costs, certain legal and professional fees, training costs, redundant wage costs, impacts recorded from the change in contingent consideration obligations, and other costs related to contract terminations and closed branches/offices.

Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA is a measure of earnings that management monitors as an important indicator of financial performance, particularly future earnings potential and recurring cash flow. Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA is also a primary objective of the management bonus plan. Inclusion of Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA is intended to provide investors insight into the manner in which management views the performance of the Company.

Non-GAAP financial measures have limitations as analytical tools and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for our financial results prepared in accordance with GAAP. Our calculation of Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA, as presented, may differ from similarly titled measures reported by other companies. We encourage investors to review these reconciliations and we qualify our use of non-GAAP financial measures with cautionary statements as to their limitations.
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 
(in thousands)
Loss from continuing operations
$
(51,592
)
 
$
(63,303
)
 
$
(36,172
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Interest expense, net
(57,433
)
 
(52,072
)
 
(37,572
)
Loss on extinguishment of debt

 
(13,453
)
 

Gain (loss) on dispositions
342

 
(581
)
 
3,954

Income tax benefit (expense)
(568
)
 
4,130

 
(2,015
)
Depreciation and amortization expense
(23,601
)
 
(27,725
)
 
(22,025
)
Stock-based compensation
(4,175
)
 
(2,360
)
 
(1,801
)
Change in fair value of equity linked liabilities
(4,836
)
 
(3,587
)
 
10,450

Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses
(6,457
)
 
(12,662
)
 
(15,859
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA
$
45,136

 
$
45,007

 
$
28,696


Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA increased during the year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the year ended December 31, 2017 primarily due to increased gross profit margins and lower operating expenses resulting from higher core mix and lower costs of prescription medications, and reduced payroll expenses. Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA increased during the year ended December 31, 2017 compared to the year ended December 31, 2016 primarily due to increased gross profit resulting from improved gross profit margins driven by increased core revenue mix and supply chain management, as well as restructuring and integration efforts which optimized operations.

Liquidity and Capital Resources

At December 31, 2018 , we had net working capital of $67.4 million , including $14.5 million of cash on hand, compared to $81.5 million of net working capital at December 31, 2017 . The working capital decrease of $14.1 million was the result of a decrease in cash and cash equivalents of $24.9 million due to lower operating cash flow driven by an increase in accounts receivable due to a temporal reduction of collection rates. At December 31, 2018 , we had outstanding letters of credit totaling $4.3 million , collateralized by restricted cash of $4.3 million . In June 2018, we exercised our option to draw upon the Second Lien Note Facility in the amount of $10.0 million to supplement our working capital needs.

39



We regularly evaluate market conditions and financing options to improve our current liquidity profile and enhance our financial flexibility. These options may include opportunities to raise additional funds through the issuance of various forms of equity and/or debt securities or other instruments, or the sale of assets or refinancing all or a portion of our indebtedness. However, there is no assurance that, if necessary, we would be able to raise capital to provide required liquidity.
Additionally, we will review a range of strategic alternatives, which could include, among other things, transitioning chronic therapies to alliance partners, a potential sale or merger of our company, or continuing to pursue our operational and strategic plan. Additionally, we may pursue joint venture arrangements, additional business acquisitions and other transactions designed to expand our business.
If we cannot successfully execute our strategic plans, including accelerating cash collections, this could have an adverse effect on our liquidity and results of operations and we will likely require additional or alternative sources of liquidity, including additional borrowings.
As of the filing of this Annual Report, we expect that our cash on hand and cash from operations will be sufficient to fund our anticipated working capital, scheduled interest repayments and other cash needs for at least the next 12 months. Principal payments on the Notes Facilities commence on September 30, 2019.
Operating Activities

Net cash used in operating activities from continuing operations was $20.0 million for the year ended December 31, 2018 , compared to net cash provided by operating activities from continuing operations of $5.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2017. The decrease primarily relates to lower cash collections of accounts receivable and a net decrease in accounts payable and accrued expenses. The decrease was partially offset by strategic inventory management initiatives and a reduction of prepaid expenses.

Net cash provided by operating activities from continuing operations was $5.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2017, a $41.1 million improvement, compared to net cash used in operating activities from continuing operations of $35.5 million for the year ended December 31, 2016. Cash interest payments increased $10.7 million to $45.4 million in 2017, compared to $34.7 million during 2016. These higher cash interest payments during 2017 were more than offset by the favorable impacts of increased Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA, lower restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses and working capital management.

Investing Activities

Net cash used in investing activities from continuing operations during the year ended December 31, 2018 was $13.5 million compared to $8.7 million of cash used during the same period in 2017 . The increase in cash used in investing was primarily due to increased renovation, expansion of certain company branch locations, and the opening of new locations during the year.

Net cash used in investing activities from continuing operations during the year ended December 31, 2017 was $8.7 million compared to $73.2 million of cash used during the same period in 2016. Fluctuations in investing cash flows during the year ended December 31, 2017, as compared to the same period in 2016, were primarily attributable to a year over year decrease in cash consideration paid for acquisitions of $67.5 million associated with the prior year acquisition of Home Solutions, Inc. and a year over year decrease in purchases of property and equipment of $1.2 million, offset by a year over year decrease of $4.2 million associated with proceeds received in divestitures related to the strategic divestiture of the Hepatitis C business during 2016.

Financing Activities

Net cash provided by financing activities was $8.1 million and $44.3 million during the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017 , respectively. The cash provided in 2018 includes the net proceeds of approximately $10.0 million from draws on the Second Lien Note Facility, offset by repayments of capital leases of $1.9 million.

Net cash provided by financing activities of $44.3 million during the year ended December 31, 2017 includes the net proceeds of approximately $20.8 million from the First Quarter 2017 Private Placement and Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement, $23.1 million from the Priming Credit Agreement, and $294.4 million from the Notes Facilities offset by repayments of $55.9 million on our Revolving Credit Facility and by $236.8 million of principal payments made on the Term Loan Facility and the Priming Credit Agreement.


40


Net cash provided by financing activities of $109.7 million during the year ended December 31, 2016 results from $83.3 million from the 2016 Equity Offering and by advances of $104.3 million offset by repayments of $64.0 million on our Revolving Credit Facility and $12.6 million of principal payments made on the Term Loan Facility.

Debt Facilities
For a discussion of our long-term debt, see Note 7 - Debt, of the accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

Contractual Obligations
The following table sets forth our contractual obligations affecting future cash flows as of December 31, 2018 (in thousands):
 
 
 
Payments Due in Year Ending December 31,
Contractual Obligations
Total
 
2019
 
2020
 
2021
 
2022
 
2022
 
2023 and Beyond
Long-term debt (1)
$
547,218

 
$
2,500

 
$
344,718

 
$
200,000

 
$

 
$

 
$

Interest on long-term debt (2)
74,975

 
36,721

 
29,379

 
8,875

 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating lease obligations
37,916

 
8,934

 
7,143

 
6,252

 
4,797

 
3,320

 
7,470

Capital lease obligations
990

 
679

 
311

 

 

 

 

Total
$
661,099

 
$
48,834

 
$
381,551

 
$
215,127

 
$
4,797

 
$
3,320

 
$
7,470

(1)
Long-term debt includes interest incurred on the Second Lien Note Facility assuming continued capitalization to principal at the variable interest rate as of December 31, 2018. Capitalized interest on the Second Lien Note Facility is due at maturity.
(2)
Interest on long-term debt includes estimated cash interest to be paid on the First Lien Note Facility and the 2021 Notes. Interest on the 2021 Notes was estimated using the stated interest rate on the borrowing. Interest on the variable rate First Lien Note Facility was estimated using the December 31, 2018 interest rate.
Item 7A.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

We are exposed to market risk from changes in interest rates related to our outstanding debt. At December 31, 2018 , we had total debt with a face value of $517.8 million, of which $317.8 million is related to the First Lien Note and Second Lien Note, and is subject to floating interest rates. The First Lien Note bears interest at a floating rate or rates equal to, at the option of the Company, (i) the base rate (defined as the highest of the Federal Funds Rate plus 0.5% per annum, the Prime Rate as published by The Wall Street Journal and the one-month London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) (subject to a 1.0% floor) plus 1.0%), or (ii) the one-month LIBOR rate (subject to a 1.0% floor), plus a margin of 6.0% if the base rate is selected or 7.0% if the LIBOR Option is selected. The Second Lien Note bears interest at a floating rate or rates equal to, at the option of the Company, (i) one-month LIBOR (subject to a 1.25% floor) plus 9.25% per annum in cash, (ii) one-month LIBOR (subject to a 1.25% floor) plus 11.25% per annum, which amount will be capitalized on each interest payment date, or (iii) one-month LIBOR (subject to a 1.25% floor) plus 10.25% per annum, of which one-half LIBOR plus 4.625% per annum will be payable in cash and one-half LIBOR plus 5.625% per annum will be capitalized on each interest payment date, provided that, in each case, if any permitted refinancing indebtedness with which the 2021 Notes are refinanced requires or permits the payment of cash interest, all of the interest on the Second Lien Notes shall be paid in cash. As of December 31, 2018 , the Eurodollar rate is approximately 2.5% . An increase in the current market rate of 1.00% would result in an increase in annual interest expense of approximately $3.4 million .

On February 11, 2014, we issued $200.0 million in aggregate principal amount of the 2021 Notes (as defined in Note 7 - Debt). The interest rate on the 2021 Notes of 8.875% is fixed and not subject to market risk.

We regularly assess the significance of interest rate market risk as part of our treasury operations and as circumstances change and enter into instruments to hedge variable rate interest expense as appropriate in accordance with the terms of the Debt Facilities. We do not use financial instruments for trading or other speculative purposes and are not a party to any derivative financial instruments at this time.

The fair value of our long-term debt under our Note Facilities subject to variable interest rates and the 2021 Notes is disclosed in Note 7 - Debt, of the accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

41


Item 8.
Financial Statements and Supplementary Data

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm



To the Stockholders and Board of Directors
BioScrip, Inc.:

Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of BioScrip, Inc. and subsidiaries (the Company) as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders’ deficit, and cash flows for each of the years in the three‑year period ended December 31, 2018, and the related notes and financial statement schedule (collectively, the consolidated financial statements). In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the years in the three‑year period ended December 31, 2018, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.
We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB), the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2018, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission, and our report dated March 14, 2019 expressed an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
Change in Accounting Principle
As discussed in Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company has changed its method of accounting for revenue recognition in 2018 due to the adoption of Accounting Standards Codification Topic 606, Revenue from Contracts with Customers .
Basis for Opinion
These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated financial statements based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

/s/ KPMG LLP


We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2014.

Denver, Colorado
March 15, 2019




42


BIOSCRIP, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(in thousands, except for share amounts)
 
December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
ASSETS
 
 
 
Current assets
 
 
 
Cash and cash equivalents
$
14,539

 
$
39,457

Restricted cash
4,321

 
4,950

Accounts receivable, net
114,864

 
85,522

Inventory
26,689

 
38,044

Prepaid expenses and other current assets
14,292

 
18,620

Total current assets
174,705

 
186,593

Property and equipment, net
28,788

 
26,973

Goodwill
367,198

 
367,198

Deferred taxes
1,032

 
1,098

Intangible assets, net
10,470

 
19,114

Other non-current assets
1,745

 
2,116

Total assets
$
583,938

 
$
603,092

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT
 

 
 

Current liabilities
 

 
 

Current portion of long-term debt
$
3,179

 
$
1,722

Accounts payable
67,025

 
65,963

Amounts due to plan sponsors
956

 
4,621

Accrued interest
6,706

 
6,706

Accrued expenses and other current liabilities
29,450

 
26,118

Total current liabilities
107,316

 
105,130

Long-term debt, net of current portion
501,495

 
478,866

Other non-current liabilities
25,842

 
21,769

Total liabilities
634,653

 
605,765

Series A convertible preferred stock, $.0001 par value; 825,000 shares authorized; 21,630 and 21,645 shares issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively; and $3,264 and $2,916 liquidation preference as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively
3,231

 
2,827

Series C convertible preferred stock, $.0001 par value; 625,000 shares authorized; 614,177 shares issued and outstanding; and $94,706 and $84,555 liquidation preference as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively
90,058

 
79,252

Stockholders’ deficit
 

 
 

Preferred stock, $.0001 par value; 5,000,000 shares authorized; no shares issued and outstanding as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively

 

Common stock, $.0001 par value; 250,000,000 shares authorized; 128,391,456 shares issued and 128,077,651 shares outstanding at December 31, 2018, and 127,639,118 shares issued and 127,634,012 shares outstanding as of December 31, 2017, respectively
13

 
13

Treasury stock, 313,805 and 5,106 shares outstanding, at cost, as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively
(950
)
 
(16
)
Additional paid-in capital
618,137

 
624,762

Accumulated deficit
(761,204
)
 
(709,511
)
Total stockholders’ deficit
(144,004
)
 
(84,752
)
Total liabilities and stockholders’ deficit
$
583,938

 
$
603,092

See accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

43


BIOSCRIP, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
 (in thousands, except per share amounts)
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Net revenue
$
708,903

 
$
817,190

 
$
935,589

Cost of revenue (excluding depreciation expense)
465,865

 
547,948

 
673,507

Gross profit
243,038

 
269,242

 
262,082

 
 
 
 
 
 
Operating expenses:
 
 
 
 
 
Service location operating expenses
154,813

 
163,273

 
169,781

General and administrative expenses
47,264

 
39,625

 
38,798

Depreciation and amortization expense
23,601

 
27,725

 
22,025

Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses
6,457

 
12,662

 
15,859

Bad debt expense

 
23,697

 
26,608

Total operating expenses
232,135

 
266,982

 
273,071

Operating income (loss)
10,903

 
2,260

 
(10,989
)
Other expense:
 
 
 
 
 
Interest expense, net
57,433

 
52,072

 
37,572

Change in fair value of equity linked liabilities
4,836

 
3,587

 
(10,450
)
Loss (gain) on dispositions
(342
)
 
581

 
(3,954
)
Loss on extinguishment of debt

 
13,453

 

Total other expense
61,927

 
69,693

 
23,168

Loss from continuing operations, before income taxes
(51,024
)
 
(67,433
)
 
(34,157
)
Income tax benefit (expense)
(568
)
 
4,130

 
(2,015
)
Loss from continuing operations
(51,592
)
 
(63,303
)
 
(36,172
)
Loss from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
(101
)
 
(893
)
 
(6,593
)
Net loss
(51,693
)
 
(64,196
)
 
(42,765
)
Accrued dividends on preferred stock
(11,210
)
 
(10,077
)
 
(9,084
)
Loss attributable to common stockholders
$
(62,903
)
 
$
(74,273
)
 
$
(51,849
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Loss per common share:
 

 
 

 
 

Loss from continuing operations, basic and diluted
$
(0.49
)
 
$
(0.59
)
 
$
(0.48
)
Loss from discontinued operations, basic and diluted

 
(0.01
)
 
(0.07
)
Loss per common share, basic and diluted
$
(0.49
)
 
$
(0.60
)
 
$
(0.55
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding:
 

 
 

 
 

Basic and diluted
127,942

 
123,791

 
93,740


See accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

44


BIOSCRIP, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT
(in thousands)

 
Preferred Stock
 
Common
Stock
 
Treasury
Stock
 
Additional
Paid-in
Capital
 
Accumulated
Deficit
 
Total
Stockholders'
Deficit
Balance at December 31, 2015
$

 
$
8

 
$
(10,737
)
 
$
531,764

 
$
(602,550
)
 
$
(81,515
)
Net proceeds from public stock offering

 
4

 

 
83,263

 

 
83,267

Exercise of stock options, vesting of restricted stock and related tax withholdings

 

 
(33
)
 

 

 
(33
)
Surrender of stock - settlement

 

 
(255
)
 
255

 

 

Shares issued in connection with the acquisition of Home Solutions, Inc.

 

 
11,025

 
(1,088
)
 

 
9,937

Equity linked liabilities reclassified to equity upon approval of Charter Amendment

 

 

 
2,847

 

 
2,847

Accrued dividends on preferred stock

 

 

 
(9,084
)
 

 
(9,084
)
Stock-based compensation

 

 

 
3,725

 

 
3,725

Net loss

 

 

 

 
(42,765
)
 
(42,765
)
Balance at December 31, 2016

 
12

 

 
611,682

 
(645,315
)
 
(33,621
)
Net proceeds from private placements

 
1

 

 
20,776

 

 
20,777

Exercise of stock options, vesting of restricted stock and related tax withholdings

 

 
(16
)
 
21

 

 
5

Accrued dividends on preferred stock

 

 

 
(10,077
)
 

 
(10,077
)
Stock-based compensation

 

 

 
2,360

 

 
2,360

Net loss

 

 

 

 
(64,196
)
 
(64,196
)
Balance at December 31, 2017

 
13

 
(16
)
 
624,762

 
(709,511
)
 
(84,752
)
Exercise of stock options, vesting of restricted stock and related tax withholdings

 

 
(934
)
 
908

 

 
(26
)
Accrued dividends on preferred stock

 

 

 
(11,210
)
 

 
(11,210
)
Stock-based compensation

 

 

 
3,677

 

 
3,677

Net loss

 

 

 

 
(51,693
)
 
(51,693
)
Balance at December 31, 2018
$

 
$
13

 
$
(950
)
 
$
618,137

 
$
(761,204
)
 
$
(144,004
)

 See accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

45


BIOSCRIP, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(in thousands)
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Cash flows from operating activities:
 
 
 
 
 
Net loss
$
(51,693
)
 
$
(64,196
)
 
$
(42,765
)
Less: Loss from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
(101
)
 
(893
)
 
(6,593
)
Loss from continuing operations
(51,592
)
 
(63,303
)
 
(36,172
)
Adjustments to reconcile net loss from continuing operations to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:
 
 
 

 
 

Depreciation and amortization
23,601

 
27,725

 
22,025

Amortization of deferred financing costs and debt discount
8,172

 
6,998

 
4,042

Change in fair value of contingent consideration

 

 
(4,597
)
Change in fair value of equity linked liabilities
4,836

 
3,587

 
(10,450
)
Change in deferred taxes
66

 
(3,379
)
 
2,045

Stock-based compensation
4,175

 
2,360

 
1,801

Paid-in-kind interest capitalized as principal on Second Lien Note Facility
7,787

 

 

Loss (gain) on dispositions
(342
)
 
581

 
(3,954
)
Loss on extinguishment of debt

 
13,453

 

Changes in assets and liabilities, net of acquired businesses:
 
 
 

 
 

Accounts receivable
(29,342
)
 
23,564

 
(2,219
)
Inventory
11,355

 
(2,544
)
 
10,016

Prepaid expenses and other assets
4,699

 
(239
)
 
(893
)
Accounts payable
1,062

 
689

 
(15,977
)
Amounts due to plan sponsors
(3,665
)
 
942

 
308

Accrued interest

 
1

 
(192
)
Accrued expenses and other liabilities
(815
)
 
(4,805
)
 
(1,305
)
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities from continuing operations
(20,003
)
 
5,630

 
(35,522
)
Net cash used in operating activities from discontinued operations
(101
)
 
(6,393
)
 
(7,019
)
Net cash used in operating activities
(20,104
)
 
(763
)
 
(42,541
)
Cash flows from investing activities:
 
 
 

 
 

Cash consideration paid for acquisitions, net of cash acquired

 

 
(67,516
)
Purchases of property and equipment, net
(13,875
)
 
(8,680
)
 
(9,870
)
Proceeds from dispositions
360

 

 
4,177

Net cash used in investing activities
(13,515
)
 
(8,680
)
 
(73,209
)
Cash flows from financing activities:
 
 
 

 
 

Proceeds from private issuances, net

 
20,777

 
83,267

Proceeds from priming credit agreement, net

 
23,060

 

Fees attributable to extinguishment of debt

 
(980
)
 

Borrowings on revolving credit facility

 
563

 
104,300

Repayments on revolving credit facility

 
(55,863
)
 
(64,000
)
Borrowing of long-term debt, net of expenses
10,000

 
294,446

 

Principal payments of long-term debt

 
(236,770
)
 
(12,550
)
Repayments of capital leases
(1,873
)
 
(1,072
)
 
(1,073
)
Net activity from exercise of employee stock awards
(55
)
 
120

 
(202
)
Net cash provided by financing activities
8,072

 
44,281

 
109,742

Net change in cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash
(25,547
)
 
34,838

 
(6,008
)
Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash - beginning of year
44,407

 
9,569

 
15,577

Cash and cash equivalents and restricted cash - end of year
$
18,860

 
$
44,407

 
$
9,569

DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
 
 
 

 
 

Cash paid during the year for interest
$
41,488

 
$
45,376

 
$
34,696

Cash paid during the year for income taxes, net of refunds
$
(319
)
 
$
649

 
$
(372
)
DISCLOSURE OF NON-CASH TRANSACTIONS:
 
 
 
 
 
   Issuance of 3,750,000 shares in connection with the Home Solutions acquisition
$

 
$

 
$
9,938

Capital lease obligations incurred to acquire property and equipment
$
34

 
$
1,825

 
$
2,314

Paid-in-kind interest capitalized as principal on Second Lien Note Facility
$
7,787

 
$

 
$

Tenant improvement allowances for leasehold improvements
$
2,914

 
$

 
$

See accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

46


BIOSCRIP, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
NOTE 1 NATURE OF OPERATIONS AND PRESENTATION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Corporate Organization and Business

BioScrip, Inc. (“BioScrip”, “we”, “us”, “our” or the “Company”) is a national provider of infusion and home care management solutions. We partner with physicians, hospital systems, payors, pharmaceutical manufacturers and skilled nursing facilities to provide patients access to post-acute care services. We operate with a commitment to bring customer-focused pharmacy and related healthcare infusion therapy services into the home or alternate-site setting. By collaborating with the full spectrum of healthcare professionals and the patient, we aim to provide cost-effective care that is driven by clinical excellence, customer service and values that promote positive outcomes and an enhanced quality of life for those whom we serve.

Our platform provides nationwide service capabilities and the ability to deliver clinical management services that offer patients a high-touch, community-based and home-based care environment. Our core services are provided in coordination with, and under the direction of, the patient’s physician. Our multidisciplinary team of clinicians, including pharmacists, nurses, dietitians and respiratory therapists, work with the physician to develop a plan of care suited to each patient’s specific needs. Whether in the home, physician office, ambulatory infusion center, skilled nursing facility or other alternate sites of care, we provide products, services and condition-specific clinical management programs tailored to improve the care of individuals with complex health conditions such as gastrointestinal abnormalities, infectious diseases, cancer, multiple sclerosis, organ and blood cell transplants, bleeding disorders, immune deficiencies and heart failure.

Basis of Presentation

The Company’s Consolidated Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”).

Principles of Consolidation

The Consolidated Financial Statements include the accounts of the Company and its wholly-owned subsidiaries. All significant intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

Reclassifications

Certain prior period financial statement amounts have been reclassified to conform to current period presentation. Additionally, certain amounts in the Consolidated Statements of Operations have been reclassified to include the presentation of operating expenses and operating income (loss).
Use of Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make certain estimates and assumptions. These estimates and assumptions affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
NOTE 2 SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Revenue Recognition

On January 1, 2018, the Company adopted ASC 606 - Revenue from Contracts with Customers (“ASC 606”) using the modified retrospective method applied to those contracts which were not completed as of January 1, 2018. Results for reporting periods beginning after January 1, 2018 are presented under ASC 606, while prior period amounts are not restated and continue to be reported in accordance with accounting standards in effect for those periods.

Net revenues are primarily generated by two performance obligations; delivery of prescription medications to patients and nursing services related to infusion therapies. A performance obligation is a promise in a contract to transfer a distinct good or service to the customer and is defined as the unit of account for revenue recognition under ASC 606. Sources of net revenues include commercial insurance payors, Medicare, Medicaid, other government insurance payors, hospital and hospice facilities

47


and patients. Revenue is allocated to each performance obligation based on its relative standalone price, determined using reimbursement rates established by third-party payor contracts. Revenue is recognized in the period in which the related performance obligation is satisfied. Prescription medication revenue is recognized at the time the product is delivered to the patient and nursing revenue is recognized on the date of service.

Transaction prices for performance obligations with contracted payors are based on contracted rates. Transaction prices for Medicare and Medicaid programs are based on predetermined net realizable rates that are established by statutes or regulation. Transaction prices for non-contracted payors are based on usual and customary rates for services provided. These transaction prices are reduced by estimates of variable consideration, consisting of (i) implicit price concessions resulting from differences between rates charged for services performed and expected reimbursements, and (ii) retroactive revenue adjustments due to audits or reviews by our third-party payors.

We determine our estimates of variable consideration based on historical collection experience with similar payor classes, aged accounts receivable by payor class, terms of payment agreements, correspondence from payors related to revenue audits or reviews, our historical settlement activity of audited and reviewed claims and current economic conditions using the portfolio approach. Revenue is recognized only to the extent that it is probable that a significant reversal of the cumulative amount recognized will not occur in future periods.

Net revenues are adjusted when changes in estimates of variable consideration occur. Changes in estimates typically arise as a result of new information obtained, such as actual payment receipt or denial, or retroactive pricing adjustments by payors for new medications or services. Subsequent changes to estimates of transaction prices are recorded as adjustments to net revenue in the period of change. Subsequent changes that are determined to be the result of an adverse change in the payors ability to pay are recorded as an allowance for doubtful accounts.

The Company's performance obligations relate to contracts with a duration of less than one year; therefore, the Company has elected to apply the optional exemption provided by ASC 606 and is not required to disclose the aggregate amount of the transaction price allocated to performance obligations that are unsatisfied or partially unsatisfied as of the end of the reporting period. The unsatisfied or partially unsatisfied performance obligations are completed when prescription medications are shipped, which generally occurs within a few days of the end of the reporting period. The Company's cost of obtaining contracts is not material.

In accordance with ASC 606, contract assets are to be recognized when an entity has the right to receive consideration in exchange for goods or services that have been transferred to a customer when that right is conditional on something other than the passage of time. The Company does not recognize contract assets as the right to receive consideration is unconditional in accordance with the passage of time criteria. Also in accordance with ASC 606, contract liabilities are to be recognized when an entity is obligated to transfer goods or services for which consideration has already been received. The Company does not receive consideration prior to the transfer of goods or services and, therefore, does not recognize contract liabilities. The Company elected a practical expedient to expense sales commissions when incurred as the amortization period associated therewith is generally one year or less. These costs are recorded in service location operating expenses.

Prior to the adoption of ASC 606, the Company accounted for revenue under ASC Subtopic 605-25,  Revenue Recognition: Multiple-Element Arrangements  (“ASC 605-25”). The Company concluded that its (i) delivery of prescription medications to patients and (ii) nursing services related to infusion therapies represented separate deliverables to its customers and allocated the total consideration to each deliverable based on its stand-alone selling price. Prescription medication revenue was recognized at the time the medication is shipped, and nursing revenue was recognized on the date of service.

Accounts Receivable and Allowance for Doubtful Accounts

Amounts billed that have not yet been collected that also meet the conditions for unconditional right to payment are presented as accounts receivable. We report accounts receivable related to delivery of prescription medications to patients and nursing services related to infusion therapies at their estimated transaction prices, inclusive of adjustments for variable consideration, based on the amounts expected to be collected from payors. Our accounts receivable are uncollateralized and consist of amounts due from commercial, government and patient payors. We write off accounts receivable once we have exhausted our collection efforts and deem an account to be uncollectible. Subsequent to the adoption of ASC 606, an allowance for doubtful accounts is established only as a result of an adverse change in the Company’s payors’ ability to pay outstanding billings. There was no allowance for doubtful accounts as of December 31, 2018.

Prior to the adoption of ASC 606, estimates of uncollectible accounts receivable were recorded as bad debt expense and a related allowance for doubtful accounts was established. The risk of collection varied based upon the product and the payor. We estimated the allowance for doubtful accounts based on several factors including the age of the outstanding receivables, the

48


historical experience of collections, adjusting for current economic conditions, and evaluating specific customer accounts for the ability to pay. We evaluated trends in collections and the effects of systems and business process changes in determining our expected collection rates. Balances that were determined to be uncollectible were written off against the existing allowance for doubtful accounts.

Cost of Revenue

Cost of revenue includes the costs of prescription medications, shipping and other direct and indirect costs, and nursing services, offset by volume and prompt pay discounts received from pharmaceutical manufacturers and distributors and manufacturer rebates, which are generally volume-based incentives that are recorded as a reduction to the cost of inventory purchases.

Cash and Cash Equivalents and Restricted Cash

Highly liquid investments with a maturity of three months or less when purchased are classified as cash equivalents. Restricted cash consists of cash balances held by financial institutions as collateral for letters of credit. These balances are reclassified to cash and cash equivalents when the underlying obligation is satisfied. Restricted cash balances expected to become unrestricted during the next twelve months are recorded as current assets. As of December 31, 2018 , the Company had a restricted cash balance, in a money market account, of approximately $ 4.3 million .

Inventory

Inventory is recorded at the lower of cost or net realizable value. Cost for prescription medications is determined using specific item identification and supplies are accounted for using the first-in, first-out method.

Acquisitions

We account for acquisitions in accordance with ASC Topic 850,  Business Combinations , if the acquired assets assumed and liabilities incurred constitute a business. We consider acquired companies to constitute a business if the acquired set of activities and assets are capable of being managed for the purpose of providing a return to the Company. For acquired companies constituting a business, we recognize the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed at their acquisition-date fair values and recognize any excess of total consideration paid over the fair value of the identifiable assets as goodwill.

Property and Equipment

Property and equipment is stated at cost less accumulated depreciation. Depreciation is calculated using the straight-line method over the estimated useful lives of assets as follows:
 
 
Useful Life
Computer hardware and software
 
3
years
 -
5
years
Office equipment
 

 
 
5
years
Vehicles
 
4
years
 -
5
years
Medical equipment
 
13
months
 -
5
years
Furniture and fixtures
 

 
 
5
years

Leasehold improvements and assets leased under capital leases are depreciated using a straight-line basis over the lesser of the related lease term or estimated useful life of the assets. Software implementation costs, primarily consisting of application development activities, are capitalized and included in property and equipment. Costs related to the preliminary project and post-implementation stages of a project are charged to expense as incurred.

Depreciation of the property and equipment commences on the date the asset is ready for its intended use. A gain or loss is recorded in the statement of operations in the period in which the asset was sold or retired. Maintenance and repair costs are expensed as incurred.

The Company evaluates whether events and circumstances have occurred that indicate the remaining estimated useful life of its property and equipment may warrant revision or that the remaining balance of an asset may not be recoverable. The measurement of impairment is based on the ability to recover the balance of assets from expected future operating cash flows on an undiscounted basis. Impairment losses, if any, are determined based on the fair value of the asset, which is generally calculated as the present

49


value of related cash flows using discount rates that reflect the inherent risk of the underlying business. No impairment charges related to property and equipment were recorded during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 or 2016.

Leases

Operating lease expense is recorded on a straight-line basis over the expected term of the lease beginning on the date the Company gains possession of leased property. The Company includes tenant improvement allowances and rent holidays received from landlords and the effect of any rent escalation clauses as adjustments to straight-line rent expense over the expected term of the lease.

Capital leases are reflected as a liability at the inception of the lease based on the present value of the minimum lease payments or, if lower, the fair value of the property. Assets recorded under capital leases are depreciated in the same manner as owned property.

Goodwill

In accordance with ASC Topic 350,  Intangibles–Goodwill and Other (“ASC 350”) , we evaluate goodwill for possible impairment annually or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of such assets may not be recoverable. We concluded that the characteristics of all components of our business are similar and therefore the reporting unit for our goodwill analysis is the entity as a whole. We use a two-step process to assess the realizability of goodwill. The first step is a qualitative assessment that analyzes current economic indicators associated with a particular reporting unit. For example, we analyze changes in economic, market and industry conditions, business strategy, cost factors, and financial performance, among others, to determine if there are indicators of a significant decline in the fair value of a particular reporting unit. If the qualitative assessment indicates a stable or improved fair value, no further testing is required.

If a qualitative assessment indicates it is more likely than not that the fair value of our reporting unit is less than its carrying amount, we will proceed to the second step where we estimate the fair value of the reporting unit. We concluded that our goodwill was not impaired as a result of our 2018 assessment and none of the goodwill associated with our single reporting unit was considered at risk of impairment as of October 31, 2018.

Intangible Assets

Intangible assets as of December 31, 2018 consisted of managed care contracts and non-compete agreements. We amortize managed care contracts over their estimated useful lives of four years, and non-compete agreements on a straight-line basis over their contractual lives, which is generally one to five years. During 2018, we evaluated our intangible assets for indicators of impairment and determined that there have been no material developments, events, changes in operating performance or other circumstances that would cause management to believe it is more likely than not that the fair value of our intangible assets would be less than its carrying amount.

Amounts due to Plan Sponsors

Amounts due to plan sponsors represent payments received from plan sponsors in excess of the contractually required reimbursement that are expected to be refunded.

2017 Warrants

The 2017 Warrants are recorded at fair value and are included in other non-current liabilities on the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets. Fair value is remeasured each reporting period and a mark-to-market adjustment is recorded under the caption “Change in fair value of equity linked liabilities” on the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Operations. The fair value of the 2017 Warrants was $25.3 million and $20.5 million as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, respectively. Fair value increases of $4.8 million and $3.6 million were recorded during the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017.

The Company estimates the fair value of the 2017 Warrants using a valuation model that considers attributes of the Company’s common stock, including the number of outstanding shares, share price and volatility. The valuation also considers the exercise period of the warrants and the attributes of other convertible instruments in estimating the number of shares that will be issued upon the exercise of the warrants.

See Note 8 - Preferred Stock and Stockholders’ Deficit for further discussion of the 2017 Warrants.


50


Income Taxes

The Company accounts for income taxes under ASC Topic 740, Income Taxes. Deferred income taxes reflect the net tax effects of temporary differences between the carrying amounts of the assets and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using current enacted tax rates in effect in the years in which those temporary differences are expected to reverse. A valuation allowance is recorded against a deferred tax asset if, based on the weight of available evidence, it is more-likely-than-not that some portion, or all, of the deferred tax asset will not be realized.

Uncertain tax positions are recognized if it is more likely than not that the Company will be able to sustain the tax position taken, and the measurement of the benefit is calculated as the largest amount that is more than 50% likely to be realized upon resolution of the benefit. The Company has analyzed filing positions in all of the federal and state jurisdictions where it is required to file income tax returns, as well as all open tax years in these jurisdictions. There were no liabilities recorded for uncertain tax positions as of December 31, 2018 or 2017.

Stock-Based Compensation

The Company accounts for stock-based compensation expense under the provisions of ASC Topic 718, Compensation – Stock Compensation (“ASC 718”). Stock-based compensation expense is based on the grant date fair value. We estimate the fair value of stock option awards using a Black-Scholes option pricing model. The fair value of restricted stock unit awards is generally estimated using the close price of our common stock on the grant date. We recognize expense for share-based payment awards based on their vesting conditions as follows:

Awards with service-based vesting conditions only – Expense is recognized on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period of the award.
Awards with performance-based vesting conditions – Expense is not recognized until it is determined that it is probable the performance-based conditions will be met. When achievement of a performance-based condition is probable, a cumulative catch-up of expense will be recorded as if the award had been vesting on a straight-line basis from the award date. The award will continue to be expensed on a straight-line basis through the vesting period and will be updated if the probability of achieving the performance-based condition changes.

The impact of forfeited awards is recorded in the period in which the forfeiture occurs.

Fair Value Measurements

ASC Topic 820, Fair Value Measurement (“ASC 820”), provides a framework for measuring fair value and defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability. Fair value is a market-based measurement that is determined using assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset or liability. The standard establishes a valuation hierarchy for inputs used in measuring fair value that maximizes the use of observable inputs and minimizes the use of unobservable inputs by requiring that the most observable inputs be used when available. Observable inputs are inputs market participants would use in valuing the asset or liability developed based on independent market data sources. Unobservable inputs are inputs that reflect the Company’s assumptions about the factors market participants would use in valuing the asset or liability developed based upon the best information available.

The valuation hierarchy is composed of three categories. The categorization within the valuation hierarchy is based on the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement. The categories within the valuation hierarchy are described as follows:

Level 1 -     Inputs to the fair value measurement are quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.
Level 2 -     Inputs to the fair value measurement include quoted prices in active markets for similar assets or liabilities, quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active, and inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly.
Level 3 -     Inputs to the fair value measurement are unobservable inputs or valuation techniques.

The Company’s cash and cash equivalents, restricted cash, accounts receivable, prepaid expenses and other current assets, accounts payable, amounts due to plan sponsors, accrued interest, accrued expenses and other current liabilities approximate fair value due to their fully liquid or short-term nature.

See Note 12 - Fair Value Measurements for additional information on the fair value of the Company’s debt facilities.

51



Accounting Pronouncements Recently Adopted

In August 2018, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued ASU 2018-15 — Internal Use Software . ASU 2018-15 aligns the requirements for capitalization of implementation costs related to hosted software with the existing internal-use software guidance. The effective date for ASU 2018-15 is for annual and interim periods beginning after December 15, 2019. The Company early adopted this ASU on October 1, 2018 on a prospective basis. The adoption of this standard did not have a material impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.

In July 2017, the FASB issued ASU 2017-11— Earnings Per Share (Topic 260), Distinguishing Liabilities From Equity (Topic 480), and Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815): I. Accounting for Certain Financial Instruments with Down Round Features and II. Replacement of the Indefinite Deferral for Mandatorily Redeemable Financial Instruments of Certain Nonpublic Entities and Certain Mandatorily Redeemable Noncontrolling Interests with a Scope Exception . ASU 2017-11 eliminates the requirement that a down round feature precludes equity classification when assessing whether an instrument is indexed to an entity’s own stock. A freestanding equity-linked financial instrument no longer would be accounted for as a derivative liability at fair value as a result of the existence of a down round feature. The Company adopted the new standard on January 1, 2019. The adoption of this standard did not have a material impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.
In May 2017, the FASB issued ASU 2017-09— Compensation–Stock Compensation (Topic 718): Scope of Modification Accounting. ASU 2017-09 modifies when a change to the terms or conditions of a share-based payment award must be accounted for as a modification. The new guidance requires modification accounting if the fair value, vesting condition or the classification of the award is not the same immediately before and after a change to the terms and conditions of the award. The effective date for ASU 2017-09 is for annual or any interim periods beginning after December 15, 2017. The Company adopted this ASU on January 1, 2018. The adoption of this standard did not materially impact the Company’s consolidated financial statements.
In November 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-18— Statement of Cash Flows (Topic 230): Restricted Cash . ASU 2016-18 requires that a statement of cash flows explain the change during the period in the total of cash, cash equivalents, and amounts generally described as restricted cash or restricted cash equivalents. Therefore, amounts generally described as restricted cash and restricted cash equivalents should be included with cash and cash equivalents when reconciling the beginning-of-period and end-of-period total amounts shown on the statement of cash flows. The effective date for ASU 2016-18 is for annual or any interim periods beginning after December 15, 2017. The Company adopted this ASU on January 1, 2018. The adoption of this standard did not materially impact the Company’s consolidated financial statements.
In August 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-15— Statement of Cash Flows (Topic 230): Classification of Certain Cash Receipts and Cash Payments. ASU 2016-15 provides guidance for eight specific cash flow issues with respect to how cash receipts and cash payments are classified in the statements of cash flows, with the objective of reducing diversity in practice. The effective date for ASU 2016-15 is for annual periods beginning after December 15, 2017, and interim periods within those fiscal years. The Company adopted this ASU on January 1, 2018. The adoption of this standard did not materially impact the Company’s consolidated financial statements.
In May 2014, the FASB issued ASU No. 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (ASC 606) . The standard provides companies with a single model for use in accounting for revenue arising from contracts with customers and replaced most of the existing revenue recognition guidance in U.S. GAAP. On January 1, 2018, we adopted ASC 606 using the modified retrospective transition method which allowed for the application of the new guidance only to contracts that were not completed at the adoption date. Prior periods have not been restated and continue to be reported under accounting standards that were in place at the time. Prior to the adoption of ASC 606, estimates of implicit price concessions and retroactive price adjustments were recorded as bad debt expense and a related allowance for doubtful accounts was established. Subsequent to the adoption of ASC 606, accounts receivable are recorded net of estimated implicit price concessions and retroactive price adjustments and an allowance for doubtful accounts is established only as a result of an adverse change in the Company’s payors’ ability to pay outstanding billings. Upon adoption, the Company concluded that the allowance for doubtful accounts at December 31, 2017 consisted entirely of estimated implicit price concessions and retroactive price adjustments. As a result, the allowance for doubtful accounts was eliminated and accounts receivable were restated net of estimated implicit price concessions and retroactive price adjustments as of January 1, 2018. Adoption of ASC 606 did not result in an opening accumulated deficit adjustment.


52


Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
In August 2018, the FASB issued ASU 2018-13— Fair Value Measurement (Topic 820): Disclosure Framework— Changes to the Disclosure Requirements for Fair Value Measurements . ASU 2018-13 modifies fair value measurement disclosure requirements. The effective date for ASU 2018-13 is for annual and interim periods beginning after December 15, 2019. Early adoption is permitted. The adoption of this standard is not expected to have a material impact on the Company’s disclosures to the consolidated financial statements.
In June 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-13— Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of Credit Losses on Financial Instruments , which requires measurement and recognition of expected credit losses for financial assets held. The amendments in ASU 2016-13 eliminate the probable threshold for initial recognition of a credit loss in current GAAP and reflect an entity’s current estimate of all expected credit losses. ASU 2016-13 is effective for interim and annual reporting periods beginning January 1, 2020, and is to be applied using a modified retrospective transition method. Earlier adoption is permitted. The adoption of this standard is not expected to have a material impact on the Company’s consolidated financial statements.
In February 2016, FASB issued ASU 2016-02, Leases  (“ASU 2016-02”) and issued additional clarifications and improvements throughout 2018. The pronouncement requires lessees to recognize a liability for lease obligations, which represents the discounted obligation to make future minimum lease payments, and a corresponding right-of-use asset on the balance sheet. The guidance requires disclosure of key information about leasing arrangements that is intended to give financial statement users the ability to assess the amount, timing, and potential uncertainty of cash flows related to leases. ASU 2016-02 is effective for interim and annual reporting periods beginning January 1, 2019. We will elect the optional transition method to apply the standard as of the effective date and therefore, we will not apply the standard to the comparative periods presented in our financial statements. We will elect the transition package of three practical expedients permitted within the standard, which eliminates the requirements to reassess prior conclusions about lease identification, lease classification and initial direct costs. We will not elect the hindsight practical expedient, which permits the use of hindsight when determining lease term and impairment of right-of-use assets. Further, we will elect a short-term lease exception policy, permitting us to not apply the recognition requirements of this standard to short-term leases (i.e. leases with terms of 12 months or less) and an accounting policy to account for lease and non-lease components as a single component for certain classes of assets. We are finalizing the impact of the standard to our accounting policies, processes, disclosures, and internal control over financial reporting and have implemented necessary upgrades to our existing lease system.
NOTE 3 - NET REVENUE AND ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE

The following table presents our disaggregated net revenue for each associated payor class (in thousands). Sales and usage-based taxes are excluded from net revenue.
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
 Commercial
$
575,566

 
$
677,536

 
$
771,278

 Government
127,301

 
131,459

 
158,450

 Patient
6,036

 
8,195

 
5,861

Net Revenue
$
708,903

 
$
817,190

 
$
935,589


Absent implementation of ASC 606, the Company would have reported revenue of  $738.8 million , gross profit of  $272.9 million , bad debt expense of  $29.9 million for the year ended December 31, 2018, respectively, and an allowance for doubtful accounts of  $41.2 million  at December 31, 2018.

Net Revenue Concentration

During the year ended December 31, 2018, Aetna Health Management, LLC accounted for approximately 10% of net revenue. During the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, UnitedHealthcare Insurance Company accounted for approximately 18% and 24% of net revenue, respectively.



53


Collectability of Accounts Receivable

The following table sets forth the aging of our accounts receivable, aged based on date of service and categorized based on the three primary payor groups (in thousands):
 
 
December 31, 2018
 
December 31, 2017
 
 
0 - 180 days
 
Over 180 days
 
Total
 
% of Total
 
0 - 180 days
 
Over 180 days
 
Total
 
% of Total
Government
 
$
17,849

 
$
6,098

 
$
23,947

 
 
 
$
20,602

 
$
10,082

 
$
30,684

 
 
Commercial
 
67,288

 
14,740

 
82,028

 
 
 
63,767

 
18,779

 
82,546

 
 
Patient
 
2,092

 
6,797

 
8,889

 
 
 
2,577

 
7,627

 
10,204

 
 
Gross accounts receivable
 
$
87,229

 
$
27,635

 
114,864

 
 
 
$
86,946

 
$
36,488

 
123,434

 
 
Allowance for doubtful accounts
 
 
 
 
 

 
%
 
 
 
 
 
(37,912
)
 
30.7
%
Accounts receivable, net
 
 
 
 
 
$
114,864

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
$
85,522

 
 


NOTE 4 ACQUISITION

On September 9, 2016, the Company acquired substantially all of the assets and assumed certain liabilities of Home Solutions, Inc. for consideration totaling 93.2 million , comprised of: (i) $67.5 million in cash; (ii) 7.1 million restricted shares of the Company’s common stock valued at $15.4 million ; (iii) 3,750,000 shares of the Company’s common stock valued at $9.9 million , and (iv) the assumption of $0.3 million of capital lease obligations. Home Solutions, a privately held company, provided home infusion and home nursing products and services to patients suffering from chronic and acute medical conditions.
The excess of the purchase price over the fair value of the tangible and identifiable intangible assets acquired and liabilities assumed in the acquisition was allocated to goodwill in the amount of $58.5 million . Acquisition and integration expenses totaled $10.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2016 and are included in restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses in the accompanying Consolidated Statements of Operations.
NOTE 5 GOODWILL AND INTANGIBLE ASSETS

Goodwill, and the changes in the carrying amount of goodwill for the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017 , are as follows (in thousands):
Balance at December 31, 2016
$
365,947

Adjustments associated with the acquisition of Home Solutions
1,251

Balance at December 31, 2017
$
367,198

Adjustments

Balance at December 31, 2018
$
367,198


Intangible assets consisted of the following (in thousands):
 
December 31, 2018
 
December 31, 2017
 
Gross Carrying Amount
 
Accumulated Amortization
 
Net Carrying Amount
 
Gross Carrying Amount
 
Accumulated Amortization
 
Net Carrying Amount
Infusion customer relationships
$
25,650

 
$
(25,650
)
 
$

 
$
25,650

 
$
(25,650
)
 
$

Managed care contracts
25,000

 
(14,576
)
 
10,424

 
25,000

 
(8,403
)
 
16,597

Licenses
5,400

 
(5,400
)
 

 
5,400

 
(3,681
)
 
1,719

Trade name
1,800

 
(1,800
)
 

 
1,800

 
(1,181
)
 
619

Non-compete agreements
1,700

 
(1,654
)
 
46

 
1,700

 
(1,521
)
 
179

 
$
59,550

 
$
(49,080
)
 
$
10,470

 
$
59,550

 
$
(40,436
)
 
$
19,114



54


Intangible assets are amortized on a straight-line basis over their estimated useful lives as follows:
 
 
Estimated Useful Life
Infusion customer relationships
 
5
months
-
4
years
Managed care contracts
 
 
 
 
 
4
years
Licenses
 
 
 
 
 
2
years
Trade name
 
 
 
 
 
2
years
Non-compete agreements
 
 
1
year
-
5
years

Total amortization expense of intangible assets was $8.6 million , $11.8 million , and $6.2 million for the years ended December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016 , respectively. Amortization expense is expected to be the following (in thousands):

Year ending December 31,
 
Estimated Amortization
2019
 
$
6,218

2020
 
4,252

Total estimated amortization expense
 
$
10,470

NOTE 6 PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT

Property and equipment consisted of the following (in thousands):
 
December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
Computer and office equipment
$
32,452

 
$
31,371

Software capitalized for internal use
17,625

 
17,470

Vehicles
2,287

 
2,379

Medical equipment
42,600

 
36,230

Work in progress
1,733

 
2,478

Furniture and fixtures
5,930

 
5,534

Leasehold improvements
27,012

 
19,809

Property and equipment, gross
129,639

 
115,271

Less: Accumulated depreciation
(100,851
)
 
(88,298
)
Property and equipment, net
$
28,788

 
$
26,973


Depreciation expense, including expense related to assets under capital lease, for the years ended December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016 was $15.0 million , $15.9 million , and $15.8 million , respectively.

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NOTE 7 DEBT

Debt consisted of the following (in thousands):

 
December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
First Lien Note Facility, net of unamortized discount
$
198,962

 
$
198,324

Second Lien Note Facility, net of unamortized discount
108,931

 
85,694

2021 Notes, net of unamortized discount
198,125

 
197,363

Capital leases
990

 
2,863

Less: Deferred financing costs
(2,334
)
 
(3,656
)
Total debt
504,674

 
480,588

Less: Current portion of long-term debt
(3,179
)
 
(1,722
)
Long-term debt, net of current portion
$
501,495

 
$
478,866


Prior Debt Facilities
The Company was previously obligated under (i) a senior secured first-lien revolving credit facility in an aggregate principal amount of $75.0 million (the “Revolving Credit Facility”), (ii) a senior secured first-lien term loan B in an aggregate principal amount of $250.0 million (the “Term Loan B Facility”) and (iii) a senior secured first-lien delayed draw term loan B in an aggregate principal amount of $150.0 million (the “Delayed Draw Term Loan Facility” and, together with the Revolving Credit Facility and the Term Loan B Facility, the “Senior Credit Facilities”) with SunTrust Bank, Jefferies Finance LLC and Morgan Stanley Senior Funding, Inc., originally entered on July 31, 2013 and amended from time to time. The borrowings under these facilities were fully repaid during 2017.
On January 6, 2017, the Company entered into a credit agreement (the “Priming Credit Agreement” and, together with the Senior Credit Facilities, the “Prior Credit Agreements”) with certain existing lenders under the Senior Credit Facilities and SunTrust Bank, as administrative agent for itself and the lenders. The Priming Credit Agreement provided an aggregate borrowing commitment of $25.0 million , which was fully drawn at closing. The borrowings under this facility were fully repaid during 2017.
First Lien and Second Lien Note Facilities
On June 29, 2017 (the “Closing Date”), the Company entered into (i) a first lien note purchase agreement (the “First Lien Note Facility”), among the Company, which is the issuer under the agreement, the financial institutions and note purchasers from time to time party to the agreement (the “First Lien Note Purchasers”), and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, in its capacity as collateral agent for itself and the First Lien Note Purchasers (the “First Lien Collateral Agent”), pursuant to which the Company issued first lien senior secured notes in an aggregate principal amount of $200.0 million (the “First Lien Notes”); and (ii) a second lien note purchase agreement (the “Second Lien Note Facility” and, together with the First Lien Note Facility, the “Notes Facilities”) among the Company, which is the issuer under the agreement, the financial institutions and note purchasers from time to time party to the agreement (the “Second Lien Note Purchasers”), and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, in its capacity as collateral agent for itself and the Second Lien Note Purchasers (the “Second Lien Collateral Agent” and, together with the First Lien Collateral Agent, the “Collateral Agent”), pursuant to which the Company (a) issued second lien senior secured notes in an aggregate initial principal amount of $100.0 million (the “Initial Second Lien Notes”) and (b) had the ability to draw upon the Second Lien Note Facility and issue second lien delayed draw senior secured notes, which was exercised on June 21, 2018, in an aggregate initial principal amount of $10.0 million , representing the maximum borrowings allowed on this facility (the “Second Lien Delayed Draw Notes” and, together with the Initial Second Lien Notes, the “Second Lien Notes”; the Second Lien notes, together with the First Lien Notes, the “Notes”). Funds managed by Ares Management L.P. are acting as lead purchasers for the Notes Facilities.
The Company used the proceeds of the sale of the First Lien Notes and the Initial Second Lien Notes pursuant to the Notes Facilities to repay in full all amounts outstanding under the Prior Credit Agreements and extinguished the liability. Each of the Prior Credit Agreements was terminated following such repayment. The Company used the remaining proceeds of $15.9 million of the Notes Facilities, net of $0.2 million in issuance costs, from the Notes Facilities and the Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement for working capital and general corporate purposes.
The First Lien Notes accrue interest, payable monthly in arrears, at a floating rate or rates equal to, at the option of the Company, (i) the base rate (defined as the highest of the Federal Funds Rate plus 0.5% per annum, the Prime Rate as published

56


by The Wall Street Journal and the one-month London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) (subject to a 1.0% floor) plus 1.0% ), or (ii) the one-month LIBOR rate (subject to a 1.0% floor), plus a margin of 6.0% if the base rate is selected or 7.0% if the LIBOR Option is selected. The First Lien Notes mature on August 15, 2020, provided that if the Company’s existing 8.875% Senior Notes due 2021 (the “2021 Notes”) are refinanced prior to August 15, 2020, then the scheduled maturity date of the First Lien Notes shall be June 30, 2022.
The First Lien Notes amortize in equal quarterly installments equal to 0.625% of the aggregate principal amount of the First Lien Note Facility, commencing on September 30, 2019, and on the last day of each third month thereafter, with the balance payable at maturity. The First Lien Notes are pre-payable at the Company’s option at specified premiums to the principal amount that will decline over the term of the First Lien Note Facility. If the First Lien Notes are prepaid prior to the second anniversary of the Closing Date, the Company will be required to pay a make-whole premium based on the present value (using a discount rate based on the specified treasury rate plus 50 basis points) of all remaining interest payments on the First Lien Notes being prepaid prior to the second anniversary of the Closing Date, plus 4.0% of the principal amount of First Lien Notes being prepaid. On or after the second anniversary of the Closing Date, the prepayment premium is 4.0% , which declines to 2.0% on or after the third anniversary of the Closing Date, and declines to 0.0% on or after the fourth anniversary of the Closing Date. At any time, the Company may pre-pay up to $50.0 million in aggregate principal amount of the First Lien Notes from internally generated cash without incurring any make-whole or prepayment premium. The occurrence of certain events of default may increase the applicable rate of interest by 2.0% and could result in the acceleration of the Company’s obligations under the First Lien Note Facility prior to stated maturity and an obligation of the Company to pay the full amount of its obligations under the First Lien Note Facility.
The First Lien Note Facility contains customary events of default that include, among others, non-payment of principal, interest or fees, violation of covenants, inaccuracy of representations and warranties, bankruptcy and insolvency events, material judgments, cross-defaults to material indebtedness and events constituting a change of control. In addition, the obligations under the First Lien Note Facility are guaranteed by joint and several guarantees from the Company’s subsidiaries.
In connection with the First Lien Note Facility, the Company, its subsidiaries and the First Lien Collateral Agent entered into a First Lien Guaranty and Security Agreement, dated as of June 29, 2017 (the “First Lien Guaranty and Security Agreement”). Pursuant to the First Lien Guaranty and Security Agreement, the obligations under the First Lien Notes are secured by first priority liens on, and security interests in, substantially all of the assets of the Company and its subsidiaries.
The Second Lien Notes accrue interest, payable monthly in arrears, at a floating rate or rates equal to, at the option of the Company, (i) one-month LIBOR (subject to a 1.25% floor) plus 9.25% per annum in cash, (ii) one-month LIBOR (subject to a 1.25% floor) plus 11.25% per annum, which amount will be capitalized on each interest payment date, or (iii) one-month LIBOR (subject to a 1.25% floor) plus 10.25% per annum, of which one-half LIBOR plus 4.625% per annum will be payable in cash and one-half LIBOR plus 5.625% per annum will be capitalized on each interest payment date, provided that, in each case, if any permitted refinancing indebtedness with which the 2021 Notes are refinanced requires or permits the payment of cash interest, all of the interest on the Second Lien Notes shall be paid in cash. The Company elected to capitalize $7.8 million of interest during the year ended December 31, 2018. No interest was capitalized during the year ended December 31, 2017. The Second Lien Notes mature on August 15, 2020, provided that if the 2021 Notes are refinanced prior to August 15, 2020, then the scheduled maturity date of the Second Lien Notes shall be June 30, 2022.
The Second Lien Notes are not subject to scheduled amortization installments. The Second Lien Notes are pre-payable at the Company’s option at specified premiums to the principal amount that will decline over the term of the Second Lien Note Facility. If the Second Lien Notes are prepaid prior to the third anniversary of the Closing Date, the Company will need to pay a make-whole premium based on the present value (using a discount rate based on the specified treasury rate plus 50 basis points) of all remaining interest payments on the Second Lien Notes being prepaid prior to the third anniversary of the Closing Date, plus 4.0% of the principal amount of Second Lien Notes being prepaid. On or after the third anniversary of the Closing Date, the prepayment premium is 4.0% , which declines to 2.0% on or after the fourth anniversary of the Closing Date, and declines to 0.0% on or after the fifth anniversary of the Closing Date. The occurrence of certain events of default may increase the applicable rate of interest by 2.0% and could result in the acceleration of the Company’s obligations under the Second Lien Note Facility prior to stated maturity and an obligation of the Company to pay the full amount of its obligations under the Second Lien Note Facility.
The Second Lien Note Facility contains customary events of default that include, among others, non-payment of principal, interest or fees, violation of covenants, inaccuracy of representations and warranties, bankruptcy and insolvency events, material judgments, cross-defaults to material indebtedness and events constituting a change of control. In addition, the obligations under the Second Lien Note Facility are guaranteed by joint and several guarantees from the Company’s subsidiaries.
In connection with the Second Lien Note Facility, the Company, its subsidiaries and the Second Lien Collateral Agent entered into a Second Lien Guaranty and Security Agreement, dated as of June 29, 2017 (the “Second Lien Guaranty and Security

57


Agreement”). Pursuant to the Second Lien Guaranty and Security Agreement, the obligations under the Second Lien Notes are secured by second priority liens on, and security interests in, substantially all of the assets of the Company and its subsidies.
In connection with the First Lien Note Facility and the Second Lien Note Facility, the Company, the First Lien Collateral Agent and the Second Lien Collateral Agent, entered into an intercreditor agreement containing customary provisions to, among other things, subordinate the lien priority of the liens granted under the Second Lien Note Facility to the liens granted under the First Lien Note Facility.
2021 Notes

On February 11, 2014, the Company issued $200.0 million aggregate principal amount of the 2021 Notes. The 2021 Notes are senior unsecured obligations of the Company and are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by all existing and future subsidiaries of the Company. The 2021 Notes were offered in the United States to qualified institutional buyers in reliance on Rule 144A under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), and outside the United States to non-U.S. persons in reliance on Regulation S under the Securities Act pursuant to an Indenture (the “2021 Notes Indenture”), dated February 11, 2014, by and among the Company, the guarantors named therein and U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee.

Interest on the 2021 Notes accrues at a fixed rate of 8.875% per annum and is payable in cash semi-annually, in arrears, on February 15 and August 15 of each year, commencing on August 15, 2014. The debt discount of $5.0 million at issuance is being amortized as interest expense through maturity which will result in the accretion over time of the outstanding debt balance to the principal amount. The 2021 Notes are the Company’s senior unsecured obligations and rank equally in right of payment with all of its other existing and future senior unsecured indebtedness and senior in right of payment to all of its existing and future subordinated indebtedness.

The 2021 Notes are guaranteed on a full, joint and several basis by each of the Company’s existing and future domestic restricted subsidiaries that is a borrower under any of the Company’s credit facilities or that guarantees any of the Company’s debt or that of any of its restricted subsidiaries, in each case incurred under the Company’s credit facilities. As of December 31, 2018 , the Company does not have any independent assets or operations, and as a result, its direct and indirect subsidiaries (other than minor subsidiaries), each being 100% owned by the Company, are fully and unconditionally, jointly and severally, providing guarantees on a senior unsecured basis to the 2021 Notes.

The 2021 Notes Indenture contains covenants that, among other things, limit the Company’s ability and the ability of certain of the Company’s subsidiaries to (i) grant liens on its assets, (ii) make dividend payments, other distributions or other restricted payments, (iii) incur restrictions on the ability of the Company’s restricted subsidiaries to pay dividends or make other payments, (iv) enter into sale and leaseback transactions, (v) merge, consolidate, transfer or dispose of substantially all of their assets, (vi) incur additional indebtedness, (vii) make investments, (viii) sell assets, including capital stock of subsidiaries, (ix) use the proceeds from sales of assets, including capital stock of restricted subsidiaries, and (x) enter into transactions with affiliates. In addition, the 2021 Notes Indenture requires, among other things, the Company to provide financial and current reports to holders of the 2021 Notes or file such reports electronically with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”). These covenants are subject to a number of exceptions, limitations and qualifications set forth in the 2021 Notes Indenture.

Pursuant to the terms of the Second Amendment to the Senior Credit Facilities, the Company used the net proceeds of the 2021 Notes of approximately $194.5 million to repay existing debt.

Fair Value of Debt Facilities

See Note 12 - Fair Value Measurements, for information related to the estimated fair value of the Company’s debt facilities.

Deferred Financing Costs

In connection with the Note Facilities and the 2021 Notes, the Company incurred underwriting fees, agent fees, legal fees and other expenses of approximately $4.1 million and $0.5 million , respectively. The deferred financing costs are reflected as additional issuance costs and amortized as a component of interest expense over the remaining term of the Note Facilities using the effective interest method.


58


Future Maturities

The estimated future maturities of the Company’s long-term debt, exclusive of deferred financing costs and unamortized discounts, as of December 31, 2018 , are as follows (in thousands):
Year Ending December 31,
 
Amount
2019
 
$
3,179

2020
 
315,598

2021
 
200,000

Total future maturities
 
$
518,777

Less: Deferred financing costs
 
(2,334
)
Less: Unamortized discounts
 
(11,769
)
Total debt
 
$
504,674

NOTE 8 PREFERRED STOCK AND STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT

Series A Preferred Stock

As of December 31, 2018 , the carrying value of Series A Preferred Stock included accrued dividends at 11.5% and discount accretion from the date of issuance. Dividends and discount accretion totaled $0.3 million and $0.1 million , respectively, for each of the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017 and were recorded as a reduction to additional paid-in capital. The following table sets forth the activity recorded during the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017 related to the Series A Preferred Stock (in thousands):
Series A Preferred Stock carrying value at December 31, 2016
$
2,462

Dividends and discount accretion through December 31, 2017 1
365

Series A Preferred Stock carrying value at December 31, 2017
$
2,827

Dividends and discount accretion through December 31, 2018 1
404

Series A Preferred Stock carrying value at December 31, 2018
$
3,231


1 Dividends recorded reflect the increase in the Liquidation Preference associated with unpaid dividends.

Series C Preferred Stock

As of December 31, 2018 , the carrying value of Series C Preferred Stock included accrued dividends at 11.5% and discount accretion from the date of issuance. Dividends and discount accretion totaled $10.1 million and $0.7 million , respectively, for the year ended December 31, 2018 and $9.1 million and $0.6 million , respectively, for the year ended December 31, 2017 and were recorded as a reduction to additional paid-in capital. The following table sets forth the activity recorded during the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017 related to the Series C Preferred Stock (in thousands):
Series C Preferred Stock carrying value at December 31, 2016
$
69,540

Dividends and discount accretion through December 31, 2017 1
9,712

Series C Preferred Stock carrying value at December 31, 2017
$
79,252

Dividends and discount accretion through December 31, 2018 1
10,806

Series C Preferred Stock carrying value at December 31, 2018
$
90,058


1 Dividends recorded reflect the increase in the Liquidation Preference associated with unpaid dividends.

First Quarter 2017 Private Placement
On March 1, 2017, the Company entered into a Stock Purchase Agreement (the “First Quarter Stock Purchase Agreement”) with Venor Capital Master Fund Ltd., Map 139 Segregated Portfolio of LMA SPC, Venor Special Situations Fund II LP and Trevithick LP (the “First Quarter Stockholders”). Pursuant to the First Quarter Stock Purchase Agreement, the Company sold an aggregate of 3.3 million shares of its common stock (the “First Quarter Shares”) for aggregate gross proceeds of approximately $5.1 million in a private placement transaction (the “First Quarter 2017 Private Placement”). The purchase price for each Share

59


was $1.5366 , which was negotiated between the Company and the First Quarter Stockholders based on the volume-weighted average price of the Company's common stock on the Nasdaq Global Market on March 1, 2017.
Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement
On June 29, 2017, the Company entered into a Stock Purchase Agreement (the “Second Quarter Stock Purchase Agreement”) with a fund managed by Ares Management L.P. (“Ares” or the “Second Quarter Stock Purchaser”). Pursuant to the terms of the Second Quarter Stock Purchase Agreement, the Company issued and sold to the Second Quarter Stock Purchaser in a private placement (the “Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement”) 6,359,350 shares of Common Stock (the “Second Quarter Shares”) at a price of $2.50 per share, for proceeds of approximately $15.9 million , net of $0.2 million in associated costs.
Second Quarter Registration Rights Agreement
In connection with the 2017 Warrants and the Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement, the Company entered into a Registration Rights Agreement (the “Second Quarter 2017 Registration Rights Agreement”) with the holders of the 2017 Warrants and the Second Quarter Stock Purchaser. Pursuant to the Second Quarter 2017 Registration Rights Agreement, subject to certain exceptions, the Company is required, upon the request of the Second Quarter Stock Purchaser and holders of the 2017 Warrants, to register the resale of the Second Quarter Shares and the shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the 2017 Warrants. Pursuant to the terms of the Second Quarter 2017 Registration Rights Agreement, these registration rights will not become effective until twelve months after the Closing Date, and the costs incurred in connection with such registrations will be borne by the Company.
2017 Warrants
In connection with the Second Lien Note Facility (as defined above), the Company issued warrants (the “2017 Warrants”) to the purchasers of the Second Lien Notes (as defined below) pursuant to a Warrant Purchase Agreement dated as of June 29, 2017 (the “Warrant Purchase Agreement”). The 2017 Warrants entitle the purchasers of the Warrants to purchase shares of Common Stock, representing at the time of any exercise of the 2017 Warrants an equivalent number of shares equal to 4.99% of the Common Stock of the Company on a fully diluted basis, subject to the terms of the Warrant Agreement governing the 2017 Warrants, dated as of June 29, 2017 (the “Warrant Agreement”); provided, however, the 2017 Warrants may not be converted to the extent that, after giving effect to such conversion, the holders of the 2017 Warrants would beneficially own, in the aggregate, in excess of (i) 19.99% of the shares of Common Stock outstanding as of June 29, 2017 (the “Closing Date”) minus (ii) the shares of Common Stock that were sold pursuant to the Second Quarter 2017 Private Placement (as defined below) (the “Conversion Cap”). The Conversion Cap will not apply to the 2017 Warrants if the Company obtains the approval of its stockholders for the removal of the Conversion Cap, which the Company is required to take certain steps to attempt to obtain, subject to the terms of the Warrant Agreement.
The 2017 Warrants have a 10 -year term and an initial exercise price of $2.00 per share, and may be exercised by payment of the exercise price in cash or surrender of shares of Common Stock into which the 2017 Warrants are being converted in an aggregate amount sufficient to pay the exercise price.  The exercise price and the number of shares that may be acquired upon exercise of the 2017 Warrants are subject to adjustment in certain situations, including price based anti-dilution protection whereby, subject to certain exceptions, if the Company later issues Common Stock or certain Common Stock Equivalents (as defined in the Warrant Agreement) at a price less than either the then-current market price per share or exercise price of the 2017 Warrants, then the exercise price will be decreased and the percentage of shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the 2017 Warrants will remain the same, giving effect to such issuance. Additionally, the 2017 Warrants have standard anti-dilution protections if the Company effects a stock split, subdivision, reclassification or combination of its Common Stock or fixes a record date for the making of a dividend or distribution to stockholders of cash or certain assets. Upon the occurrence of certain business combinations, the 2017 Warrants will be converted into the right to acquire shares of stock or other securities or property (including cash) of the successor entity.
See 2017 Warrants within Note 2 - Summary of Significant Accounting Policies for additional information related to the estimated fair value of the 2017 Warrants.

Treasury Stock

During the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017, 51,394 and 5,106 shares, respectively, were surrendered to satisfy tax withholding obligations on the exercise of stock options and the vesting of restricted stock awards. During the year ended December 31, 2018, an additional 257,305 shares were surrendered in net settlement of option exercises. The Company did not hold any shares of treasury stock at December 31, 2016 as the balance was utilized to issue shares, reflected as consideration, in the Home Solutions acquisition.

60



NOTE 9 STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION AND EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

BioScrip Equity Incentive Plans

Under the Company’s Amended and Restated 2008 Equity Incentive Plan (the “2008 Plan”), the Company may issue, among other things, incentive stock options, non-qualified stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock grants, restricted stock units, performance shares and performance units to key employees and directors. While stock appreciation rights are authorized under the 2008 Plan, they may also be issued outside of the plan. The 2008 Plan is administered by the Company’s Management Development and Compensation Committee (the “Compensation Committee”), a standing committee of the Board of Directors.
On November 30, 2016, at a special meeting, the stockholders approved an amendment to the 2008 Plan to (a) increase the number of shares of Common Stock in the aggregate that may be subject to awards by 5,250,000 shares, from 9,355,000 to 14,605,000 shares and (b) increase the annual grant caps under the Company’s 2008 Plan from 500,000 Options, 500,000 Stock Appreciation Rights and 350,000 Stock Grants and Restricted Stock Units to a cap of no more than a total of 3,000,000 Options, Stock Appreciation Rights, Stock Grants and Restricted Stock Units combined that are intended to comply with the requirements of Section 162(m) of the Code.
On May 3, 2018, at the annual meeting of stockholders, the Board of Directors and stockholders approved the 2018 Equity Incentive Plan (the “2018 Plan”) to replace the expiring 2008 Plan. The 2018 Plan contains terms and conditions substantially similar to the 2008 Plan. A total of 16,406,939 shares of Common Stock were initially authorized for issuance under the 2018 Plan, which included the shares that remained available under the 2008 Plan. The 2018 Plan will terminate ten years after its adoption, unless terminated earlier by the Board of directors. As of December 31, 2018 , there were 12,987,351 shares of Common Stock available for future grant under the 2018 Plan.
Stock Options

Options granted under the 2008 Plan or the 2018 Plan: (a) typically vest over a three -year period and, in certain instances, fully vest upon a change in control of the Company, (b) have an exercise price that may not be less than 100% of its fair market value on the date of grant and (c) are exercisable for seven to ten years after the date of grant, subject to earlier termination in certain circumstances.

Option expense is amortized on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period. The Company recognized compensation expense related to stock options of $1.0 million , $1.0 million , and $3.4 million , in the years ended December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016 , respectively.

The weighted-average, grant-date fair value of options granted during the years ending December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016 was $1.69 , $1.22 , and $0.72 , respectively. The fair value of stock options granted was estimated on the date of grant using a Black-Scholes option-pricing model. The assumptions used to compute the fair value of options for the years ending December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016 were:
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Expected volatility
71.0
%
 
73.2
%
 
68.1
%
Risk-free interest rate
2.71
%
 
2.04
%
 
1.98
%
Expected life of options
6.0 years

 
5.7 years

 
4.8 years

Dividend rate

 

 



61


A summary of stock option activity for the 2008 Plan and the 2018 Plan through December 31, 2018 was as follows:
 
Options
 
Weighted
Average
Exercise Price
 
Aggregate
Intrinsic Value
(thousands)
 
Weighted Average
Remaining
Contractual Life
Balance at December 31, 2017
4,398,200

 
$
3.98

 
$
2,639

 
5.5 years
Granted
1,047,642

 
$
2.61

 
$
990

 
 
Exercised
(427,977
)
 
$
2.14

 
$
382

 
 
Forfeited and expired
(1,320,140
)
 
$
4.78

 
$
904

 
 
Balance at December 31, 2018
3,697,725

 
$
3.52

 
$
3,974

 
5.9 years
Exercisable at December 31, 2018
2,132,090

 
$
4.46

 
$
1,875

 
4.1 years

Cash received from option exercises under share-based payment arrangements was $0.1 million , 0.4 million and nominal for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 , respectively.

The maximum term of stock options under these plans is ten years. Options outstanding as of December 31, 2018 expire on various dates ranging from February 2019 through November 2028. The following table outlines our outstanding and exercisable stock options as of December 31, 2018 :
 
 
Options Outstanding
 
Options Exercisable
Range of Option Exercise Price
 
Outstanding Options
 
Weighted Average Exercise Price
 
Weighted Average Remaining Contractual Life
 
Options Exercisable
 
Weighted Average Exercise Price
$0.00 - $2.06
 
921,094

 
$
1.35

 
6.4 years
 
471,139

 
$
0.76

$2.06 - $4.13
 
1,812,798

 
$
2.50

 
7.2 years
 
697,118

 
$
1.90

$4.13 - $6.19
 
179,000

 
$
5.13

 
3.0 years
 
179,000

 
$
2.74

$6.19 - $8.25
 
633,333

 
$
7.16

 
2.8 years
 
633,333

 
$
4.15

$10.31 - $12.38
 
125,000

 
$
11.04

 
2.6 years
 
125,000

 
$
5.97

$12.38 - $14.44
 
21,500

 
$
14.06

 
4.3 years
 
21,500

 
$
7.30

$16.50 - $18.57
 
5,000

 
$
16.63

 
4.6 years
 
5,000

 
$
8.96

All options
 
3,697,725

 


 

 
2,132,090

 



As of December 31, 2018 there was $1.7 million of unrecognized compensation expense related to unvested option grants that is expected to be recognized over a weighted-average period of 2.1 years.

Restricted Stock

Restricted stock grants subject solely to an employee’s or director’s continued service with the Company generally will become fully vested within (a) one to three years from the date of grant to employees and, in certain instances, may fully vest upon a change in control of the Company, and (b) one year from the date of grant for directors. Stock grants subject to the achievement of performance conditions will not vest less than one year from the date of grant.

The Company recognized compensation expense related to restricted stock awards of $2.6 million , $1.1 million , and $0.5 million for the years ended December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016 , respectively.


62


A summary of restricted stock award activity through December 31, 2018 was as follows:
 
Restricted
Stock
 
Weighted Average
Grant
Date Fair Value
Balance at December 31, 2017
1,882,363

 
$
1.82

Granted
3,284,197

 
$
2.55

Awards Vested
(372,116
)
 
$
2.09

Canceled
(392,256
)
 
$
2.29

Balance at December 31, 2018
4,402,188

 
$
1.87


As of December 31, 2018 , there was $3.5 million in unrecognized compensation expense related to unvested restricted stock awards that is expected to be recognized over a weighted-average period of 1.8 years. The total fair value of restricted stock awards vested during the years December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016 was $0.4 million , $0.4 million , and $0.2 million , respectively.

Employee Stock Purchase Plan

The Company’s Employee Stock Purchase Plan (the “ESPP”) is administered by the Compensation Committee. The ESPP provides all eligible employees, as defined under the ESPP, the opportunity to purchase up to a maximum number of shares of Common Stock of the Company as determined by the Compensation Committee. Participants in the ESPP may acquire the Common Stock at a cost of 85% of the lower of the fair market value on the first or last day of the quarterly offering period.

On May 8, 2018, the Board of Directors and stockholders approved an amendment to the ESPP to increase the number of shares available for issuance from 750,000 shares to 2,250,000 shares. As of December 31, 2018, there were 1,379,943 remaining shares available for issuance. During the years ended December 31, 2018 , 2017 and 2016, 173,519 , 265,608 and 245,371 shares were purchased under this plan, respectively. The Company recognized $0.1 million of expense related to the ESPP during the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016.

401(k) Plan

The Company maintains a deferred compensation plan under Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code. Under the Plan, employees may elect to defer up to 100% of their salary, subject to Internal Revenue Service limits, and the Company may make a discretionary matching contribution. During the year ended December 31, 2018, management approved discretionary matching contributions totaling approximately $0.3 million effective July 1, 2018. The Company elected to forgo a matching contribution during the years ended December 31, 2017 and 2016.
NOTE 10 LOSS PER SHARE

The Company presents basic and diluted loss per share for its common stock, par value $.0001 per share (“Common Stock”). Basic loss per share is calculated by dividing the net loss attributable to common stockholders of the Company by the weighted average number of shares of Common Stock outstanding during the period. Diluted loss per share is determined by adjusting the profit or loss attributable to stockholders and the weighted average number of shares of Common Stock outstanding adjusted for the effects of all dilutive potential common shares comprised of options granted, unvested restricted stock, stock appreciation rights, the 2017 Warrants and Series A and Series C Convertible Preferred Stock. Potential Common Stock equivalents that have been issued by the Company related to outstanding stock options, unvested restricted stock and warrants are determined using the treasury stock method, while potential common shares related to Series A and Series C Convertible Preferred Stock are determined using the “if converted” method.

The Company's Series A and Series C Convertible Preferred Stock, par value $.0001 per share (together, the “Preferred Stock”), is considered a participating security, which means the security may participate in undistributed earnings with Common Stock. The holders of the Preferred Stock would be entitled to share in dividends, on an as-converted basis, if the holders of Common Stock were to receive dividends. The Company is required to use the two-class method when computing loss per share when it has a security that qualifies as a participating security. The two-class method is an earnings allocation formula that determines loss per share for each class of common stock and participating security according to dividends declared (or accumulated) and participation rights in undistributed earnings. In determining the amount of net earnings to allocate to common stockholders, earnings are allocated to both common and participating securities based on their respective weighted-average shares outstanding during the period. Diluted loss per share for the Company’s Common Stock is computed using the more dilutive of the two-class method or the if-converted method.

63



The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted loss per common share (in thousands, except per share amounts):
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Numerator:
 
 
 
 
 
Loss from continuing operations
$
(51,592
)
 
$
(63,303
)
 
$
(36,172
)
Loss from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
(101
)
 
(893
)
 
(6,593
)
Net loss
(51,693
)
 
(64,196
)
 
(42,765
)
Accrued dividends on preferred stock
(11,210
)
 
(10,077
)
 
(9,084
)
Loss attributable to common stockholders
$
(62,903
)
 
$
(74,273
)
 
$
(51,849
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
Denominator - Basic and Diluted:
 
 
 
 
 
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding
127,942

 
123,791

 
93,740

Loss Per Common Share:
 
 
 
 
 
Loss from continuing operations, basic and diluted
$
(0.49
)
 
$
(0.59
)
 
$
(0.48
)
Loss from discontinued operations, basic and diluted

 
(0.01
)
 
(0.07
)
Loss per common share, basic and diluted
$
(0.49
)
 
$
(0.60
)
 
$
(0.55
)

The loss attributable to common stockholders is used as the basis of determining whether the inclusion of common stock equivalents would be anti-dilutive. Accordingly, the computation of diluted shares for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 excludes the effect of shares that would be issued in connection with the PIPE Transaction, the Rights Offering, 2017 Warrants, stock options, and restricted stock awards, as their inclusion would be anti-dilutive to loss attributable to common stockholders.
NOTE 11 INCOME TAXES

The federal and state income tax benefit (expense) from continuing operations consisted of the following (in thousands):
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Current
 
 
 
 
 
Federal
$

 
$
925

 
$

State
(502
)
 
(174
)
 
30

Total current
(502
)
 
751

 
30

Deferred
 

 
 

 
 

Federal

 
1,951

 
(1,744
)
State
(66
)
 
1,428

 
(301
)
Total deferred
(66
)
 
3,379

 
(2,045
)
Total tax benefit (expense)
$
(568
)
 
$
4,130

 
$
(2,015
)


64


The effect of temporary differences that give rise to a significant portion of deferred taxes is as follows (in thousands):
 
December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
Deferred tax assets:
 
 
 
Reserves not currently deductible
$
6,634

 
$
10,707

Net operating loss carryforwards
128,819

 
110,773

Goodwill and intangibles (tax deductible)
7,853

 
12,757

Accrued expenses
641

 
95

Property basis differences
3,679

 
2,813

Stock based compensation
2,180

 
2,371

Total deferred tax assets
149,806

 
139,516

Deferred tax liabilities:
 

 
 

Other
(309
)
 
(180
)
Less: valuation allowance
(148,465
)
 
(138,238
)
Net deferred tax asset
$
1,032

 
$
1,098


The Company continually assesses the necessity of a valuation allowance. Based on this assessment, the Company concluded that a valuation allowance, in the amount of $148.5 million and $138.2 million , was required as of December 31, 2018 and 2017 , respectively. If the Company determines in a future period that it is more likely than not that part or all of the deferred tax assets will be realized, the Company will reverse part or all of the valuation allowance.

At December 31, 2018 , the Company had federal net operating loss carryforwards of approximately $429.8 million , of which $11.9 million is subject to an annual limitation, which will begin expiring in 2026 and later. The Company also has a carryforward of approximately $49.2 million related to the interest expense limitation, which is not subject to an expiration period. The Company has post-apportioned state net operating loss carryforwards of approximately $479.7 million , the majority of which will begin expiring in 2019 and later.

A reconciliation of the federal statutory rate to the effective income tax rate from continuing operations is as follows (in thousands):
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Tax benefit at statutory rate
$
10,715

 
$
23,654

 
$
11,907

State tax benefit, net of federal taxes
1,510

 
4,587

 
1,398

Change in valuation allowance
(10,227
)
 
41,550

 
(14,725
)
Change in tax contingencies

 
10

 
66

Alternative minimum tax receivable

 
925

 

Corporate tax rate changes

 
(67,707
)
 

Other
(2,566
)
 
1,111

 
(661
)
Tax benefit (expense)
$
(568
)
 
$
4,130

 
$
(2,015
)

As of December 31, 2018 , the Company had $1.0 million of gross unrecognized tax benefits. A reconciliation of the beginning and ending amount of gross unrecognized tax benefits is as follows (in thousands):
 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Unrecognized tax benefits balance at January 1,
$
1,014

 
$
1,021

 
$
1,067

Lapse of statute of limitations

 
(7
)
 
(46
)
Unrecognized tax benefits balance at December 31,
$
1,014

 
$
1,014

 
$
1,021


The Company’s policy for recording interest and penalties associated with uncertain tax positions is to record such items as a component of income tax expense in the Consolidated Statements of Operations. As of December 31, 2018 and December 31, 2017 , the Company had a nominal amount of accrued interest related to uncertain tax positions.

65



The Company files income tax returns, including returns for its subsidiaries, with federal, state and local jurisdictions. The Company’s uncertain tax positions are related to tax years that remain subject to examination. As of December 31, 2018 , U.S. tax returns for the years 2015 through 2018 remain subject to examination by federal tax authorities. Tax returns for the years 2014 through 2018 remain subject to examination by state and local tax authorities for a majority of the Company's state and local filings.

On December 22, 2017, the President of the United States signed into law the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (“TCJA”). The enactment included broad tax changes that are applicable to BioScrip, Inc. Most notably, the TCJA has established the U.S. corporate tax rate decrease from a high of 35% to a flat 21% income tax rate effective January 1, 2018.
These changes require BioScrip, Inc. to re-measure deferred tax assets and liabilities. The Company uses the asset and liability approach for accounting for income taxes. Under that method, assets and liabilities are recorded for future tax consequences attributable to the difference between financial statement balances of assets and liabilities and their respective tax basis. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using the enacted tax rates at which the temporary differences are expected to reverse. As a result of the decreased U.S. corporate income tax rate from 35% to 21%, the Company has revalued its ending net deferred tax assets as of December 31, 2017. Due to the full valuation allowance against substantially all net deferred tax assets, the change in deferred tax rate to 21% does not have an impact on the Company’s financial statements.

NOTE 12 FAIR VALUE MEASURMENTS

The estimated fair values of the Company’s financial instruments either recorded or disclosed on a recurring basis as of December 31, 2018 are as follows (in thousands):

Financial Instrument
 
Carrying Value as of December 31, 2018
 
Markets for Identical Item (Level 1)
 
Significant Other Observable Inputs (Level 2)
 
Significant Unobservable Inputs (Level 3)
First Lien Note Facility (1)
 
$
198,962

 
$

 
$

 
$
203,462

Second Lien Note Facility (1)
 
108,931

 

 

 
121,622

2021 Notes (2)
 
198,125

 

 
186,500

 

Total debt instruments
 
$
506,018

 
$

 
$
186,500

 
$
325,084

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2017 Warrants  (3)
 
$
25,331

 
$

 
$
25,331

 
$


(1)
The estimated fair values of the First and Second Lien Notes were based on cash flow models discounted at market interest rates that considered the underlying risks of the note.
(2)
The estimated fair value of the 2021 Notes incorporated recent trading activity in public markets.
(3)
See 2017 Warrants within Note 2 - Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.

66


NOTE 13 RESTRUCTURING, ACQUISITION, INTEGRATION, AND OTHER EXPENSES

Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses include non-recurring costs associated with restructuring, acquisition and integration initiatives such as employee severance costs, certain legal and professional fees, training costs, redundant wage costs, impacts recorded from the change in contingent consideration obligations, and other costs related to contract terminations and closed branches/offices.

Restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses in the Consolidated Statements of Operations consisted of the following (in thousands):

 
Year Ended December 31,
 
2018
 
2017
 
2016
Restructuring and other expense
$
4,934

 
$
12,134

 
$
10,334

Acquisition and integration expenses
1,523

 
528

 
10,122

Change in fair value of contingent consideration

 

 
(4,597
)
Total restructuring, acquisition, integration, and other expenses
$
6,457

 
$
12,662

 
$
15,859

NOTE 14 COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

Legal Proceedings
The Company is a party to various legal, regulatory and governmental proceedings incidental to its business. Based on current knowledge, management does not believe that loss contingencies arising from pending legal, regulatory and governmental matters, including the matters described herein, will have a material adverse effect on the consolidated financial position or liquidity of the Company. However, in light of the inherent uncertainties involved in pending legal, regulatory and governmental matters, some of which are beyond the Company’s control, and the indeterminate damages sought in some of these matters, an adverse outcome in one or more of these matters could be material to the Company’s results of operations or cash flows for any particular reporting period. 
 
With respect to all legal, regulatory and governmental proceedings, the Company considers the likelihood of a negative outcome. If the Company determines the likelihood of a negative outcome with respect to any such matter is probable and the amount of the loss can be reasonably estimated, the Company records an accrual for the estimated loss for the expected outcome of the matter. If the likelihood of a negative outcome with respect to material matters is reasonably possible and the Company is able to determine an estimate of the possible loss or a range of loss, whether in excess of a related accrued liability or where there is no accrued liability, the Company discloses the estimate of the possible loss or range of loss. However, the Company is unable to estimate a possible loss or range of loss in some instances based on the significant uncertainties involved in, and/or the preliminary nature of, certain legal, regulatory and governmental matters.

On December 18, 2017, a commercial payor of the Company sent a letter that claimed an alleged breach of the Company’s obligation under its provider contracts.  No legal proceeding has been filed. The Company is not able to estimate the amount of any possible loss.  The Company believes this claim is without merit and intends to vigorously defend against this claim if any such legal proceeding is commenced.

Government Regulation

Various federal and state laws and regulations affecting the healthcare industry do or may impact the Company’s current and planned operations, including, without limitation, federal and state laws prohibiting kickbacks in government health programs, federal and state antitrust and drug distribution laws, and a wide variety of consumer protection, insurance and other state laws and regulations. While management believes the Company is in substantial compliance with all existing laws and regulations material to the operation of its business, such laws and regulations are often uncertain in their application to our business practices as they evolve and are subject to rapid change. As controversies continue to arise in the healthcare industry, federal and state regulation and enforcement priorities in this area can be expected to increase, the impact of which cannot be predicted.
From time to time, the Company responds to investigatory subpoenas and requests for information from governmental agencies and private parties. The Company cannot predict with certainty what the outcome of any of the foregoing might be. While the Company believes it is in substantial compliance with all laws, rules and regulations that affects its business and operations, there can be no assurance that the Company will not be subject to scrutiny or challenge under one or more existing laws or that any

67


such challenge would not be successful. Any such challenge, whether or not successful, could have a material effect upon the Company’s Consolidated Financial Statements. A violation of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute, for example, may result in substantial criminal penalties, as well as suspension or exclusion from the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Moreover, the costs and expenses associated with defending these actions, even where successful, can be significant. Further, there can be no assurance the Company will be able to obtain or maintain any of the regulatory approvals that may be required to operate its business, and the failure to do so could have a material effect on the Company’s Consolidated Financial Statements.
Leases

The Company leases its facilities and certain equipment under various operating leases with third parties. The majority of these leases contain escalation clauses that increase base rent payments based upon either the Consumer Price Index or an agreed upon schedule.

In addition, the Company utilizes capital leases agreements with third parties to obtain certain property and equipment. Interest rates on capital leases are both fixed and variable and range from 3% to 7% .

As of December 31, 2018 , future minimum lease payments under operating and capital leases were as follows (in thousands):
 
Operating Leases
 
Capital Leases
 
Total
2019
$
8,934

 
$
679

 
$
9,613

2020
7,143

 
311

 
7,454

2021
6,252

 

 
6,252

2022
4,797

 

 
4,797

2023
3,320

 

 
3,320

2024 and Thereafter
7,470

 

 
7,470

Total Future Minimum Lease Payments
$
37,916

 
$
990

 
$
38,906


Rent expense for leased facilities and equipment was approximately $8.1 million , $7.7 million and $7.3 million for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016 , respectively.

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NOTE 15 SELECTED QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED)

A summary of unaudited quarterly financial information for the years ended December 31, 2018 and 2017 is as follows (in thousands, except per share amounts).
 
First Quarter
 
Second Quarter
 
Third Quarter
 
Fourth Quarter
Year ended December 31, 2018
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Net revenue
$
168,584

 
$
175,789

 
$
180,962

 
$
183,568

Gross profit
55,048

 
59,957

 
65,911

 
62,122

Loss from continuing operations, before income taxes
(12,939
)
 
(15,081
)
 
(8,001
)
 
(15,003
)
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
(30
)
 
(15
)
 
(71
)
 
15

Net loss
$
(13,017
)
 
$
(15,139
)
 
$
(8,174
)
 
$
(15,363
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Loss per share from continuing operations, basic and diluted
$
(0.12
)
 
$
(0.14
)
 
$
(0.09
)
 
$
(0.14
)
Income (loss) per share from discontinued operations, basic and diluted

 

 

 

Loss per share, basic and diluted
$
(0.12
)
 
$
(0.14
)
 
$
(0.09
)
 
$
(0.14
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Year ended December 31, 2017
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Net revenue
$
217,810

 
$
218,106

 
$
198,692

 
$
182,582

Gross profit
64,874

 
67,611

 
66,563

 
70,194

Loss from continuing operations, before income taxes
(18,801
)
 
(28,432
)
 
(12,998
)
 
(7,202
)
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of income taxes
(299
)
 
(373
)
 
66

 
(287
)
Net loss
$
(19,719
)
 
$
(29,523
)
 
$
(12,992
)
 
$
(1,962
)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Loss per share from continuing operations, basic and diluted
$
(0.18
)
 
$
(0.26
)
 
$
(0.12
)
 
$
(0.03
)
Income (loss) per share from discontinued operations, basic and diluted

 

 

 
(0.01
)
Loss per share, basic and diluted
$
(0.18
)
 
$
(0.26
)
 
$
(0.12
)
 
$
(0.04
)
NOTE 16 SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

On March 14, 2019 we entered into a definitive merger agreement with the shareholder of Option Care Enterprises, Inc. (“Option Care”), the nation’s largest independent provider of home and alternate treatment site infusion therapy services. Under the terms of the merger agreement, the Company will issue new shares of its common stock to Option Care’s shareholder in a non-taxable exchange, which will result in BioScrip shareholders holding approximately 20% of the combined company. The shareholder of Option Care has secured committed financing, the proceeds of which will be used to retire the Company’s First Lien Note Facility, Second Lien Note Facility and 2021 Notes at the close of the transaction.  Following the close of the transaction, the combined company common stock will continue to be listed on the Nasdaq National Market. The transaction is currently expected to close by the end of 2019.


69


Item 9.
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

None.
Item 9A.
Controls and Procedures

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

An evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures was performed under the supervision, and with the participation, of our management, including the principal executive officer and the principal financial officer to ensure that information required to be disclosed in our reports that we file or submit under the Securities Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the SEC’s rules and forms. Based on that evaluation, our management, including the principal executive officer and principal financial officer, concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures were effective as of the end of the period covered by this report.

Management Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting

Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting. Under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including the principal executive officer and the principal financial officer, we conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting based on the framework in the  Internal Control-Integrated Framework  (2013 framework) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Based on our evaluation under this framework ,  management concluded that our internal control over financial reporting was effective at December 31, 2018.
 
KPMG LLP, the independent registered public accounting firm that audited the consolidated financial statements included in this annual report on Form 10-K, has issued an attestation report on our internal control over financial reporting, which is included herein.

Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting

During 2018, we developed and implemented remediation plans to address the material weakness we identified during 2017.  Specifically, our remediation plans included (i) enhancing risk assessment processes and monitoring activities to ensure the Company designs, implements, and operates effective controls that are responsive to identified risks; (ii) implementing controls to validate key inputs and calculations used in spreadsheets used to determine financial statement amounts and disclosures; (iii) implementing controls to identify and clear unmatched transactions in suspense accounts; (iv) implementing monitoring controls to be operated by a centralized resource to ensure periodic counts of inventory and fixed assets are completed and differences are timely processed by our accounting systems, and; (v) enhancing controls surrounding the timely and accurate recognition of fixed asset disposals and abandonments. To effectively execute on our plan, we hired additional resources with significant experience with internal controls over financial reporting to our accounting team, and invested in a more robust internal audit function. As a result of implementing our remediation plans, as of December 31, 2018, we believe we have remediated the material weakness.

Except as discussed above, there were no changes during the fourth quarter of 2018 in our internal control over financial reporting that have materially affected or are reasonably likely to materially affect our internal control over financial reporting.





70



Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

To the Stockholders and Board of Directors
BioScrip, Inc.:
Opinion on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
We have audited BioScrip, Inc. and subsidiaries’ (the Company) internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2018, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. In our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2018, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.
We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB), the consolidated balance sheets of the Company as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders’ deficit, and cash flows for each of the years in the three‑year period ended December 31, 2018, and the related notes and financial statement schedule (collectively, the consolidated financial statements), and our report dated March 15, 2019 expressed an unqualified opinion on those consolidated financial statements.
Basis for Opinion
The Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in the accompanying Management Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting . Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit. We are a public accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audit of internal control over financial reporting included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audit also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
Definition and Limitations of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

/s/ KPMG LLP


Denver, Colorado
March 15, 2019


71


Item 9B.
Other Information

None.

PART III
Item 10.
Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance

We have adopted a Code of Ethics that applies to all of our directors, officers and employees, including our principal executive, principal financial and principal accounting officers, or persons performing similar functions. Our Code of Ethics is posted on our website located at http://www.bioscrip.com/corporate-governance. We intend to disclose future amendments to certain provisions of the Code of Ethics, and waivers of the Code of Ethics granted to executive officers and directors.

The other information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the information contained in our 2019 Proxy Statement.
Item 11.
Executive Compensation

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the information contained in our 2019 Proxy Statement.
Item 12.
Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the information contained in our 2019 Proxy Statement.
Item 13.
Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the information contained in our 2019 Proxy Statement.
Item 14.
Principal Accountant Fees and Services

The information required by this item is incorporated by reference from the information contained in our 2019 Proxy Statement.

72


PART IV
Item 15.
Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules
 
Page
(a)(1) Financial Statements.
 
The following financial statements appear in Part II, Item 8:
 
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2018 and 2017
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Deficit for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(a)(2) Financial Statement Schedule:
 
Valuation and Qualifying Accounts for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016
All other schedules not listed above have been omitted since they are not applicable or are not required.
 

(a)(3) Exhibits.
Index to Exhibits
Exhibit Number
Description
2.1**
2.2**
2.3**
2.4**
2.5**
Amendment, dated as of March 31, 2014, to the Stock Purchase Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2 to the Company's Form 8-K filed on April 1, 2014)
2.6
Asset Purchase Agreement, dated August 9, 2015, by and among the Company, BioScrip PBM Services, LLC and ProCare Pharmacy Benefit Manager Inc.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on August 10, 2015)
2.7
2.8
First Amendment, dated June 16, 2016, to the Home Solutions Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K/A filed on June 20, 2016)

73


2.9
Second Amendment, dated September 2, 2016, to the Home Solutions Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on September 7, 2016)
2.10
Third Amendment, dated September 9, 2016, to the Home Solutions Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on September 12, 2016)
3.1
Second Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 17, 2005)
3.2
Amendment to the Second Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 10, 2010)
3.3
Certificate of Amendment of the Second Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of Bioscrip, Inc. dated November 30, 2016.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on December 2, 2016)
3.4
Certificate of Designations for Series A Convertible Preferred Stock.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 10, 2015)
3.5
Amended and Restated By-Laws.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on April 28, 2011)
3.6
Certificate of Designations for Series B Convertible Preferred Stock.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 13, 2016)
3.7
Certificate of Designations for Series C Convertible Preferred Stock. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 14, 2016)
3.8
Certificate of Designations, Preferences, and Rights for Series D Junior Participating Preferred Stock.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on August 12, 2016)
4.1
Specimen Common Stock Certificate.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Form 10-K filed on March 31, 2006)
4.2
Form of Cash-Only Stock Appreciation Right Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.40 to the Company’s Form 10-K filed on March 16, 2011)
4.3
Indenture, dated as of February 11, 2014, by and among the Company, the Guarantors party thereto and U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on February 11, 2014)
4.4
4.5
4.6
4.7
Amendment No. 2 to the Registration Rights Agreement dated June 14, 2016, by and among the Company and the PIPE Investors.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 14, 2016)
4.8
Form of Subscription Rights Certificate.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-3/A filed on May 29, 2015)
4.9
Form of Certificate Representing Series A Convertible Preferred Stock.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.3 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-3 filed on March 10, 2015)
4.10
Common Stock Warrant Agreement, dated July 28, 2015, by and between the Company and the American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on July 28, 2015)
4.11
4.12
Form of Certificate Representing Series C Convertible Preferred Stock. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 14, 2016)

74


4.13
Registration Rights Agreement, dated March 1, 2017, by and among the Company and the investors named therein.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 2, 2017)
4.14
Registration Rights Agreement, dated June 29, 2017, by and among the Company and the parties signatory thereto (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on June 29, 2017)
4.15
Warrant Agreement, dated June 29, 2017, by and among the Company and the subscribers signatory thereto  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on June 29, 2017)
10.1†
MIM Corporation Amended and Restated 2001 Incentive Stock Plan.  (Incorporated by reference to the definitive proxy statement filed on April 30, 2003)
10.2†
Amendment to BioScrip, Inc. 2001 Incentive Stock Plan. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on August 10, 2011)
10.3†
Amended and Restated BioScrip, Inc. 2008 Equity Incentive Plan.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on May 14, 2014)
10.4†
Amendment to BioScrip, Inc. Amended and Restated 2008 Equity Incentive Plan, dated June 1, 2016.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 2, 2016)
10.5†
Second Amendment to Bioscrip, Inc. 2008 Equity Incentive Plan dated November 28, 2016.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on December 2, 2016)
10.6†
BIOSCRIP/CHS 2006 Equity Incentive Plan, as Amended and Restated.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on May 2, 2011)
10.7†
10.8†
Employee Stock Purchase Plan.  (Incorporated by reference to the definitive proxy statement filed on April 2, 2013)
10.9†
First Amendment to Employee Stock Purchase Plan.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Company’s Form 10-Q filed on August 10, 2015)
10.10†
Form of Restricted Stock Grant Certificate.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.3 to the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-8 filed on filed on May 16, 2008)
10.11†
Form of Non-Qualified Stock Option Agreement 2008 Equity Incentive Plan.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.7 to the Company’s Form 10-K filed on March 2, 2015)
10.12†
Form of Amendment One to Non-Qualified Stock Option Agreement 2008 Equity Incentive Plan  (entered with Messrs. Kreger, Evans and Stiver). (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on September 12, 2016)
10.13†
Form of Market-Based Cash Award Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Company’s Form 10-Q filed on August 10, 2015)
10.14†
Employment Offer Letter, dated January 30, 2009, by and between the Company and David Evans.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.23 to the Company’s Form 10-K/A filed on December 16, 2013)
10.15†
Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated as of November 25, 2013, by and between the Company and Richard M. Smith.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on November 27, 2013)
10.16†
First Amendment to Amended and Restated Employment Agreement, dated September 9, 2016, between Richard M. Smith and the Company.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on September 12, 2016)
10.17†
Employment Offer Letter, dated March 10, 2009, by and between the Company and Brian Stiver. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.24 to the Company’s Form 10-K/A filed on June 6, 2014)
10.18†
Employment Offer Letter, dated July 30, 2012, by and between the Company and Brian Stiver.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.25 to the Company’s Form 10-K/A filed on June 6, 2014)
10.19†
Amendment, dated April 2, 2015, to the Employment Offer Letter by and between the Company and Brian Stiver.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Company’s Form 10-Q filed on May 8, 2015)

75


10.20†
Employment Offer Letter, dated December 1, 2013, by and between the Company and Karen Cain.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.17 to the Company’s Form 10-K filed on March 2, 2015)
10.21†
Employment Offer Letter, dated as of April 26, 2015, by and between the Company and Jeffrey M. Kreger.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on April 28, 2015)
10.22†
Offer Letter, dated as of April 10, 2017, by and between BioScrip, Inc. and Stephen M. Deitsch.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on April 20, 2017)
10.23†
Offer Letter, dated as of November 21, 2017, by and between BioScrip, Inc. and Harriet Booker.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed November 28, 2017)
10.24†
Offer Letter, dated as of November 29, 2017, by and between BioScrip, Inc. and Anthony “Tony” Lopez. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed December 1, 2017)
10.25
Form of Indemnification Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 14, 2013)
10.26
10.27
10.28
10.29
10.30
10.31
10.32
10.33
10.34
10.35#
10.36
First Amendment, dated as of March 25, 2010, to the Prime Vendor Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 31, 2010)

76


10.37#
Second Amendment, dated as of June 1, 2010 to the Prime Vendor Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 10-Q filed on August 3, 2010)
10.38#
Third Amendment, dated as of August 1, 2010, to the Prime Vendor Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on May 2, 2011)
10.39#
Fourth Amendment, dated as of May 1, 2011, to the Prime Vendor Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on May 2, 2011)
10.40#
Fifth Amendment, dated as of January 1, 2012, to the Prime Vendor Agreement.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on January 26, 2012)
10.41
10.42
Amendment No. 1 to the Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of March 8, 2013, by and between the Company and Kohlberg Investors. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 10-Q filed on May 9, 2013)
10.43
Amendment No. 2 to the Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of March 14, 2013, by and between the Company and Kohlberg Investors.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Company’s Form 10-Q filed on May 9, 2013)
10.44
Amendment No. 3 & Waiver to the Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of August 13, 2013, by and between the Company and Kohlberg Investors. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 1.2 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on August 19, 2013)
10.45
Amendment No. 4 & Waiver to the Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of March 26, 2014, by and between the Company and Kohlberg Investors.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on April 1, 2014)
10.46
10.47
10.48
Investor Agreement, dated as of February 6, 2015, by and among the Company, Cloud Gate Capital LLC and DSC Advisors, LLC. (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on February 9, 2015)
10.49
Securities Purchase Agreement, dated as of March 9, 2015, by and among the Company and the PIPE Investors.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 10, 2015)
10.50
Warrant Agreement, dated as of March 9, 2015, by and among the Company and the PIPE Investors.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 10, 2015)
10.51
Addendum to the Warrant Agreement, dated as of March 23, 2015, by and among the Company and the PIPE Investors.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Company’s Form 8-K/A filed on March 24, 2015)
10.52
Exchange Agreement, dated as of June 10, 2016, entered into by and among the Company and each of the PIPE Investors signatory thereto.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 13, 2016)
10.53
Exchange Agreement, dated as of June 14, 2016, entered into by and among the Company and each of the PIPE Investors signatory thereto.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on June 14, 2016)
10.54

77


10.55
Employment Agreement, dated October 31, 2016, by and between the Company and Daniel E. Greenleaf.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on November 3, 2016)
10.56
Stock Purchase Agreement, dated March 1, 2017, by and among the Company and the investors named therein.  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form 8-K filed on March 2, 2017)
10.57
10.58
10.59
10.60
10.61
Warrant Purchase Agreement, dated as of June 29, 2017, by and among the Company and the subscribers signatory thereto  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on June 29, 2017)
10.62
Stock Purchase Agreement, dated as of June 29, 2017, by and among the Company and the purchaser signatory thereto  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on June 29, 2017)
10.63†
BioScrip, Inc. 2018 Equity Incentive Plan.  (Incorporated by reference to Appendix A to the definitive proxy statement filed on April 4, 2018)
10.64†
Second Amendment to Employee Stock Purchase Plan.  (Incorporated by reference to Appendix B to the definitive proxy statement filed on April 4, 2018)
10.65†
Offer Letter, dated October 12, 2018, by and between the Company and John McMahon  (Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed on October 22, 2018)
21.1 *
23.1 *
31.1 *
31.2 *
32.1 *
32.2 *
101
The following financial information from the Company’s Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2018, formatted in XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language): (i) Consolidated Statements of Operations for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, (ii) Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2018 and 2017, (iii) Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, (iv) Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2018, 2017 and 2016, and (v) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


78


*
Filed herewith.
**
Pursuant to Item 601(b)(2) of Regulation S-K, certain schedules and exhibits are omitted from some exhibits. The Company agrees to furnish supplementally a copy of any omitted schedule or exhibit to the SEC upon request.
Designates the Company’s management contracts or compensatory plan or arrangement.
#
The SEC has granted confidential treatment of certain provisions of these exhibits. Omitted material for which confidential treatment has been granted has been filed separately with the SEC.



79


Item 16. Form 10-K Summary
None

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, on March 15, 2019 .
 

                                                          BIOSCRIP, INC.
 
                                                          /s/ John McMahon
John McMahon
Vice President, Controller and Chief Accounting Officer (Principal Accounting Officer)


Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

Signature
Title(s)
Date
/ s/ Daniel E. Greenleaf
Daniel E. Greenleaf
Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
 (Principal Executive Officer)
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ Stephen Deitsch
Stephen Deitsch
Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
(Principal Financial Officer)
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ John McMahon
John McMahon
Vice President, Controller and Chief Accounting Officer
(Principal Accounting Officer)
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ R. Carter Pate
R. Carter Pate
Non-Executive Chairman of the Board
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ David Golding
David Golding
Director
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ Michael Goldstein
Michael Goldstein
Director
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ Christopher Shackelton
Christopher Shackelton
Director
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ Michael G. Bronfein
Michael G. Bronfein
Director
March 15, 2019
 
 
 
/s/ Steven Neumann
Steven Neumann
Director
March 15, 2019

80


BioScrip, Inc. and Subsidiaries
Schedule II-- Valuation and Qualifying Accounts
(in thousands)

 
Balance at
Beginning of
Period
 
Write-Off
of
Receivables
 
Charged to
Costs
and Expenses
 
Balance at
End of Period
Year ended December 31, 2016
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Allowance for doubtful accounts
$
59,689

 
$
(41,567
)
 
$
26,608

 
$
44,730

Year ended December 31, 2017
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Allowance for doubtful accounts
$
44,730

 
$
(30,515
)
 
$
23,697

 
$
37,912

Year ended December 31, 2018
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Allowance for doubtful accounts  (1)
$

 
$

 
$

 
$


(1) Subsequent to adoption of ASC 606, an allowance for doubtful accounts is established only as a result of an adverse change in the Company’s payors’ ability to pay outstanding billings.

81
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