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xbrli:shares xbrli:pure utr:sqft
UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON,
D.C. 20549
FORM
10-K
(MARK
ONE)
☒ |
ANNUAL
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934 |
FOR
THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31,
2021
OR
☐ |
TRANSITION
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934 |
FOR
THE TRANSITION PERIOD FROM TO
COMMISSION
FILE NUMBER
001-36159
STEREOTAXIS, INC.
(Exact
name of the Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
delaware |
|
94-3120386 |
(State
or Other Jurisdiction of
Incorporation
or Organization)
|
|
(I.R.S.
Employer
Identification
Number)
|
710 North Tucker Boulevard,
Suite 110
St. Louis,
MO
63101
(Address
of Principal Executive Offices including Zip Code)
(314)
678-6100
(Registrant’s
Telephone Number, Including Area Code)
Securities
registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title
of each class |
|
Trading
Symbol(s) |
|
Name
of each exchange on which registered |
Common Stock, par value $0.001 per share |
|
STXS |
|
NYSE American |
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 ☐ No ☒
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 ☐ No ☒
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 ☒ No ☐
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 “See 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 ☒ No ☐
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer,
an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting
company or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of
“large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer”, “smaller reporting
company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the
Exchange Act.
Large
accelerated filer ☐ |
|
Accelerated
filer ☐ |
|
Non-accelerated filer ☒ |
|
Smaller
reporting company
☒ |
Emerging
growth company
☐ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
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. ☐
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and
attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of
its internal control over financial reporting under Section 404(b)
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered
public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report.
☐
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined
in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). Yes ☐
No ☒
The
aggregate market value of the registrant’s common stock held by
non-affiliates of the registrant on the last business day of the
registrant’s most recently completed second fiscal quarter (based
on the closing sales prices on the NYSE American on June 30, 2021)
was approximately $577.9
million.
The
number of outstanding shares of the registrant’s common stock on
February 28, 2022 was
74,638,306.
DOCUMENTS
INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
Portions of the Proxy
Statement for the registrant’s 2022 Annual Meeting of Shareholders
are incorporated by reference in Part III, Items 10, 11, 12, 13 and
14.
STEREOTAXIS,
INC.
INDEX
TO ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K
PART I
In
this report, “Stereotaxis”, the “Company”, “Registrant”, “we”,
“us”, and “our” refer to Stereotaxis, Inc. and its wholly owned
subsidiaries. Genesis RMN®, Niobe®,
Navigant®, Odyssey®, Odyssey
Cinema™, Vdrive®, Vdrive Duo™,
V-CAS™, V-Loop™, V-Sono™,
QuikCAS™ and Cardiodrive® are trademarks of
Stereotaxis, Inc. All other trademarks that appear in this report
are the property of their respective owners.
FORWARD-LOOKING
STATEMENTS
This
annual report on Form 10-K, including the sections entitled
“Business” and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations,” contains forward-looking
statements. These statements relate to, among other
things:
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our
business, operating, sales and marketing, and regulatory
strategies; |
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our
value proposition; |
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the
impact of the coronavirus (“COVID-19”) pandemic and our responses
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our
overall liquidity and our ability to fund operations; |
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our
ability to convert backlog to revenue; |
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the
ability of physicians to perform certain medical procedures with
our products safely, effectively and efficiently; |
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the
adoption of our products by hospitals and physicians; |
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the
market opportunity for our products, including expected demand for
our products; |
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the
timing and prospects for regulatory approval of our additional
disposable interventional devices; |
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the
success of our business partnerships and strategic
relationships; |
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our
industry generally, and overall economic conditions; |
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our
estimates regarding our capital requirements; |
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our
plans for hiring additional personnel; and |
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any
of our other plans, objectives, expectations and intentions
contained in this annual report that are not historical
facts. |
These
statements relate to future events or future financial performance,
and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other
factors that may cause our actual results, levels of activity,
performance or achievements to be materially different from any
future results, levels of activity, performance or achievements
expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. In some
cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terminology
such as “may”, “will”, “should”, “could”, “expects”, “plans”,
“intends”, “anticipates”, “believes”, “estimates”, “predicts”,
“potential”, or “continue”, or the negative of such terms or other
comparable terminology. Although we believe that the expectations
reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, we
cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity, performance,
or achievements. These statements are only predictions.
Factors
that may cause our actual results to differ materially from our
forward-looking statements include, among others, changes in
general economic and business conditions and the risks and other
factors set forth in “Item 1A—Risk Factors” and elsewhere in this
annual report on Form 10-K.
Our
actual results may be materially different from what we expect. We
undertake no duty to update these forward-looking statements after
the date of this annual report, even though our situation may
change in the future. We qualify all of our forward-looking
statements by these cautionary statements.
OVERVIEW
Stereotaxis
is a pioneer and global leader in surgical robotics for minimally
invasive endovascular intervention. We design, manufacture and
market robotic systems, instruments and information systems for the
interventional laboratory. Our proprietary robotic technology,
Robotic Magnetic Navigation, fundamentally transforms endovascular
interventions using precise computer-controlled magnetic fields to
directly control the tip of flexible interventional catheters or
devices. Direct control of the tip of an interventional device, in
contrast to all manual hand-held devices that are controlled from
their handle, can improve the precision, stability, reach and
safety of these devices during procedures.
Our
primary clinical focus has been electrophysiology, specifically
cardiac ablation procedures for the treatment of arrhythmias.
Cardiac ablation has become a well-accepted therapy for arrhythmias
and a multi-billion-dollar medical device market with expectations
for substantial long-term growth. We have shared our aspiration and
a product strategy to expand the clinical focus of our technology
to several additional endovascular indications including coronary,
neuro, and peripheral interventions.
There
is substantial real-world evidence and clinical literature for
Robotic Magnetic Navigation in electrophysiology. Hundreds of
electrophysiologists at over one hundred hospitals globally have
treated over 100,000 arrhythmia patients with our robotic
technology. Clinical use of our technology has been documented in
over 400 clinical publications. Robotic Magnetic Navigation is
designed to enable physicians to complete more complex
interventional procedures with greater success and safety by
providing image-guided delivery of catheters through the blood
vessels and chambers of the heart to treatment sites. This is
achieved using externally applied computer-controlled magnetic
fields that govern the motion of the working tip of the catheter,
resulting in improved navigation. The more flexible atraumatic
design of catheters driven using magnetic fields may reduce the
risk of patient harm and other adverse events. Performing the
procedure from a control cockpit enables physicians to complete
procedures in a safe location protected from x-ray exposure, with
greater ergonomics, and improved efficiency. We believe these
benefits can be applicable in other endovascular indications where
navigation through complex vasculature is often challenging or
unsuccessful and generates significant x-ray exposure.
Our
primary products include the Genesis RMN System, the
Odyssey Solution, and other related devices. We also offer
to our customers the Stereotaxis Imaging Model S x-ray System and
other accessory devices.
The
Genesis RMN System is designed to enable physicians to
complete more complex interventional procedures by providing
image-guided delivery of catheters through the blood vessels and
chambers of the heart to treatment sites. This is achieved using
externally applied magnetic fields that govern the motion of the
working tip of the catheter, resulting in improved navigation,
efficient procedures, and reduced x-ray exposure.
The
Odyssey Solution consolidates lab information onto one large
integrated display, enabling physicians to view and control all the
key information in the operating room. This is designed to improve
lab layout and procedure efficiency. The system also features a
remote viewing and recording capability called Odyssey
Cinema, which is an innovative solution that delivers
synchronized content for optimized workflow, advanced care, and
improved productivity. This tool includes an archiving capability
that allows clinicians to store and replay entire procedures or
segments of procedures. This information can be accessed from
locations throughout the hospital local area network and over the
global Odyssey Network providing physicians with a tool for
clinical collaboration, remote consultation, and
training.
We
promote our full suite of products in a typical hospital
implementation, subject to regulatory approvals or clearances. This
implementation requires a hospital to agree to an upfront capital
payment and recurring payments. The upfront capital payment
typically includes equipment and installation charges. The
recurring payments typically include disposable costs for each
procedure, equipment service costs beyond the warranty period, and
ongoing software updates. In hospitals where our full suite of
products has not been implemented, equipment upgrade or expansion
can be implemented upon purchasing of the necessary upgrade or
expansion.
We
have received regulatory clearances and registration necessary for
us to market the Genesis RMN System in the U.S. and Europe,
and we are in the process of obtaining necessary registrations for
extending our markets in other countries. Our prior generation
robotic magnetic navigation system, the Niobe System, and
the Odyssey Solution, Cardiodrive, and various
disposable interventional devices have received regulatory
clearance in the U.S., Europe, Canada, China, Japan and various
other countries. We have received the regulatory clearance,
licensing and/or CE Mark approvals that allow us to market the
Vdrive and Vdrive Duo Systems with the V-CAS,
V-Loop and V-Sono devices in the U.S., Canada and
Europe. The Stereotaxis Imaging Model S x-ray System is CE marked
and cleared by the FDA.
Not
all products have and/or require regulatory clearance in all of the
markets we serve. Please refer to “Regulatory Approval” in Item 1
for a description of the regulatory clearance, licensing, and/or
approvals we currently have or are pursuing.
As of
December 31, 2021, we had approximately $10.1 million of backlog,
consisting of outstanding purchase orders and other commitments for
these systems. Of the December 31, 2021 backlog, we expect
approximately 78% to be recognized as revenue over the course of
2022. We had backlog of approximately $6.9 million as of December
31, 2020. There can be no assurance that we will recognize such
revenue in any particular period or at all because some of our
purchase orders and other commitments are subject to contingencies
that are outside our control. These orders and commitments may be
revised, modified or canceled, either by their express terms, as a
result of negotiations or by project changes or delays. In
addition, the sales cycle for the robotic magnetic navigation
system is lengthy and generally involves construction or renovation
activities at customer sites. Consequently, revenues and/or orders
resulting from sales of our robotic magnetic navigation system can
vary significantly from one reporting period to the
next.
We
have strategic relationships with technology leaders and innovators
in the global interventional market. Through these strategic
relationships we provide compatibility between our robotic magnetic
navigation system and digital imaging and 3D catheter location
sensing technology, as well as disposable interventional devices.
The maintenance of these strategic relationships, or the
establishment of equivalent alternatives, is critical to our
commercialization efforts. There are no guarantees that any
existing strategic relationships will continue, and efforts are
ongoing to ensure the availability of integrated systems and
devices and/or equivalent alternatives. We cannot provide assurance
as to the timeline of the ongoing availability of such compatible
systems or our ability to obtain equivalent alternatives on
competitive terms or at all.
We
were incorporated in Delaware in June, 1990 as Stereotaxis, Inc.
Our principal executive offices are located at 710 North Tucker
Boulevard, Suite 110, St. Louis, Missouri 63101, and our telephone
number is (314) 678-6100.
THE
STEREOTAXIS VALUE PROPOSITION
Although
great strides have been made in manual interventional devices and
techniques, significant challenges remain that reduce
interventional productivity and limit both the number of complex
procedures and the types of diseases that can be treated manually.
These challenges primarily involve the inherent mechanical
limitations of manual instrument control and the lack of
integration of the information systems used by physicians in the
interventional lab as well as a significant amount of training and
experience required to ensure proficiency. As a result, many
complex cases in electrophysiology are treated with palliative drug
therapy, and many procedures are still performed as invasive
surgeries rather than as minimally invasive endovascular
interventions.
Our
systems address the current challenges in the interventional lab by
providing precise computerized control of the working tip of the
interventional instrument and by integrating this control with the
visualization technology and information systems used during
electrophysiology and endovascular interventional procedures, on a
cost-justified basis.
We
believe that our technology can:
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Improve
patient outcomes by optimizing therapy. Difficulty in
controlling the working tip of disposable interventional devices
can lead to sub-optimal results in many procedures. Conversely, the
precise control of multiple complex diagnostic and therapeutic
devices by a single physician can lead to better outcomes for the
patient. Precise instrument control is necessary for treating a
number of cardiac and other endovascular conditions. To treat
arrhythmias, precise placement of an ablation catheter against a
beating inner heart wall is necessary. Maintaining this precision
and contact can be very challenging, especially in the most complex
procedures. For endovascular navigation, precise and safe
navigation through complex vasculature may also have a significant
impact on procedure outcomes, efficiency, and cost. We believe our
robotic technology can enhance procedure results by improving
navigation of disposable interventional devices to treatment sites,
and by affecting more precise and safe treatments once these sites
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Expand
the market by enabling minimally invasive endovascular
intervention. Treatment of a number of major diseases,
including ventricular tachycardia, atrial fibrillation, congenital
heart diseases, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, and coronary
vascular disease, is highly challenging using conventional wire
and/or catheter-based techniques. These patients may therefore be
referred to more invasive or less curative therapies because of the
difficulty in precisely and safely controlling the working tip of
disposable interventional devices used to treat these complex cases
interventionally. Because our robotic technology provides precise,
computerized control of the working tip of disposable
interventional devices, we believe that it will potentially enable
difficult diseases to be treated interventionally on a much broader
scale than today. |
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Enhance
patient and physician safety. The clinical value of our
technology has been demonstrated in over 400 publications and in
the real-world experience of more than 100,000 procedures. The
clinical literature as well as other available data suggests
meaningful reductions in major complications and patient exposure
to radiation during procedures utilizing our robotic technology.
This may be driven by the softer a-traumatic design of an
interventional device navigated using magnetic fields. These safety
benefits to patients are complemented by improved occupational
safety for the physicians and nursing staff who are performing the
procedures. Healthcare professionals face significant orthopedic
and radiation exposure risks. Studies have documented that 49% of
interventional cardiologists suffer orthopedic injury and 85% of
brain tumors in these physicians present on the left side of the
brain which is the side typically exposed to radiation when
performing a manual procedure. Our robotic technology improves
physician safety and reduces physician fatigue by enabling them to
conduct procedures remotely from an adjacent control room, which
reduces their exposure to harmful radiation, and the orthopedic
burden of wearing lead. |
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Improve
clinical workflow and information management. Complex ablation
procedures involve several sources of information, which
conventionally require a physician to mentally integrate and
process large quantities of information from different sources in
real time, often from separate user interfaces. Sources of
information include real time x-ray and/or ultrasound images, real
time location sensing systems providing the 3-D location of a
catheter tip, pre-operative map of the electrical activity of the
heart, real time recording of electrical activity of the heart, and
temperature feedback from an ablation catheter. The Odyssey
Solution improves clinical workflow and information management
efficiency by integrating and synchronizing the multiple sources of
diagnostic and imaging information found in the interventional labs
into a large-screen user interface with single mouse and keyboard
control. |
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Enhance
hospital efficiency by reducing and standardizing procedure times,
disposables utilization and staffing needs. Conventional
interventional procedure times currently range from several minutes
to many hours as physicians often engage in repetitive, “trial and
error” maneuvers due to difficulties with manually controlling the
working tip of disposable interventional devices. By reducing both
navigation time and the time needed to carry out therapy at the
target site, we believe that our robotic technology can reduce
procedure times compared to manual procedures, especially in the
most complex procedures such as the treatment of ventricular
tachycardia. We believe the robotic magnetic navigation system can
also reduce the variability in procedure times compared to manual
methods. Greater standardization of procedure times allows for more
efficient scheduling of interventional cases including staff
requirements. We also believe that additional cost savings from
robotics can result from decreased use of multiple catheters,
high-end deflectable sheaths, and contrast media in procedures
compared with manual methods further enhancing the rate of return
to hospitals. |
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Improve
physician skill levels in order to improve the efficacy of complex
cardiology procedures. Training required for physicians to
safely and effectively carry out manual interventional procedures
typically takes years, over and above the training required to
become a specialist in cardiology. This has led to a shortage of
physicians who are skilled in performing more complex procedures.
We believe that our robotic technology can allow procedures that
previously required the highest levels of manual dexterity and
skill to be performed effectively by a broader range of
interventional physicians, with more standardized outcomes. In
addition, interventional physicians can learn to use robotic
systems in a relatively short period of time. The robotic magnetic
navigation system can also be programmed to carry out sequences of
complex navigation automatically further enhancing ease of use. We
believe the Odyssey Solution can allow advanced training
online thereby accelerating learning. |
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Help
hospitals recruit physicians and attract patients. Due to the
clinical benefits of our products, we believe hospitals will
realize significant operational benefits when recruiting physicians
to work in a safer procedure environment, while attracting patients
who desire to have safer procedures that lead to better long-term
outcomes. |
PRODUCTS
Robotic
Magnetic Navigation
Our
proprietary robotic magnetic navigation systems (“RMN”) include the
Genesis RMN and the prior generation Niobe Systems.
These systems are designed to enable physicians to complete more
complex interventional procedures by providing image-guided
delivery of catheters and guidewires through the blood vessels and
chambers of the heart to treatment sites. This is achieved using
externally applied magnetic fields that govern the motion of the
working tip of the catheter or guidewire, resulting in improved
navigation, efficient procedures and reduced x-ray exposure. Our
systems provide physicians with precise remote digital instrument
control in combination with sophisticated image integration. It can
be operated either from an adjacent room and outside the x-ray
fluoroscopy field or beside the patient table, as in traditional
interventional procedures. The RMN system allows the operator to
navigate disposable interventional devices to the treatment site
through complex paths in the blood vessels and chambers of the
heart to deliver treatment by using computer controlled, externally
applied magnetic fields to directly govern the motion of the
working tip of these devices, each of which has a magnetically
sensitive tip that predictably responds to magnetic fields
generated by our system. Because the working tip of the disposable
interventional device is directly controlled by these external
magnetic fields, the physician has the same degree of control
regardless of the number or type of turns, or the distance traveled
by the working tip to arrive at its position in the blood vessels
or chambers of the heart. This results in highly precise digital
control of the working tip of the disposable interventional device
while still giving the physician the option to manually advance the
device.
Through
our arrangements with fluoroscopy system manufacturers and
providers of catheters and electrophysiology mapping systems, we
provide compatibility between the robotic magnetic navigation
system and the visualization and information systems used during
electrophysiology and endovascular procedures in order to provide
the physician with a comprehensive information and instrument
control system. In addition, we have integrated the robotic
magnetic navigation system with 3D catheter location sensing
technology to provide accurate real-time information as to the 3D
location of the working tip of the instrument.
The components of the robotic
magnetic navigation system are identified and described
below:
Robotic
Magnetic Navigation System. Our robotic magnetic navigation
systems utilize two permanent magnets mounted on articulating and
pivoting arms with one magnet on either side of the patient table.
These magnets generate magnetic navigation fields that are less
than the strength of fields typically generated by MRI equipment
and therefore require significantly less shielding, and cause
significantly less interference, than MRI equipment. The robotic
magnetic navigation system is indicated for use in cardiac,
peripheral and neurovascular applications.
Cardiodrive®
Automated Catheter Advancement System. As the physician
conducts the procedure from the adjacent control room, the
Cardiodrive Automated Catheter Advancement System
(“Cardiodrive”) in conjunction with the QuikCAS
automated catheter advancement system is used to remotely advance
and retract the electrophysiology catheter in the patient’s heart
while the robotic magnetic navigation system magnets precisely
steer the working tip of the device.
Odyssey®
Solution
The
Odyssey Solution offers a fully integrated, real-time
information solution to manage, control, record and share
procedures across networks or around the world. We believe that the
Odyssey Solution enhances the physician workflow in
interventional labs through a consolidated user interface of
multiple systems on a single display to enable greater focus on the
case and improve the efficiency of the lab. Through the use of a
single mouse and keyboard, the Odyssey Solution allows the
user to command multiple systems in the lab from a single point of
control. In addition, the Odyssey Solution acquires a
real-time, remote view of the lab, capturing synchronized procedure
data for review of important events during cases. The
Odyssey Solution enables physicians to access recorded cases
and create snapshots following procedures for enhanced clinical
reporting, auditing and presentation. The Odyssey Solution
enables physicians to establish a comprehensive master archive of
procedures performed in the lab providing an excellent tool for
training new staff on the standard practices. The Odyssey
Solution further enables procedures to be observed remotely around
the world with high speed Internet access over a hospital VPN, even
wirelessly using a standard laptop or Windows tablet
computer.
Stereotaxis
Imaging Model S X-ray System
Developed
in collaboration with Omega Medical Imaging, and designed to be
specifically available with RMN Systems, the Stereotaxis Imaging
Model S provides an integrated complete solution for a robotic
interventional operating room. It is a single-plane, full-power
x-ray system and includes the c-arm, powered table, motorized boom,
and large high-definition monitors. Stereotaxis Imaging Model S
incorporates modern fluoroscopy technology to support high quality
imaging while minimizing radiation exposure for patients and
physicians. The combination of RMN Systems with Stereotaxis Imaging
Model S is designed to reduce the cost of acquisition, the ongoing
cost of ownership, and the complexity of installation of a robotic
electrophysiology practice.
Disposables
and Other Accessories
Our
robotic magnetic navigation systems are designed to use a toolkit
of proprietary disposable interventional devices. The toolkit
currently consists of:
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Our
QuikCAS automated catheter advancement disposables designed
to provide precise remote advancement of proprietary
electrophysiology catheters; and |
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Biosense
Webster’s CARTO® RMT navigation and ablation system, CELSIUS® RMT,
NAVISTAR® RMT, NAVISTAR® RMT DS, NAVISTAR® RMT THERMOCOOL® and
CELSIUS® RMT THERMOCOOL® Irrigated Tip Diagnostic/Ablation
Steerable Tip Catheters co-developed by Biosense Webster and
Stereotaxis, as described below, with sales of such
magnetically-enabled catheters generating royalty payable from
Biosense Webster to Stereotaxis. |
Revenue
from sales of disposable products is recognized when control is
transferred to the customers, which generally occurs at the time of
shipment, but can also occur at the time of delivery depending on
the customer arrangement. Disposable products are covered by an
assurance type warranty that provides for the return of defective
products. Warranty costs were not material for the periods
presented.
We
also manufacture and market various disposable (the V-Loop,
V-Sono, and V-CAS) components which can be
manipulated by our Vdrive™ Robotic Navigation System a
complimentary product that provides navigation and stability for
diagnostic and therapeutic devices designed to improve
interventional procedures. In addition, we also market and
distribute other disposable and related devices that can be use
with our robotic magnetic navigation systems.
Other
Recurring Revenue
Other
recurring revenue includes revenue from product maintenance plans,
other post warranty maintenance, and the implied obligation to
provide software enhancements if and when available for a specified
period, typically one year following installation of our systems.
Revenue from services and software enhancements is deferred and
amortized over the service or update period, which is typically one
year. Revenue related to services performed on a time-and-materials
basis is recognized when performed.
Regulatory
Approval
We
have received regulatory clearance, licensing and/or CE Mark
approvals necessary for us to market the Genesis RMN System
in the U.S. and Europe, and we are in the process of obtaining
necessary registrations for extending our markets in other
countries.
We
have received regulatory clearance, licensing and/or CE Mark
approvals necessary for us to market the Niobe System,
Cardiodrive, and various disposable devices in the U.S.,
Canada, Europe, China, Japan, and various other
countries.
We
have received regulatory clearance, licensing and/or CE Mark
approvals necessary for us to market the Vdrive and
Vdrive Duo Systems with the V-CAS, V-Loop and
V-Sono devices in the U.S., Canada and Europe.
Biosense
Webster has received FDA approval, and CE Mark for the
CARTO® RMT navigation system for use with the
Niobe System, the 4mm CELSIUS® RMT
Diagnostic/Ablation Steerable Tip Catheter, the 4mm
NAVISTAR® RMT Diagnostic/Ablation Steerable Tip
Catheter, the 8mm Navistar RMT DS Diagnostic/Ablation Steerable Tip
Catheter, and the 3.5mm NAVISTAR® RMT
THERMOCOOL® Irrigated Tip Catheter. In addition,
Biosense Webster has received FDA approval and CE Mark for the
3.5mm CELSIUS® RMT THERMOCOOL® Irrigated Tip
Catheter. Biosense Webster also received China CFDA approval and
Japan PMDA approval for the CARTO® RMT navigation system
for use with the Niobe System, and the 3.5mm
NAVISTAR® RMT THERMOCOOL® Irrigated Tip
Catheter. Our strategic relationship with Biosense Webster provides
for co-development of catheters that can be navigated with our
system, both with and without Biosense Webster’s 3D catheter
location sensing technology. In addition, we can utilize technology
which allows our system to recognize specific disposable
interventional devices in order to prevent unauthorized use of our
system. See “Strategic Relationships” below for a description of
our arrangements with Biosense Webster.
FINANCIAL
INFORMATION ABOUT CUSTOMERS
No
single customer accounted for more than 10% of total revenue for
the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020. Revenue from customers
in China accounted for $3.7 million, or 10% of total revenue for
the year ended December 31, 2021 and revenue from customers in
Finland accounted for $2.7 million, or 10%, of total revenue for
the year ended December 31, 2020. No other single country, other
than the U.S., accounted for more than 10% of total revenue for the
years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020.
CLINICAL
APPLICATIONS
We
have focused our clinical and commercial efforts on applications of
our products primarily in electrophysiology procedures for the
treatment of arrhythmias and secondarily in complex interventional
cardiology procedures for the treatment of coronary artery disease.
Our system potentially has broad applicability in other areas, such
as structural heart repair, interventional neurosurgery,
interventional neuroradiology, peripheral vascular, renal
denervation, pulmonology, urology, gynecology and gastrointestinal
medicine, and some of our patents may be applicable in these areas
as well.
Electrophysiology
The
rhythmic beating of the heart results from the transmission of
electrical impulses. When these electrical impulses are mistimed or
uncoordinated, the heart fails to function properly, resulting in
symptoms that can range from fatigue to stroke or death. Over 5.0
million people in the U.S. currently suffer from abnormal heart
rhythms, which are known as arrhythmias. The prevalence of
arrhythmias is expected to continue to rise as the population ages,
life expectancy increases, and lifestyle factors such as obesity
become more prevalent. Arrhythmias are a major physical and
economic burden and are associated with stroke, heart failure, and
adverse symptoms causing patients to be motivated to seek
treatment. The combination of symptoms, prevalence and
comorbidities make arrhythmias a major economic factor in
healthcare.
Drug
therapies for arrhythmias often have limited efficacy, poor
compliance, and side effects. Consequently, physicians have
increasingly sought more permanent, non-pharmacological, solutions
for arrhythmias. The most common interventional treatment for
arrhythmias is an ablation procedure in which the diseased tissue
giving rise to the arrhythmia is isolated or destroyed. Prior to
performing an electrophysiology ablation, a physician typically
performs a diagnostic procedure in which the electrical signal
patterns of the heart wall are “mapped” to identify the heart
tissue generating the aberrant electrical signals. Following the
mapping, the physician may then use an ablation catheter to
eliminate the aberrant signal or signal path, restoring the heart
to its normal rhythm. These procedures may be performed separately
but are more commonly performed at the same time.
We
believe more than 5,000 interventional labs around the world are
currently conducting over one million cardiac ablation procedures
annually. The market has grown rapidly over the last decade with
annualized procedure growth of approximately 10%.
We
believe that Robotic Magnetic Navigation is particularly
well-suited for these electrophysiology procedures which are time
consuming, or which can only be performed by highly experienced
physicians. These procedures include:
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Ventricular
Tachycardia. Ventricular tachycardia is a malignant,
potentially lethal arrhythmia that is extremely difficult and time
consuming to treat. The magnetic catheter has been characterized as
the ideal tool for this application. These arrhythmias can often be
modified or interrupted by the pressure of a conventional catheter
making it very difficult to identify the appropriate location for
the ablation, whereas magnetic catheters produce fewer extra beats
and provide for easier and more efficient mapping of the diseased
tissue. Successful ablation of ventricular tachycardia can extend
the useful life of an implantable defibrillator, reduce shocks to
the patient, reduce the need for antiarrhythmic drugs or, in some
cases, obviate the need for an expensive implantable device and its
associated follow-up. |
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Atrial
Fibrillation. The most commonly diagnosed abnormal heart
rhythm, atrial fibrillation, is a particular type of arrhythmia
characterized by rapid, disorganized contractions of the heart’s
upper chambers, the atria, which lead to ineffective heart pumping
and blood flow and can be a major risk factor for stroke. This
chaotic electrical activity of the top chambers of the heart is
estimated to be present in three million people in the United
States and over seven million people worldwide. The number of
potential patients for manual catheter-based procedures for atrial
fibrillation has been limited because the procedures are extremely
complex and are performed by only the most highly skilled
electrophysiologists. They also typically have much longer
procedure times than general ablation cases and the success rates
have been lower and more variable. We believe that our system can
allow these procedures to be performed by a broader range of
electrophysiologists and, by automating some of the more complex
catheter maneuvers, can standardize and reduce procedure times and
significantly improve outcomes. |
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General
Mapping and Ablations. For the more routine mapping and
ablation procedures, our system offers the unique benefit of
precise catheter movement and consistent heart wall contact.
Additionally, the system can control the procedure and direct
catheter movement from the control room, saving the physician time
and helping to avoid unnecessary exposure to high doses of
radiation. |
We
believe that our system can address the current challenges in
electrophysiology by permitting the physician to remotely navigate
disposable interventional devices from a control room outside the
x-ray field. Additionally, we believe that our system allows for
more predictable and efficient navigation of these devices to the
treatment site and enables catheter contact to be consistently
maintained to efficiently apply energy on the wall of the beating
heart. We also believe that our system will significantly lower the
skill barriers required for physicians to perform complex
electrophysiology procedures and, additionally, improve
interventional lab efficiency and reduce disposable interventional
device utilization.
Interventional
Cardiology
More
than half a million people die annually from coronary artery
disease, a condition in which the formation of plaque in the
coronary arteries obstructs the supply of blood to the heart,
making this the leading cause of death in the U.S. Despite various
attempts to reduce risk factors, each year over one million
patients undergo interventional procedures in an attempt to open
blocked vessels and another one half million patients undergo open
heart surgery to bypass blocked coronary arteries.
Blockages
within a coronary artery, often called lesions, are categorized by
degree of obstruction as partial occlusions, non-chronic total
occlusions and chronic total occlusions. Lesions are also
categorized by the degree of difficulty with which they can be
opened as simple or complex. Complex lesions, such as chronic total
occlusions, longer lesions, and lesions located within smaller
diameter vessels, are often very difficult or time consuming to
open with manual interventional techniques.
We
believe approximately 11,000 interventional labs worldwide are
currently capable of conducting interventional cardiology. Over 4
million interventional cardiology procedures are performed annually
in the U.S. alone. We estimate that approximately 10-15% of these
interventional cardiology procedures currently being performed are
complex and therefore require longer procedure times and may have
sub-optimal outcomes. We believe that our system can substantially
benefit this subset of complex interventional cardiology
procedures.
Interventional
Neuroradiology, Neurosurgery and Other Interventional
Applications
Physicians
used a predecessor to our Niobe System to conduct a number
of procedures for the treatment of brain aneurysms, a condition in
which a portion of a blood vessel wall balloons and which can
result in debilitating or fatal bleeding and strokes. We believe
the robotic magnetic navigation system also has a range of
potential applications in minimally invasive neurosurgery,
including biopsies and the treatment of tumors, treatment of
vascular malformations and fetal interventions.
STRATEGIC
RELATIONSHIPS
We
have entered into business arrangements with technology leaders in
the global interventional market, including manufacturers of
fluoroscopy systems, ablation catheters, and electrophysiology
mapping systems, that we believe aid us in commercializing our
robotic magnetic navigation system. These arrangements are
important to us as they provide for the integration of our system
with digital imaging and 3D catheter location sensing technology,
as well as catheters compatible with our system.
Imaging
We
have successfully integrated our robotic magnetic navigation system
with digital fluoroscopy systems to provide advanced interventional
lab visualization and instrument control through user-friendly
computerized interfaces. The maintenance of these arrangements, or
the establishment of equivalent alternatives, is critical to our
commercialization efforts. There are no guarantees that any
existing strategic relationships will continue, and efforts are
ongoing to ensure the availability of integrated next generation
systems and/or equivalent alternatives. We cannot provide assurance
as to the timeline of the ongoing availability of such compatible
systems or our ability to obtain equivalent alternatives on
competitive terms or at all.
Disposables
Devices
We
have entered into strategic relationships and successfully
integrated with diagnostic mapping technologies to provide a robust
open ecosystem where physicians and patients benefit from the broad
integration of procedure data.
With
Biosense Webster, we have jointly developed associated location and
non-location sensing electrophysiology mapping and ablation
catheters that are navigable with our robotic magnetic navigation
system. We believe that these products provide physicians with the
elements required for effective complex electrophysiology
procedures: highly accurate information as to the exact location of
the catheter in the body and highly precise control over the
working tip of the catheter.
The
co-developed catheters are manufactured and distributed by Biosense
Webster, and both of the parties agreed to contribute to the
resources required for their development. We are entitled to
royalty payments from Biosense Webster, payable quarterly based on
net revenues from sales of the co-developed catheters. Royalty
revenue from the co-developed catheters represented 7% and 8% of
revenue for the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020,
respectively.
Biosense
Webster’s distribution rights for co-developed catheters are
nonexclusive until December 31, 2022. Upon the expiration or
termination of the agreement, other than due to a change of control
of Stereotaxis, the agreement provides for a continuation of supply
by Biosense Webster of the co-developed catheters to us or our
customers for three years. The agreement provides an opportunity to
expand the product offering covered by the agreement to include a
next generation irrigated magnetic catheter, subject to mutually
agreeable terms including exclusive distribution rights.
Under
the agreements with Biosense Webster, we granted Biosense Webster
certain notice and discussion rights for product development
activities we undertake relating to localization of magnetically
enabled interventional disposable devices in fields outside of
electrophysiology and mapping.
Either
party may terminate this agreement in certain specified “change of
control” situations, although the termination would not be
effective until one year after the change of control and then would
be subject to a wind-down period during which Biosense Webster
would continue to supply co-developed catheters to us or to our
customers for three years (or, for non-location sensing mapping and
ablation catheters, until our first sale of a competitive product
after a change of control, if earlier than three years). If either
party terminates the agreement under this provision, we must pay a
termination fee to Biosense Webster equal to 5% of our total equity
value in the change of control transaction, up to a maximum of $10
million. If a change of control of Stereotaxis occurs after
Biosense Webster has received approval from the U.S. FDA for atrial
fibrillation indication for the NAVISTAR® RMT
THERMOCOOL® catheter, we would be required to pay an
additional $10 million fee to Biosense Webster, and termination of
the agreement by either party would not be effective until two
years after the change of control. We also agreed to notify
Biosense Webster if we reasonably believe that we are engaged in
substantive discussions with respect to the sale of the Company or
substantially all of our assets.
Additionally,
we have entered into a broad strategic collaboration with Osypka
AG. This collaboration includes the development of a
next-generation magnetic ablation catheter to be navigated using
Stereotaxis’ robotic technology. Stereotaxis is funding the
development and will be the sole owner of the catheter.
The
maintenance of these arrangements, or the establishment of
equivalent alternatives, is critical to our commercialization
efforts. There are no guarantees that any existing strategic
relationships or collaborations will continue.
RESEARCH
AND DEVELOPMENT
We
have assembled an experienced group of engineers and physicists
with recognized expertise in magnetics, software, control
algorithms, mechanics, electronics, systems integration and
disposable interventional device design.
Our
research and development efforts are focused in the following
areas:
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development
and enhancement of Robotic Magnetic Navigation Systems; |
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designing
new proprietary disposable interventional devices for use in
Electrophysiology and other clinical specialties with our robotic
systems; and |
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software
and other engineering efforts to enhance imaging integrations, user
interface, automated navigation, and operating room
connectivity. |
Our
research and development team collaborates with strategic third
parties to integrate our robotic magnetic navigation system’s open
architecture platform with key imaging, location sensing and
information systems in the interventional lab. We have also
collaborated with a number of highly regarded interventional
physicians in key clinical areas and have entered into agreements
with a number of universities and teaching hospitals, which serve
to increase our access to world class physicians and to expand our
name recognition in the medical community.
CUSTOMER
SERVICE AND SUPPORT
We
provide worldwide maintenance and support services to our customers
for our integrated products directly or with the assistance of
outsourced product and service representatives. By utilizing these
relationships, we provide direct, on-site technical support
activities, including call center, customer support engineers and
service parts logistics and delivery. In certain situations, we use
these third parties as a single point of contact for the customer,
allowing us to focus on providing installation, training, and
back-up technical support.
Our
back-up technical support includes a combination of on-line,
telephone and on-site technical assistance services 24 hours a day,
seven days a week. We employ service and support engineers with
networking and medical equipment expertise and outsource a portion
of our installation and support services. We offer different levels
of support to our customers, including basic hardware and software
maintenance, extended product maintenance, and rapid response
capability for both parts and service.
We
have established a call center in our St. Louis facilities, which
provides real-time clinical and technical support to our customers
worldwide.
MANUFACTURING
Robotic Magnetic Navigation Systems and Odyssey
Solution
Our
manufacturing strategy for our Robotic Magnetic Navigation
Systems and Odyssey Solution is to sub-contract the
manufacture of major subassemblies of our systems to maximize
manufacturing flexibility and lower fixed costs. We maintain
quality control for all of our systems by completing final system
assembly and inspection in-house.
We
purchase both custom and off-the-shelf components from a large
number of suppliers and subject them to quality specifications and
processes. Some of the components necessary for the assembly of our
products are currently provided to us by sole-sourced suppliers
(the only recognized supply source available to us) or
single-sourced suppliers (the only approved supply source for us
among other sources). We purchase the majority of our components
and major assemblies through purchase orders rather than long-term
supply agreements and generally do not maintain large volumes of
finished goods.
Disposable
Interventional Devices
Our
manufacturing strategy for disposable interventional devices is to
outsource their manufacture through subcontracting and to expand
partnerships for other interventional devices. We work closely with
our contract manufacturers and have strong relationships with
component suppliers. We have entered into manufacturing agreements
to provide high volume capability for devices other than
catheters.
Software
The
software components of the robotic magnetic navigation system and
Odyssey Solution, including control and application
software, are developed both internally and with integrated modules
we purchase or license. We perform final testing of software
products in-house prior to their commercial release.
General
Our
manufacturing facility operates under processes that meet the FDA’s
requirements under the Quality System Regulation (QSR). Our ISO
registrar and European notified British Standard Institution (BSI)
has audited our facility annually since 2001 and found the facility
to be in compliance with relevant requirements. The most recent ISO
13485 and MDSAP Certificate of Registration were issued in 2019 and
2020, respectively and are valid through September 2022.
SALES
AND MARKETING
We
market our products in the U.S and internationally through a direct
sales force of senior sales specialists, distributors and sales
agents, supported by account managers and clinical specialists who
provide training, clinical support, and other services to our
customers. In addition, Biosense Webster distributes
magnetically-enabled electrophysiology mapping and ablation
catheters, co-developed pursuant to our agreement with
them.
Our
sales and marketing efforts include two important elements: (1)
selling robotic magnetic systems, Odyssey Solutions,
Stereotaxis Imaging Model S x-ray Systems, and Vdrive
systems directly and through distributors; and (2) leveraging our
installed base of systems to drive recurring sales of disposable
interventional devices, software and service.
REIMBURSEMENT
We
believe that substantially all of the procedures, whether
commercial or in clinical trials, conducted in the U.S. with the
Niobe System have been reimbursed to date. We expect that
third-party payors will reimburse, under existing billing codes,
procedures in which compatible ablation catheters are used. We
expect healthcare facilities in the U.S. to bill various
third-party payors, such as Medicare, Medicaid, other government
programs and private insurers, for services performed with our
products. We believe that procedures performed using our products,
or targeted for use by products that do not yet have regulatory
clearance or approval, are generally already reimbursable under
government programs and most private plans. Accordingly, we believe
providers in the U.S. will generally not be required to obtain new
billing authorizations or codes in order to be compensated for
performing medically necessary procedures using our products on
insured patients. We cannot guarantee that reimbursement policies
of third-party payors will not change in the future with respect to
some or all of the procedures using the robotic magnetic navigation
system.
In
countries outside the United States, reimbursement is obtained from
various sources, including governmental authorities, private health
insurance plans, and labor unions. In most foreign countries,
private insurance systems may also offer payments for some
therapies. Additionally, health maintenance organizations are
emerging in certain European countries. In Europe, we believe that
substantially all of the procedures, whether commercial or in
clinical trials, conducted with the Niobe System have been
reimbursed to date. In Japan, the Ministry of Health, Labor and
Welfare (MHLW) has classified the Niobe System as a C2
medical device (the highest reimbursement category) and has
established a “technical fee” of Japanese Yen 50,000 per procedure.
In other foreign countries, we may need to seek international
reimbursement approvals, and we do not know if these required
approvals will be obtained in a timely manner or at all.
See
“Item 1A—Risk Factors” for a discussion of various risks associated
with reimbursement from third-party payors.
INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
The
proprietary nature of, and protection for, our products, processes
and know-how are important to our business. We seek patent
protection in the United States and internationally for our systems
and other technology where available and when
appropriate.
We
have an extensive patent portfolio that we believe protects the
fundamental scope of our technology and systems, including our
robotic magnetic technology, navigational methods, mapping system
and procedural workflows, 3D integration technology, and disposable
interventional devices. As of December 31, 2021, we had 80 issued
U.S. patents and 4 pending U.S. patent applications. In addition,
we had 54 issued foreign patents and 15 pending foreign patent
applications. The key patents that protect our technology and
systems extend until 2028 and beyond.
We
also have a number of invention disclosures under consideration and
several applications that are being prepared for filing. We cannot
be certain that any patents will be issued from any of our pending
patent applications, nor can we be certain that any of our existing
patents or any patents that may be granted in the future will
provide us with protection.
It
would be technically difficult and costly to reverse engineer our
robotic magnetic navigation system, which contains numerous complex
algorithms that control our disposable devices inside the magnetic
fields generated by the robotic magnetic navigation system. We
further believe that our patent portfolio is broad enough in scope
to enable us to obtain legal relief if any entity not licensed by
us attempted to market disposable devices in the U.S. that can be
navigated by the robotic magnetic navigation system. We can also
utilize security keys, such as embedded smart chips or associated
software that could allow our system to recognize specific
disposable interventional devices in order to prevent unauthorized
use of our system.
We
have also developed substantial expertise in magnet design, magnet
physics and magnetic instrument control that was developed in
connection with the development of the robotic magnetic navigation
system, which we maintain as trade secrets. This expertise centers
around our proprietary magnet design, which is a critical aspect of
our ability to design, manufacture and install a cost-effective
magnetic navigation system that is small enough to be installed in
a standard interventional lab. Our Odyssey Solution contains
numerous complex algorithms and proprietary software and hardware
configurations, and requires substantial knowledge to design and
assemble, which we maintain as trade secrets. This proprietary
software and hardware, some of which is owned by Stereotaxis, and
some of which is licensed to Stereotaxis, is a material aspect of
the ability to design, manufacture and install a cost-effective and
efficient information integration, storage, and delivery
platform.
In
addition, we seek to protect our proprietary information by
entering into confidentiality, assignment of invention or license
agreements with our employees, consultants, contractors, advisers
and other third parties. However, we believe that these measures
afford only limited protection.
COMPETITION
The
markets for medical devices are intensely competitive and are
characterized by rapid technological advances, frequent new product
introductions, evolving industry standards and price
erosion.
In
electrophysiology we consider the primary competition to our
robotic magnetic navigation system to be traditional catheter-based
electrophysiology ablation approaches including RF (radiofrequency)
ablation and non-RF therapies. To our knowledge, we are the only
company that has commercialized remote, digital and direct control
of the working tip of catheters for use in RF ablation procedures.
Our success depends in part on convincing hospitals and physicians
to convert traditional interventional procedures to procedures
using our robotic magnetic navigation system.
We
face competition from companies that are developing and marketing
new products for use in electrophysiology. These products include
next generation mapping systems and RF ablation devices with which
our robotic magnetic navigation system is not currently compatible,
as well as non-RF ablation devices including single-shot
cryoablation devices and other new products, such as pulse field
ablation, for use in other interventional therapies. Some of these
products are marketed by companies that may have an established
presence in the field of electrophysiology, including major
imaging, capital equipment and disposables companies that are
currently selling products in the interventional lab. In addition,
we face competition from companies that currently market or are
developing drugs, gene or cellular therapies to treat the
conditions for which our products are intended.
We
also face competition from companies that are developing robotic
technologies for electrophysiology and non-electrophysiology
interventional procedures. We are aware of three companies that
commercialized endovascular catheter navigation systems which have
been cleared by the FDA for electrophysiology procedures as well as
two companies with electromagnetic catheter navigation systems that
received CE Mark approval in Europe. None of these companies seem
to be active with any current commercial activities. Outside of
electrophysiology, there are at least two companies that have
commercialized robotic systems for guidewire manipulation and can
be viewed as potential competitors as we look to address additional
clinical applications.
We
face direct competition to certain products in our Odyssey
Solution. These competitors include established imaging companies
as well as dedicated solution providers. We expect to continue to
face competitive pressure in this market in the future, based on
the rapid pace of advancements with this technology.
We
believe that the primary competitive factors in the market we
address are capability, safety, efficacy, ease of use, price,
quality, reliability and effective sales, support, training and
service. The length of time required for products to be developed
and to receive regulatory and reimbursement approval is also an
important competitive factor. See “Item 1A—Risk Factors” for a
discussion of other competitive risks facing our
business.
GOVERNMENT
REGULATION
Our
products are medical devices that are subject to extensive
regulation in the U.S. and in foreign countries where we do
business. The U.S. FDA regulates the development, testing,
manufacturing, labeling, storage, recordkeeping, promotion,
marketing, distribution and service of medical devices in the U.S.
to ensure that medical products distributed domestically are safe
and effective for their intended uses. In addition, the FDA
regulates the export of medical devices manufactured in the U.S. to
international markets and the importation of medical devices
manufactured abroad.
In
many foreign countries in which we market our products, we are
subject to regulations affecting, among other things, product
standards, packaging requirements, labeling requirements, import
restrictions, tariff regulations, duties and tax requirements. Many
of these regulations are similar to those of the FDA or other U.S.
regulations. In addition, our products must meet the requirements
of a large and growing body of international standards which govern
the design, manufacture, materials content and sourcing, testing,
certification, packaging, installation, use and disposal of our
products. Failure to meet these standards could limit the ability
to market our products in those regions which require compliance to
such standards. Examples of groups of such standards are electrical
safety standards such as those of the International
Electrotechnical Commission and composition standards such as the
Reduction of Hazardous Substances (“RoHS”) and Waste Electrical and
Electronic Equipment (“WEEE”) Directives.
U.S.
Food and Drug Administration
Unless
an exemption applies, each medical device we wish to commercially
market in the United States will require 510(k) clearance, de novo
approval, or pre-market approval from the FDA. The FDA classifies
medical devices into one of three classes. Devices deemed to pose
lower risks are placed in either Class I or II, which requires the
manufacturer to submit to the FDA a pre-market notification
requesting permission to commercially distribute the device, known
as 510(k) clearance. Some low-risk devices are exempted from this
requirement. Devices deemed by the FDA to pose the greatest risks,
such as life-sustaining, or life-supporting, or devices deemed not
substantially equivalent to a previously cleared 510(k) device, are
placed in Class III, requiring pre-market approval, or PMA. The
majority of our current products are Class II devices requiring
510(k) clearances. Biosense Webster’s compatible catheters used
with our magnetic navigation system are Class III therapeutic
devices and are subject to the PMA process.
If
U.S. clinical data are needed to support clearance, approval or a
marketing application for our devices, generally, an
investigational device exemption, or IDE, is assembled and
submitted to the FDA. The FDA reviews and must approve the IDE
before the study can begin. In addition, the study must be approved
by an Institutional Review Board covering each clinical site
involved in the study. When all approvals are obtained, we initiate
a clinical study to evaluate the device. Following completion of
the study, we collect, analyze and present the data in an
appropriate submission to the FDA (i.e., in support of a 510(k), de
novo, or PMA).
When
a 510(k) clearance is required, we must submit a pre-market
notification demonstrating that our proposed device is
substantially equivalent to a previously cleared and legally
marketed 510(k) device, de novo approved device, or a device that
was in commercial distribution before May 28, 1976, for which the
FDA has not yet called for the submission of pre-market approval
applications. To establish substantial equivalence, the applicant
must show that the new device has the same intended use as the
predicate device, and it either has the same technological
characteristics or has been shown to be equally safe and effective
and does not raise different questions of safety and effectiveness
as compared to the predicate device. The FDA may require further
information, including clinical trial results or product test data,
to make a determination regarding substantial equivalence. The
FDA’s 510(k) clearance process usually takes from four to 12 months
but can take longer.
If a
device is not eligible for the 510(k) clearance process, but the
product is low or moderate risk, we may be able to obtain de novo
review. The de novo process allows FDA to classify a low- to
moderate-risk device not previously classified into Class I or II.
If the device is not eligible for either the 510(k) or de novo
processes, a PMA must be submitted to the FDA. A PMA must be
supported by extensive data, including but not limited to,
technical, preclinical, clinical trials, manufacturing and labeling
to demonstrate reasonable evidence of the device’s safety and
efficacy to the FDA’s satisfaction. The PMA process is much more
costly, lengthy and uncertain than the 510(k) clearance process,
and it generally takes from one to three years, but can take
longer. We cannot be sure that the FDA will ever grant 510(k)
clearance, de novo approval or pre-market approval for any product
we propose to market in the United States.
After
a device receives 510(k) clearance or de novo approval, any
modification that could significantly affect its safety or
effectiveness, or that would constitute a significant change in its
intended use, will require a new clearance. Modification to a PMA
approved device or its labeling may require either a new PMA or PMA
supplement approval, which could be a costly and lengthy
process.
After
a device is placed on the market, numerous regulatory requirements
apply. These include for example:
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The
Quality System Regulation, or QSR, which requires manufacturers,
including third-party manufacturers, to follow stringent design,
testing, documentation and other quality assurance procedures
during product design and throughout the manufacturing
process; |
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Labeling
requirements and the FDA prohibitions against promoting products
for uncleared, unapproved or “off-label” uses; |
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Medical
device reporting regulations, which require that manufacturers
report to the FDA if their device may have caused or contributed to
a death or serious injury or malfunctioned in a way that would
likely cause or contribute to a death or serious injury if the
malfunction were to recur; and |
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Reports
of Corrections and Removals regulation, which requires
manufacturers to report recalls and field actions to the FDA if
initiated to reduce a risk to health posed by the device or to
remedy a violation of the FD&C Act. |
The
FDA has broad post-market and regulatory enforcement powers. We are
subject to unannounced inspections by the FDA to determine our
compliance with the QSR and other regulations. If we fail to comply
with the QSR or other regulatory requirements, we may receive a
warning or untitled letter from the FDA or be subject to other
enforcement actions, including fines, injunctions, civil penalties,
seizures, operating restrictions, partial suspension or total
shutdown of production, refusing requests for 510(k) clearance, de
novo petitions, or PMA approval of new products, withdrawing 510(k)
clearance, de novo approvals, or PMA approvals already granted, and
criminal prosecution. The FDA also has the authority to require us
to repair, replace or refund the cost of any medical device that we
have manufactured or distributed if there is a reasonable
probability that the device would cause serious, adverse health
consequences or death.
International
Regulation
In
order for us to market our products in other countries, we must
obtain regulatory approvals and comply with extensive safety and
quality regulations in other countries. These regulations,
including the requirements for approvals or clearance and the time
required for regulatory review, vary from country to country and
can involve additional product testing and additional
administrative review periods. The time required to obtain approval
in other countries may differ from that required to obtain FDA
clearance or approval.
The
primary regulatory environment in Europe is that of the European
Union, which encompasses most of the major countries in Europe. The
European Union, along with other member countries of the European
Economic Area, or EEA, requires that manufacturers of medical
products obtain the right to affix the CE Mark to their products
before selling them in member countries of the EEA. The CE Mark is
an international symbol of adherence to quality assurance standards
and compliance with applicable directives. In order to obtain the
right to affix the CE Mark to products, a manufacturer must obtain
certification that its processes meet certain quality standards.
Compliance with the Medical Device Directive, as certified by a
recognized European Notified Body, permits the medical device
manufacturer to affix the CE Mark on its products and commercially
distribute those products throughout the EEA. We are subject to
annual surveillance audits and periodic re-certification audits in
order to maintain our CE Mark permissions.
To be
sold in Japan, most medical devices must undergo thorough safety
examinations and demonstrate medical efficacy before they receive
regulatory (“Shonin”) approval. We are subject to additional
regulations in other foreign countries, including, but not limited
to, Canada, Taiwan, China, Korea, and Russia, in order to sell our
products. We intend that either we or our distributors will receive
any necessary approvals or clearance prior to marketing our
products in these international markets.
Please
refer to “Regulatory Approval” in Item 1 of this annual report for
a description of the regulatory clearance, licensing and/or
approvals we currently have or are pursuing.
Anti-Kickback
and False Claims Laws
We
are subject to various federal and state laws relating to
healthcare fraud and abuse, including anti-kickback and false
claims laws. The U.S. federal healthcare program Anti-Kickback
Statute prohibits persons from knowingly and willfully soliciting,
offering, receiving or providing remuneration, directly or
indirectly, in exchange for or to induce either the referral of an
individual, or furnishing or arranging for a good or service, for
which payment may be made under a federal healthcare program such
as the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The definition of
“remuneration” has been broadly interpreted to include anything of
value, including for example, gifts, discounts, the furnishing of
supplies or equipment, credit arrangements, payments of cash and
waivers of payments, and providing anything of value at less than
fair market value. Penalties for violations include criminal
penalties and civil sanctions such as fines, imprisonment and
possible exclusion from Medicare, Medicaid and other federal
healthcare programs. Federal false claims laws prohibit any person
from knowingly presenting, or causing to be presented, a false
claim for payment to the federal government, or knowingly making,
or causing to be made, a false statement to have a false claim
paid. Recently, several healthcare companies have been prosecuted
under these laws for allegedly providing free product to customers
with the expectation that the customers would bill federal programs
for the product. In addition, certain marketing practices,
including off-label promotion, may also violate false claims
laws.
Many
states have adopted laws similar to the federal healthcare program
Anti-Kickback Statute and the federal false claims laws. Some of
these state prohibitions apply to healthcare items or services
reimbursed by any source, not only the Medicare and Medicaid
programs.
Transparency
Laws
Under
the Physician Payments Sunshine Act, or the Sunshine Act, which was
enacted by Congress as part of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, we are required to track and report to the
federal government on an annual basis, subject to certain
exceptions, all payments and other transfers of value to U.S.
physicians and teaching hospitals, as well as ownership interests
held by physicians. Such data are made available by the government
on a publicly searchable website. In addition, we are subject to
similar state laws related to the tracking and reporting of certain
payments and other transfers of value to healthcare
professionals.
HIPAA
and Other Privacy Laws
We
are subject to laws and regulations protecting the privacy and
integrity of patient medical information, including the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, or HIPAA,
which imposes certain requirements relating to the privacy,
security and transmission of individually identifiable health
information, and the applicable Privacy and Security Standards of
HITECH, the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical
Health Act. HIPAA also prohibits executing a scheme to defraud any
healthcare benefit program or making false statements relating to
healthcare matters.
In
addition to federal regulations issued under HIPAA, some states and
foreign countries have enacted privacy and security statutes or
regulations that, in some cases, are more stringent than those
issued under HIPAA. For example, the General Data Protection
Regulation (the “GDPR”), which is in effect across the European
Economic Area (the “EEA”), imposes several stringent requirements
for controllers and processors of personal data and increased our
obligations, for example, by imposing higher standards when
obtaining consent from individuals to process their personal data,
requiring more robust disclosures to individuals, strengthening
individual data rights, shortening timelines for data breach
notifications, limiting retention periods and secondary use of
information, increasing requirements pertaining to health data as
well as pseudonymised data, and imposing additional obligations
when we contract third-party processors in connection with the
processing of personal data. The GDPR provides that EU member
states may make their own further laws and regulations limiting the
processing of genetic, biometric, or health data. Failure to comply
with the requirements of the GDPR and the applicable national data
protection laws of the EU member states may result in fines of up
to 4% of the total worldwide annual turnover of the preceding
financial year and other administrative penalties.
In
addition, effective January 1, 2020, California passed the
California Consumer Privacy Act (the “CCPA”), which is considered
by many to be the most far-reaching data privacy law introduced in
the US to date and which introduces new compliance burdens on many
organizations doing business in California who collect Personal
Information about California residents. The CCPA’s definition of
Personal Information is very broad and specifically includes
biometric information. The CCPA took effect in 2020 and will allow
for significant fines by the state attorney general, as well as a
private right of action from individuals in relation to certain
security breaches. The enactment of the CCPA is prompting a wave of
similar legislative developments in other US states and creating
the potential for a patchwork of overlapping but different state
laws. Additionally, a new California ballot initiative, the
California Privacy Rights Act (the “CPRA”) recently passed in
California. The CPRA will impose additional data protection
obligations on companies doing business in California. The majority
of the provisions will go into effect on January 1, 2023, and
additional compliance investment and potential business process
changes may be required.
As a
result of any of the foregoing, it may be necessary to modify our
operations and procedures to comply with the more stringent state
and foreign laws, which may entail significant and costly changes
for us.
Certificate
of Need Laws
In a
number of states in the U.S., a certificate of need or similar
regulatory approval is required prior to the acquisition of
high-cost capital items or various types of advanced medical
equipment, such as our robotic magnetic navigation system. Many of
the states in which we sell robotic magnetic navigation systems
have laws that require institutions located in those states to
obtain a certificate of need in connection with the purchase of our
system, and some of our purchase orders are conditioned upon our
customer’s receipt of necessary certificate of need
approval.
Human
Capital
Given
the highly competitive nature of the medical device industry, the
future success of our company depends on our ability to attract,
retain, and further develop top talent. We value the diversity of
each of our employees and the contributions they make in helping us
achieve our mission to discover, develop and deliver robotic
systems, instruments, and information solutions for the
interventional laboratory. We are committed to attracting,
developing, and retaining the best talent reflecting a diversity of
ideas, backgrounds, and perspectives.
As of
December 31, 2021, we had 130 employees, 38 of whom were engaged
directly in research and development, 52 in sales and marketing
activities, 21 in manufacturing and service, and 19 in general
administrative activities including finance, information systems,
legal and general management. A significant majority of our
employees are not covered by a collective bargaining agreement, and
we consider our relationship with our employees to be positive. We
also engage the services of independent contractors and consultants
as needed for special or temporary projects or specific
expertise.
As of
December 31, 2021, our employees were based in 9 different
countries around the world. Our global workforce consists of
diverse, highly skilled talent at all levels.
Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
Diversity,
equity and inclusion are integral parts of our culture. We strongly
believe in a diverse workplace where all employees can thrive in an
inclusive environment free from discrimination, harassment, bias
and prejudice. We strive to foster a culture where mutual respect,
inclusive behavior, and dignity are core to our individual
expectations.
Our
employees represent a broad range of backgrounds and bring a wide
array of perspectives and experiences that have helped us achieve
our global leadership in innovative robotic technologies designed
to enhance the treatment of arrhythmias and perform endovascular
procedures.
Health, Safety, and Wellness
Employee
safety and well-being is of utmost importance to us and has been of
particular focus due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In response to the
pandemic, we implemented significant changes that we determined
were in the best interest of our employees, as well as the
communities in which we operate, in compliance with government
regulations. This included having a significant portion of our
employee base work from home, while implementing additional safety
measures for operation-critical development and manufacturing
employees that worked on-site. In addition, despite the challenges
and disruptions inflicted by COVID-19, we continued to support
patients and physicians that rely on our technology, while
protecting our sales and service employees, with the broad
deployment of TeleRobotic support, leveraging proprietary
connectivity technology to enable remote clinical and technical
support of robotic electrophysiology practices.
Compensation and Benefits
We
strive to provide our employees with what we believe is a very
competitive and comprehensive total rewards package of
compensation, benefits and services. In addition to base
compensation, these packages, which vary by country and region, can
include annual bonuses, sales commissions, 401(k) and/or pension
plans, healthcare and insurance benefits for employees and family
members, health savings and flexible spending accounts, paid time
off, family leave, and flexible work schedules. In addition, we
offer employees the benefit of equity ownership in the company
through stock option grants and/or restricted stock units. Eligible
employees have the opportunity to participate in an employee stock
purchase plan, which offers the opportunity to purchase our common
stock at a discount of 5%.
Training and Development
We recognize the importance of furthering education and development
of our employees through the various stages of their
careers. We
are dedicated to promoting individual, leader, team, and
organizational development through a number of tools and services.
We offer a variety of professional development courses for our
employees and support employee continuing education. In addition,
our employees are required to complete compliance training
applicable to our industry. We also have an annual global
performance review process for reviewing all employees’ performance
and pay.
Availability
of Information
We
make certain filings with the SEC, including our annual report on
Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form
8-K, and all amendments and exhibits to those reports, available
free of charge in the Investors section of our website,
http://www.stereotaxis.com, as soon as reasonably
practicable after they are filed with the SEC. Further, these
filings are available on the Internet at http://www.sec.gov.
Information contained on our website is not part of this report and
such information is not incorporated by reference into this
report.
Executive
Officers
See
Part III – Item 10 for information about our Executive
Officers.
The
following uncertainties and factors, among others, could affect
future performance and cause actual results to differ materially
from those expressed or implied by forward looking
statements.
RISK
FACTORS SUMMARY
Risks
Related to Our Business and Business Operations
|
● |
We
may not generate cash from operations or be able to raise the
necessary capital to continue operations. |
|
● |
A
pandemic, epidemic or outbreak of infectious disease could have an
adverse effect our business, operating results or financial
condition. |
|
● |
We
may not be able to fund our business operations in the same manner
as we have done historically if we do not improve the operating
performance of the Company or raise additional capital. |
|
● |
Hospital
decision-makers may not purchase our Robotic Magnetic Navigation
Systems or related products or may think that such systems and
products are too expensive. |
|
● |
If we
are unable to fulfill our current purchase orders and other
commitments on a timely basis or at all, we may not be able to
achieve future sales growth. |
|
● |
We
will likely experience long and variable sales and installation
cycles, which could result in substantial fluctuations in our
quarterly results of operations. |
|
● |
Physicians
may not use our products if they do not believe they are safe,
efficient and effective. |
|
● |
Our
collaborations with fluoroscopy system manufacturers and providers
of catheters and electrophysiology mapping systems or other parties
may fail, or we may not be able to enter into additional
collaborations in the future. |
|
● |
The
complexity associated with selling, marketing, and distributing
products could impair our ability to increase revenue. |
|
● |
Our
marketing strategy is dependent on collaboration with physician
“thought leaders.” |
|
● |
Physicians
may not commit enough time to sufficiently learn our
system. |
|
● |
Customers
may choose to purchase competing products and not ours. |
|
● |
If
the magnetic fields generated by our system are not compatible
with, or interfere with, other widely used equipment in the
interventional labs, sales of our products would be negatively
affected. |
|
● |
The
use of our products could result in product liability claims that
could be expensive, divert management’s attention, and harm our
reputation and business. |
|
● |
We
have incurred substantial losses in the past and may not be
profitable in the future. |
|
● |
Our
reliance on contract manufacturers and on suppliers, and in some
cases, a single supplier, could harm our ability to meet demand for
our products in a timely manner or within budget. |
|
● |
Risks
associated with international manufacturing and trade could
negatively impact the availability and cost of our products because
materials used to manufacture our magnets, one of our key system
components, are sourced from overseas. |
|
● |
We
may encounter problems at our manufacturing facilities or those of
our subcontractors or otherwise experience manufacturing delays
that could result in lost revenue. |
|
● |
Our
growth may place a significant strain on our resources, and if we
fail to manage our growth, our ability to develop, market, and sell
our products will be harmed. |
Risks Relating to Technology and Intellectual Property
Matters
|
● |
The
rate of technological innovation of our products might not keep
pace with the rest of the market. |
|
● |
Security
breaches and other disruptions to our information technology
infrastructure could interfere with our operations, compromise
confidential information, and expose us to liability which could
materially adversely impact our business and
reputation. |
|
● |
We
may be unable to protect our technology from use by third
parties. |
|
● |
Third
parties may assert that we are infringing their intellectual
property rights. |
|
● |
Expensive
intellectual property litigation is frequent in the medical device
industry. |
|
● |
We
may not be able to maintain all the licenses or rights from third
parties necessary for the development, manufacture, or marketing of
new and existing products. |
|
● |
Our
products and related technologies can be applied in different
medical applications, and we may fail to focus on the most
profitable areas. |
|
● |
We
may be subject to damages resulting from claims that our employees
or we have wrongfully used or disclosed alleged trade secrets of
their former employers. |
|
● |
Software
errors or other defects may be discovered in our
products. |
Risks Relating to Regulatory and Legal Matters
|
● |
If we
or the parties in our strategic collaborations fail to obtain or
maintain necessary FDA clearances or approvals for our medical
device products, or if such clearances or approvals are delayed, we
will be unable to continue to commercially distribute and market
our products. |
|
● |
If
our strategic collaborations elect not to or we fail to obtain
regulatory approvals in other countries for products under
development, we will not be able to commercialize these products in
those countries. |
|
● |
We
may fail to comply with continuing regulatory requirements of the
FDA and other authorities and become subject to enforcement action,
which may include substantial penalties. |
|
● |
Our
suppliers, subcontractors, or we may fail to comply with the FDA
quality system regulation or other quality standards. |
|
● |
If we
fail to comply with health care regulations, we could face
substantial penalties and our business, operations and financial
condition could be adversely affected. |
|
● |
Healthcare
policy changes, including the potential repeal or amendment of any
existing legislation, may have a material adverse effect on
us. |
|
● |
The
application of state certificate of need regulations and compliance
by our customers with federal and state licensing or other
international requirements could substantially limit our ability to
sell our products and grow our business. |
|
● |
Hospitals
or physicians may be unable to obtain reimbursement from
third-party payors for procedures using our products, or
reimbursement for procedures may be insufficient to recoup the
costs of purchasing our products. |
|
● |
Our
costs could substantially increase if we receive a significant
number of warranty claims or have other significant, uninsured
liabilities. |
Risks
Related to Our Common Stock
|
● |
Our
principal stockholders continue to own a large percentage of our
voting stock, and they have the ability to substantially influence
matters requiring stockholder approval. |
|
● |
Future
issuances of our securities could dilute current stockholders’
ownership. |
|
● |
We
have never paid dividends on our common stock, and we do not
anticipate paying any cash dividends in the foreseeable
future. |
|
● |
Our
certificate of incorporation and bylaws, Delaware law, and one of
our collaboration agreements contain provisions that could
discourage a takeover. |
|
● |
Evolving
regulation of corporate governance and public disclosure may result
in additional expenses and continuing uncertainty. |
|
● |
Our
future operating results may be below securities analysts’ or
investors’ expectations, which could cause our stock price to
decline. |
|
● |
We
expect that the price of our common stock could fluctuate
substantially, possibly resulting in class action securities
litigation. |
|
● |
If we
fail to continue to meet all applicable NYSE American Market
requirements and the NYSE American determines to delist our common
stock, the delisting could adversely affect the market liquidity of
our common stock, which would impair the value of your investment
and ultimately harm our business by limiting our access to equity
markets for capital raising. |
Risks
Related to the February 2021 CEO Performance Stock Unit
Grant
|
● |
We
will incur significant additional stock-based compensation expense
over the term of the CEO Performance Award regardless of whether or
not any of the milestones are achieved. |
|
● |
Our
stockholders may experience substantial dilution upon payout of
shares under the CEO Performance Award. |
|
● |
Certain
provisions in the PSU Agreement may discourage a change in control
of the Company even if such a transaction would otherwise be
beneficial to our stockholders. |
|
● |
We
are highly dependent on the services of Mr. Fischel, and our
compensation package, including the CEO Performance Award, may fail
to retain him. |
Summary of General Risk Factors
|
● |
General
economic conditions could materially adversely impact
us. |
|
● |
We
may lose key personnel or fail to attract and retain replacement or
additional personnel. |
|
● |
We
face currency and other risks associated with international
operations. |
Risks
Related to Our Business and Business Operations
We
may not generate cash from operations or be able to raise the
necessary capital to continue operations.
We
may require additional funds to meet our operational, working
capital and capital expenditure needs in the future. We cannot be
certain that we will be able to obtain additional funds on
favorable terms or at all. If we cannot raise capital on acceptable
terms, we will not be able to, among other things:
|
● |
maintain
customer and vendor relationships; |
|
● |
hire,
train and retain employees; |
|
● |
maintain
or expand our operations; |
|
● |
enhance
our existing products or develop new ones; |
|
● |
respond
to competitive pressures; or |
|
● |
service
our debt obligations and meet our financial covenants. |
Our
failure to do any of these things could result in lower revenue and
adversely affect our financial condition and results of operations,
and we may have to curtail or cease operations.
A
pandemic, epidemic or outbreak of infectious disease could have an
adverse effect our business, operating results or financial
condition.
The
novel coronavirus COVID-19 (“COVID-19”) pandemic has resulted, and
is likely to continue to result, in significant disruptions to the
economy, as well as business and capital markets around the world.
The full extent of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our
business, results of operations and financial condition will depend
on numerous evolving factors that we may not be able to accurately
predict.
As a
result of the COVID-19 outbreak, we have experienced business
disruptions, including travel restrictions on us and our
third-party distributors, which have negatively affected our
complex sales, marketing, installation, distribution and service
network relating to our products and services. The COVID-19
pandemic may continue to negatively affect demand for both our
systems and our disposable products by limiting the ability of our
sales personnel to maintain their customary contacts with customers
as governmental authorities institute prolonged quarantines, travel
restrictions, and shelter-in-place orders, or as our customers
impose limitations on contacts and in-person meetings that go
beyond those imposed by governmental authorities.
In
addition, many of our hospital customers, for whom the purchase of
our system involves a significant capital purchase which may be
part of a larger construction project at the customer site
(typically the construction of a new building), may themselves be
under economic pressures. This may cause delays or cancellations of
current purchase orders and other commitments, and may exacerbate
the long and variable sales and installation cycles for our robotic
magnetic navigation systems. We may also experience significant
reductions in demand for our disposable products as our healthcare
customers (physicians and hospitals) continue to re-prioritize the
treatment of patients and divert resources away from
non-coronavirus areas, which we anticipate will lead to the
performance of fewer procedures in which our disposable products
are used. In addition, patients may consider foregoing or deferring
procedures utilizing our products, even if physicians and hospitals
are willing to perform them, which could also reduce demand for,
and sales of, our disposable products.
As of
the date of the filing of this Annual Report on Form 10-K, we
believe our manufacturing operations and supply chains have been
manageably impacted, but we cannot guarantee that they will not be
impacted more severely in the future. If our manufacturing
operations or supply chains are materially interrupted, it may not
be possible for us to timely manufacture relevant products at
required levels, or at all. Changes in economic conditions and supply
chain constraints could lead to higher inflation than previously
experienced or expected, which could, in turn, lead to an increase
in costs. We may be unable to raise the prices of our products
sufficiently to keep up with the rate of inflation. A
material reduction or interruption to any of our manufacturing
processes or a substantial increase in costs would have a material
adverse effect on our business, operating results, and financial
condition.
As
governmental authorities around the world continue to institute
prolonged mandatory closures, social distancing protocols and
shelter-in-place orders, or as private parties on whom we rely to
operate our business put in place their own protocols that go
beyond those instituted by relevant governmental authorities, our
ability to adequately staff and maintain our operations or further
our product development could be negatively impacted.
Any
disruption to the capital markets could negatively impact our
ability to raise capital. If the capital markets are disrupted for
an extended period of time and we need to raise additional capital,
such capital may not be available on acceptable terms, or at all.
Continued disruptions to the capital markets and other financing
sources could also negatively impact our hospital customers’
ability to raise capital or otherwise obtain financing to fund
their operations and capital projects. Such could result in delayed
spending on current projects, a longer sales cycle for new projects
where a large capital commitment is required, and decreased demand
for our disposable products as well as an increased risk of
customer defaults or delays in payments for our systems
installation, service contracts and disposable products.
We
continue to evaluate and, where appropriate, take actions to reduce
costs and spending across our organization. We will continue to
actively monitor the situation and may take further actions that
alter our business operations that may be required by federal,
state, or local governmental authorities that may be implemented by
our vendors, supplier or customers, or that we determine are in the
best interests of our employees, customers, suppliers and
stockholders.
We
may not be able to fund our business operations in the same manner
as we have done historically if we do not improve the operating
performance of the Company or raise additional
capital.
The
Company has sustained operating losses throughout its corporate
history and expects that its 2022 operating expenses will exceed
its 2022 gross margin. The Company expects to continue to incur
operating losses and negative cash flows until revenues reach a
level sufficient to support ongoing operations or expense
reductions are in place. The Company’s liquidity needs will be
largely determined by the success of clinical adoption within the
installed base of our robotic magnetic navigation system as well as
by new placements of capital systems. The Company’s plans for
improving the liquidity conditions primarily include its ability to
control the timing and spending of its operating expenses and
raising additional funds through debt or equity
financing.
There
can be no assurance that any of our plans will be successful or
that additional capital will be available to us on reasonable
terms, or at all, when needed. If we are unable to improve the
operating performance of the Company or if we are unable to obtain
sufficient additional capital, it may impair our ability to obtain
new customers or hire and retain employees, any of which could
force us to substantially revise our business plan or cease
operations, which may reduce or negate the value of your
investment.
Hospital
decision-makers may not purchase our Robotic Magnetic Navigation
Systems or related products or may think that such systems and
products are too expensive.
To
achieve and grow sales, hospitals must purchase our products, and
in particular, our robotic magnetic navigation system. The robotic
magnetic navigation system is a novel device, and hospitals and
physicians are traditionally slow to adopt new products and
treatment practices. In addition, hospitals may delay their
purchase or installation decision for the robotic magnetic
navigation system based on the disposable interventional devices
that have received regulatory clearance or approval. Moreover, the
robotic magnetic navigation system is an expensive piece of capital
equipment, representing a significant portion of the cost of a new
or replacement interventional lab. Although priced significantly
below a robotic magnetic navigation system, the Odyssey
Solution is still an expensive product. If hospitals do not widely
adopt our systems, or if they decide that they are too expensive,
we may never become profitable. Any failure to sell as many systems
as our business plan requires could also have a seriously
detrimental impact on our results of operations, financial
condition, liquidity position, and cash flow.
If
we are unable to fulfill our current purchase orders and other
commitments on a timely basis or at all, we may not be able to
achieve future sales growth.
Our
backlog, which consists of purchase orders and other commitments,
is considered by some investors to be a significant indicator of
future performance. Consequently, negative changes to this backlog
or its failure to grow commensurate with expectations could
negatively impact our future operating results or our share price.
Our backlog includes those outstanding purchase orders and other
commitments that management believes will result in recognition of
revenue upon delivery or installation of our systems. We cannot
assure you that we will recognize revenue in any particular period
or at all because some of our purchase orders and other commitments
are subject to contingencies that are outside our control. In
addition, these orders and commitments may be revised, modified or
cancelled, either by their express terms, as a result of
negotiations or by project changes or delays. System installation
is, by its nature, subject to the interventional lab construction
or renovation process which comprises multiple stages, all of which
are outside of our control. Although the actual installation of our
robotic magnetic navigation system requires only a few weeks and
can be accomplished by either our staff or by subcontractors,
successful installation of our system can be subjected to delays
related to the overall construction or renovation process. If we
experience any failures or delays in completing the installation of
these systems, our reputation would suffer and we may not be able
to sell additional systems. We have experienced situations in which
our purchase orders and other commitments did not result in
recognizing revenue from placement of a system with a customer. In
addition to construction delays, there are risks that an
institution will attempt to cancel a purchase order as a result of
subsequent project review by the institution or the departure from
the institution of physicians or physician groups who have
expressed an interest in purchasing our products.
Decreases
in our backlog have occurred in the past and could occur in the
future, causing delays in revenue recognition or even removal of
orders and other commitments from our backlog. Such events would
have a negative effect on our revenue and results of
operations.
We
will likely experience long and variable sales and installation
cycles, which could result in substantial fluctuations in our
quarterly results of operations.
We
anticipate that our robotic magnetic navigation system will
continue to have a lengthy sales cycle because it consists of a
relatively expensive piece of capital equipment, the purchase of
which requires the approval of senior management at hospitals,
inclusion in the hospitals’ interventional lab budget process for
capital expenditures, and, in some instances, a certificate of need
from the state or other regulatory approval. In addition,
historically the majority of our products have been delivered less
than one year after the receipt of a purchase order from a
hospital, with the timing being dependent on the construction cycle
for the new or replacement interventional suite in which the
equipment will be installed. In some cases, this time frame has
been extended further because the interventional suite construction
is part of a larger construction project at the customer site
(typically the construction of a new building), which may occur
with our existing and future purchase orders. We cannot assure you
that the time from purchase order to delivery for systems to be
delivered in the future will be consistent with our historical
experience. Moreover, a global economic slowdown may cause our
customers to further delay construction or significant capital
purchases, which could further lengthen our sales cycle. This may
contribute to substantial fluctuations in our quarterly operating
results. As a result, in future quarters our operating results
could fall below the expectations of securities analysts or
investors, in which event our stock price would likely
decrease.
Physicians
may not use our products if they do not believe they are safe,
efficient and effective.
We
believe that physicians will not use our products unless they
determine that our products provide a safe, effective and
preferable alternative to interventional methods in general use
today. If longer-term patient studies or clinical experience
indicate that treatment with our system or products is less
effective, less efficient or less safe than our current data
suggest, our sales would be harmed, and we could be subject to
significant liability. Further, unsatisfactory patient outcomes or
patient injury could cause negative publicity for our products,
particularly in the early phases of product introduction. In
addition, physicians may be slow to adopt our products if they
perceive liability risks arising from the use of these new
products. It is also possible that as our products become more
widely used, latent defects could be identified, creating negative
publicity and liability problems for us and adversely affecting
demand for our products. If physicians do not use our products, we
likely will not become profitable or generate sufficient cash to
fund company operations going forward.
Our
collaborations with fluoroscopy system manufacturers and providers
of catheters and electrophysiology mapping systems or other parties
may fail, or we may not be able to enter into additional
collaborations in the future.
We
have collaborated with and are continuing to collaborate with
fluoroscopy system manufacturers and providers of catheters and
electrophysiology mapping systems and other parties to make our
instrument control technology compatible with their respective
imaging products or disposable interventional devices and to
co-develop additional disposable interventional devices for use
with our products. A significant portion of our revenue from system
sales is derived from these integrated products. The maintenance of
these collaborations, or the establishment of equivalent
alternatives, is critical to our commercialization
efforts.
There
are no guarantees that any existing strategic relationships will
continue, and efforts are ongoing to ensure the availability of
integrated next generation systems and/or equivalent alternatives.
We cannot provide assurance as to the timeline of the ongoing
availability of such compatible systems or our ability to obtain
equivalent alternatives on competitive terms or at all.
Our
product commercialization plans could be disrupted, leading to
lower than expected revenue and a material and adverse impact on
our results of operations and cash flow, if:
|
● |
we
fail to or are unable to maintain adequate compatibility of our
products with the most prevalent imaging products or disposable
interventional devices expected by our customers for their clinical
practice; |
|
● |
any
of our collaboration partners delays or fails in the integration of
its technology or new products with our robotic magnetic navigation
system; |
|
● |
any
of our collaboration partners fails to develop or commercialize the
integrated products in a timely manner; or |
|
● |
we
become involved in disputes with one or more of our collaboration
partners regarding our collaborations. |
Some
of our collaborators are
large, global organizations with diverse product lines and
interests that may diverge from our interests in commercializing
our products. Accordingly, our collaborators may not devote
adequate resources to our products, or may experience financial
difficulties, change their business strategy or undergo a business
combination that may affect their willingness or ability to fulfill
their obligations to us.
The
failure of one or more of our collaborations could have a material
adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations
and cash flow. In addition, if we are unable to enter into
additional collaborations in the future, or if these collaborations
fail, our ability to develop and commercialize products could be
impacted negatively and our revenue could be adversely
affected.
The
complexity associated with selling, marketing, and distributing
products could impair our ability to increase
revenue.
We
currently market our products in the U.S., Europe and the rest of
the world through a direct sales force of senior sales specialists,
distributors and sales agents, supported by account managers and
clinical specialists who provide training, clinical support, and
other services to our customers. If we are unable to effectively
utilize our existing sales force or increase our existing sales
force in the foreseeable future, we may be unable to generate the
revenue we have projected in our business plan. Factors that may
inhibit our sales and marketing efforts include:
|
● |
our
inability to recruit and retain adequate numbers of qualified sales
and marketing personnel; |
|
● |
our
inability to accurately forecast future product sales and utilize
resources accordingly; |
|
● |
the
inability of sales personnel to obtain access to or persuade
adequate numbers of hospitals and physicians to purchase and use
our products; and |
|
● |
unforeseen
costs associated with maintaining and expanding an independent
sales and marketing organization. |
In
addition, if we fail to effectively use distributors or contract
sales agents for distribution of our products where appropriate,
our revenue and profitability would be adversely
affected.
Our
marketing strategy is dependent on collaboration with physician
“thought leaders.”
Our
research and development efforts and our marketing strategy depend
heavily on obtaining support, physician training assistance, and
collaboration from highly regarded physicians at leading commercial
and research hospitals, particularly in the U.S. and Europe. If we
are unable to gain and/or maintain such support, training services,
and collaboration or if the reputation or standing of these
physicians is impaired or otherwise adversely affected, our ability
to market our products and, as a result, our financial condition,
results of operations and cash flow could be materially and
adversely affected.
Physicians
may not commit enough time to sufficiently learn our
system.
In
order for physicians to learn to use the robotic magnetic
navigation system, they must attend structured training sessions in
order to familiarize themselves with a sophisticated user interface
and they must be committed to learning the technology. Further,
physicians must utilize the technology on a regular basis to ensure
they maintain the skill set necessary to use the interface.
Continued market acceptance could be delayed by lack of physician
willingness to attend training sessions, by the time required to
complete this training, or by state or institutional restrictions
on our ability to provide training. An inability to train a
sufficient number of physicians to generate adequate demand for our
products could have a material adverse impact on our financial
condition and cash flow.
Customers
may choose to purchase competing products and not
ours.
Our
products must compete with traditional interventional methods.
These methods are widely accepted in the medical community, have a
long history of use and do not require the purchase of an
additional expensive piece of capital equipment. In addition, many
of the medical conditions that can be treated using our products
can also be treated with pharmaceuticals or other medical devices
and procedures. Many of these alternative treatments are also
widely accepted in the medical community and have a long history of
use.
We
also face competition from companies that are developing robotic
technologies for electrophysiology and non-electrophysiology
interventional procedures. We are aware of three companies that
commercialized endovascular catheter navigation systems which have
been cleared by the FDA for electrophysiology procedures as well as
two companies with electromagnetic catheter navigation systems that
received CE Mark approval in Europe. None of these companies seem
to be active with any current commercial activities. Outside of
electrophysiology, there are at least two companies that have
commercialized robotic systems for guidewire manipulation and can
be viewed as potential competitors as we look to address additional
clinical applications.
We
face competition from companies that are developing drugs, gene or
cellular therapies or other medical devices or procedures to treat
the conditions for which our products are intended. The medical
device and pharmaceutical industries make significant investments
in research and development, and innovation is rapid and
continuous. Other companies in the medical device industry continue
to develop new devices and technologies for traditional
interventional methods.
If
these or other new products or technologies emerge that provide the
same or superior benefits as our products at equal or lesser cost,
it could render our products obsolete or unmarketable. In addition,
the presence of other competitors may cause potential customers to
delay their purchasing decisions, resulting in a longer than
expected sales cycle, even if they do not choose our competitors’
products. We cannot be certain that physicians will use our
products to replace or supplement established treatments or that
our products will be competitive with current or future products
and technologies.
Many
of our other competitors also have longer operating histories,
significantly greater financial, technical, marketing and other
resources, greater name recognition and a larger base of customers
than we do. In addition, as the markets for medical devices
develop, additional competitors could enter the market. We cannot
assure you that we will be able to compete successfully against
existing or new competitors. Our revenue would be reduced or
eliminated if our competitors develop and market products that are
more effective and less expensive than our products.
If
the magnetic fields generated by our system are not compatible
with, or interfere with, other widely used equipment in the
interventional labs, sales of our products would be negatively
affected.
Our
robotic magnetic navigation system generates magnetic fields that
directly govern the motion of the internal, or working, tip of
disposable interventional devices. If other equipment in the
interventional labs or elsewhere in a hospital is incompatible with
the magnetic fields generated by our system, or if our system
interferes with such equipment, we may be required to install
additional shielding, which may be expensive and which may not
solve the problem. If magnetic interference becomes a significant
issue at targeted institutions, it would increase our installation
costs at those institutions and could limit the number of hospitals
that would be willing to purchase and install our systems, either
of which would adversely affect our financial condition, results of
operations and cash flow.
The
use of our products could result in product liability claims that
could be expensive, divert management’s attention, and harm our
reputation and business.
Our
business exposes us to significant risks of product liability
claims. The medical device industry has historically been
litigious, and we could face product liability claims if the use of
our products were to cause injury or death. The coverage limits of
our product liability insurance policies may not be adequate to
cover future claims, and we may be unable to maintain product
liability insurance in the future at satisfactory rates or adequate
amounts. A product liability claim, regardless of its merit or
eventual outcome, could divert management’s attention, and result
in significant legal defense costs, significant harm to our
reputation and a decline in revenue.
We
have incurred substantial losses in the past and may not be
profitable in the future.
We
have incurred substantial net losses since inception, including
incurring an accumulated deficit of $498.7 million as of December
31, 2021, and we expect to incur losses into the future as we
continue the commercialization of our products. Moreover, the
extent of our future losses and the timing of profitability are
highly uncertain. Although we have achieved operating profitability
during certain quarters, we may not achieve profitable operations
on an annual basis, and if we achieve profitable operations, we may
not sustain or increase profitability on a quarterly or annual
basis. If we require more time than we expect to generate
significant revenue and achieve annual profitability, or if we are
unable to sustain profitability once achieved, we may not be able
to continue our operations. Our failure to achieve annual
profitability or sustain profitability on an annual or quarterly
basis could negatively impact the market price of our common stock.
Furthermore, even if we achieve significant revenue, we may choose
to pursue a strategy of increasing market penetration and presence
or expand or accelerate new product development or clinical
research activities at the expense of profitability.
Our
reliance on contract manufacturers and on suppliers, and in some
cases, a single supplier, could harm our ability to meet demand for
our products in a timely manner or within budget.
We
depend on contract manufacturers to produce and assemble certain of
the components of our systems and other products such as our
electrophysiology catheter advancement device and other disposable
devices. We also depend on various third-party suppliers for the
magnets we use in our robotic magnetic navigation system and
certain components of our Odyssey Solution. In addition,
some of the components necessary for the assembly of our products
are currently provided to us by a single supplier, including the
magnets for our robotic magnetic navigation system and certain
components of our Odyssey Solution, and we generally do not
maintain large volumes of inventory. Our reliance on these third
parties involves a number of risks, including, among other things,
the risk that:
|
● |
we
may not be able to control the quality and cost of our system or
respond to unanticipated changes and increases in customer
orders; |
|
● |
we
may lose access to critical services, materials, or components,
resulting in an interruption in the manufacture, assembly and
shipment of our systems; and |
|
● |
we
may not be able to find new or alternative components for our use
or reconfigure our system and manufacturing processes in a timely
manner if the components necessary for our system become
unavailable. |
If
any of these risks materialize, it could significantly increase our
costs and impair product delivery.
Lead
times for materials and components ordered by us and our contract
manufacturers vary and depend on factors such as the specific
supplier, contract terms and demand for a component at a given
time. We, and our contract manufacturers, acquire materials,
complete standard subassemblies and assemble fully configured
systems based on sales forecasts. If orders do not match forecasts,
we, as well as our contract manufacturers, may have excess or
inadequate inventory of materials and components.
In
addition, if these manufacturers or suppliers stop providing us
with the components or services necessary for the operation of our
business, we may not be able to identify alternate sources in a
timely fashion. Any transition to alternate manufacturers or
suppliers would likely result in operational problems and increased
expenses and could delay the shipment of or limit our ability to
provide our products. We cannot assure you that we would be able to
enter into agreements with new manufacturers or suppliers on
commercially reasonable terms or at all. Additionally, obtaining
components from a new supplier may require a new or supplemental
filing with applicable regulatory authorities and clearance or
approval of the filing before we could resume product sales. Any
disruptions in product flow may harm our ability to generate
revenue, lead to customer dissatisfaction, damage our reputation
and result in additional costs or cancellation of orders by our
customers.
We
also rely on Biosense Webster and other parties to manufacture a
number of disposable interventional devices for use with our
robotic magnetic navigation system. If these parties cannot
manufacture sufficient quantities of disposable interventional
devices to meet customer demand, or if their manufacturing
processes are disrupted, our revenue and profitability would be
adversely affected.
Risks
associated with international manufacturing and trade could
negatively impact the availability and cost of our products because
materials used to manufacture our magnets, one of our key system
components, are sourced from overseas.
We
purchase the permanent magnets for our robotic magnetic system from
a manufacturer that uses material produced in Japan, and we
anticipate that a certain amount of the production work for these
magnets will be performed for this manufacturer in China. Given the
complex relationships between China and the U.S., political,
diplomatic, military, or other events could result in business
disruptions, including increased regulatory enforcement against
companies, tariffs, trade embargoes, and export restrictions
relating to this production work. For example, in 2020, the U.S.
government amended the Entity List rules to expand the requirement
to obtain a license prior to the export of certain technologies. In
addition, in 2020, a new U.S. regulation seeks to prohibit the U.S.
government from contracting with companies who use the products or
services of certain Chinese companies. While we believe that these
regulations do not materially impact our business at this time, we
cannot predict the impact that additional regulatory changes may
have on our business in the future, which could adversely affect
our business operations in China, or may otherwise limit our
ability to offer our products and services in China and other parts
of the world. In addition, our subcontractor may purchase magnets
for our disposable interventional devices directly from a
manufacturer in Japan. The relationships with these manufacturers
and suppliers are generally on a purchase order basis and do not
provide a contractual obligation to provide adequate supply or
acceptable pricing on a long-term basis. These vendors could
discontinue sourcing or supplying these magnets at any time. If any
of our significant vendors were to discontinue their relationship
with us or with our subcontractor, or if the factories were to
suffer a disruption in their production, we may be unable to
replace the vendors in a timely manner, which could result in
short-term disruption to our supply of magnets as we transition our
orders to new vendors or factories which could, in turn, cause a
significant increase in price or a disruption of imports, including
the imposition of import restrictions, could adversely affect our
business, financial condition and results of operations. The flow
of components from our vendors could also be adversely affected by
financial or political instability or travel restrictions or bans
in any of the countries in which the goods we purchase are
manufactured, if the instability or restriction affects the
production or export of product components from those countries.
Trade restrictions in the form of tariffs or quotas, or both, could
also affect the importation of those product components and could
increase the cost and reduce the supply of products available to
us. For example, the previous administration implemented, or was
considering the imposition of, tariffs on certain foreign goods,
and we cannot predict the ongoing status of tariffs or any further
potential legislation or actions taken by the U.S. federal
government that restrict trade, such as additional tariffs, trade
barriers, and other protectionist or retaliatory measures taken by
governments in Europe, Asia, and other countries, could adversely
impact our ability to sell products and services, which could
increase the cost of our products and the components and raw
materials that go into making them. Countries may also adopt other
protectionist measures that could limit our ability to offer our
products and services. In addition, decreases in the value of the
U.S. dollar against foreign currencies, or significant price
increase from these suppliers, could increase the cost of products
we purchase from overseas vendors.
We
may encounter problems at our manufacturing facilities or those of
our subcontractors or otherwise experience manufacturing delays
that could result in lost revenue.
We
subcontract all or part of the manufacture and assembly of
components of our products and devices. The products we design may
not satisfy all of the performance requirements of our customers
and we may need to improve or modify the design or ask our
subcontractors to modify their production process in order to do
so. In addition, we, or our subcontractors, may experience quality
problems, substantial costs and unexpected delays related to
efforts to upgrade and expand manufacturing, assembly and testing
capabilities. If we incur delays due to quality problems or other
unexpected events, our revenue may be impacted.
Our
growth may place a significant strain on our resources, and if we
fail to manage our growth, our ability to develop, market, and sell
our products will be harmed.
Our
business plan contemplates a period of substantial growth and
business activity. This growth and activity will likely result in
new and increased responsibilities for management personnel and
place significant strain upon our operating and financial systems
and resources. To accommodate our growth and compete effectively,
we will be required to improve our information systems, create
additional procedures and controls and expand, train, motivate and
manage our work force. We cannot be certain that our personnel,
systems, procedures, and controls will be adequate to support our
future operations. Any failure to effectively manage our growth
could impede our ability to successfully develop, market, and sell
our products.
Risks
Relating to Technology and Intellectual Property
Matters
The
rate of technological innovation of our products might not keep
pace with the rest of the market.
The
rate of innovation for the market in which our products compete is
fast-paced and requires significant resources and innovation. If
other products and technologies are developed that compete with, or
may compete with, our products, it could be difficult for us to
maintain our advantages associated with being an early developer of
this technology. Likewise, the innovation and development cycle of
competitors may impact our research and development efforts and
ultimately, commercial adoption of viable research and development
efforts. In addition, connectivity with other devices in the
electrophysiology lab is a key driver of value. If the Company is
not able to continue to commit sufficient resources to ensure that
its products are compatible with other products within the
electrophysiology lab, this could have a negative impact on
revenue.
Security
breaches and other disruptions to our information technology
infrastructure could interfere with our operations, compromise
confidential information, and expose us to liability which could
materially adversely impact our business and
reputation.
Security
breaches and other disruptions to our information technology
infrastructure could interfere with our operations; compromise
information belonging to us, our employees, customers, and
suppliers; and expose us to liability which could adversely impact
our business and reputation. In the ordinary course of business, we
rely on information technology networks and systems, some of which
are managed by third parties, to process, transmit, and store
electronic information, and to manage or support a variety of
business processes and activities. Additionally, we collect and
store certain data, including proprietary business information and
customer and employee data, and may have access to confidential or
personal information in certain of our businesses that is subject
to privacy and security laws, regulations, and customer-imposed
controls. Despite our cyber security measures (including employee
and third-party training, use of user names and passwords for
access to information technology systems, monitoring of networks
and systems, and maintenance of backup and protective systems)
which are continuously reviewed and upgraded, our information
technology networks and infrastructure may still be vulnerable to
damage, disruptions, or shutdowns due to attack by hackers,
breaches, employee error or malfeasance, power outages, computer
viruses, telecommunication or utility failures, systems failures,
war or other military conflicts, natural disasters, or other
catastrophic events. We have programs in place to detect, contain,
and respond to data security incidents, and we continually make
improvements to our networks and systems in order to minimize or
eliminate vulnerabilities. However, because the techniques used to
exploit systems change frequently and can be difficult to detect,
we may not be able to prevent these intrusions or mitigate them
when and if they occur. Additionally, we rely on some information
technology networks and systems managed by third parties, and we
rely on these third parties to deploy appropriate measures to
protect their systems and networks. Vulnerabilities in their
systems could compromise the security of our own infrastructure.
Any such events could result in legal claims or proceedings,
liability or penalties under privacy laws, disruption in
operations, and damage to our reputation, which could materially
adversely affect our business. While we have experienced, and
expect to continue to experience, these types of threats to our
information technology networks and infrastructure, to date none of
these threats has had a material impact on our business or
operations.
We
may be unable to protect our technology from use by third parties,
which may allow them to compete with us and harm our
business.
Our
commercial success depends in part on obtaining patent and other
intellectual property right protection for the technologies
contained in our products and on successfully defending these
rights against third party challenges. The patent positions of
medical device companies, including ours, can be highly uncertain
and involve complex and evolving legal and factual questions. We
cannot assure you that we will obtain the patent protection we
seek, that any protection we do obtain will be found valid and
enforceable if challenged or that it will confer any significant
commercial advantage. U.S. patents and patent applications may also
be subject to interference proceedings and U.S. patents may be
subject to re-examination proceedings in the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office, and foreign patents may be subject to opposition
or comparable proceedings in the corresponding foreign patent
office, which proceedings could result in either loss of the
patent, or denial of the patent application, or loss or reduction
in the scope of one or more of the claims of the patent or patent
application. In addition, such interference, re-examination, and
opposition proceedings may be costly. Thus, any patents that we own
or license from others may not provide any protection against
competitors. Our pending patent applications, those we may file in
the future, or those we may license from third parties may not
result in patents being issued and certain foreign patent
applications for medical related devices and methods may be found
unpatentable. If issued, they may not provide us with proprietary
protection or competitive advantages against competitors with
similar technology.
Some
of our technology was developed in conjunction with third parties,
and thus there is a risk that a third party may claim rights in our
intellectual property. Outside the U.S., we rely on third-party
payment services for the payment of foreign patent annuities and
other fees. Non-payment or delay in payment of such fees, whether
intentional or unintentional, may result in loss of patents or
patent rights important to our business. Many countries, including
certain countries in Europe, have compulsory licensing laws under
which a patent owner may be compelled to grant licenses to third
parties (for example, the patent owner has failed to “work” the
invention in that country, or the third party has patented
improvements). In addition, many countries limit the enforceability
of patents against government agencies or government contractors.
In these countries, the patent owner may have limited remedies,
which could materially diminish the value of the patent. We also
cannot assure you that we will be able to develop additional
patentable technologies. If we fail to obtain adequate patent
protection for our technology, or if any protection we obtain
becomes limited or invalidated, others may be able to make and sell
competing products, impairing our competitive position.
Our
trade secrets, nondisclosure agreements and other contractual
provisions to protect unpatented technology provide only limited
and possibly inadequate protection of our rights. As a result,
third parties may be able to use our unpatented technology, and our
ability to compete in the market would be reduced. In addition,
employees, consultants and others who participate in developing our
products or in commercial relationships with us may breach their
agreements with us regarding our intellectual property, and we may
not have adequate remedies for the breach.
Our
competitors may independently develop similar or alternative
technologies or products that are equal or superior to our
technology and products without infringing any of our patent or
other intellectual property rights, or may design around our
proprietary technologies. Our competitors may acquire similar or
even the same technology components that are utilized in our
current offering eroding some differentiation in the marketplace.
In addition, the laws of some foreign countries do not protect
intellectual property rights to the same extent, as do the laws of
the U.S., particularly in the field of medical products and
procedures.
Third
parties may assert that we are infringing their intellectual
property rights, and any defense of such assertions may be
unsuccessful and expensive, even if we are
successful.
Successfully
commercializing our products depends in part on not infringing
patents held by third parties. It is possible that one or more of
our products, including those that we have developed in conjunction
with third parties, infringes existing patents. We may also be
liable for patent infringement by third parties whose products we
use or combine with our own and for which we have no right to
indemnification. In addition, because patent applications are
maintained under conditions of confidentiality and can take many
years to issue, there may be applications now pending of which we
are unaware and which may later result in issued patents that our
products infringe. Determining whether a product infringes a patent
involves complex legal and factual issues and may not become clear
until finally determined by a court in litigation. Our competitors
may assert that our products infringe patents held by them.
Moreover, as the number of competitors in our market grows the
possibility of a patent infringement claim against us increases. If
we were unsuccessful in obtaining a license or redesigning our
products, we could be subject to litigation. If we lose in this
kind of litigation, a court could require us to pay substantial
damages or prohibit us from using technologies essential to our
products covered by third-party patents. An inability to use
technologies essential to our products would have a material
adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations
and cash flow and could undermine our ability to continue our
current business operations.
Expensive
intellectual property litigation is frequent in the medical device
industry and may cause to incur substantial expenses to
defend.
Infringement
actions, validity challenges and other intellectual property claims
and proceedings, whether with or without merit, can be expensive
and time-consuming and would divert management’s attention from our
business. We have incurred, and expect to continue to incur,
substantial costs in obtaining patents and may have to incur
substantial costs defending our proprietary rights. Incurring such
costs could have a material adverse effect on our financial
condition, results of operations and cash flow.
We
may not be able to maintain all the licenses or rights from third
parties necessary for the development, manufacture, or marketing of
new and existing products.
As we
develop additional products and improve or maintain existing
products, we may find it advisable or necessary to seek licenses or
otherwise make payments in exchange for rights from third parties
who hold patents covering certain technology. If we cannot obtain
or maintain the desired licenses or rights for any of our products,
we could be forced to try to design around those patents at
additional cost or abandon the product altogether, which could
adversely affect revenue and results of operations. If we have to
abandon a product, our ability to develop and grow our business in
new directions and markets would be adversely affected.
Our
products and related technologies can be applied in different
medical applications, and we may fail to focus on the most
profitable areas.
The
robotic magnetic navigation system is designed to have the
potential for expanded applications beyond electrophysiology and
interventional cardiology, including congestive heart failure,
structural heart repair, interventional neurosurgery,
interventional neuroradiology, peripheral vascular, pulmonology,
urology, gynecology and gastrointestinal medicine. However, we have
limited financial and managerial resources and, therefore, may be
required to focus on products in selected industries and sites and
to forego efforts with regard to other products and industries. Our
decisions may not produce viable commercial products and may divert
our resources from more profitable market opportunities. Moreover,
we may devote resources to developing products in these additional
areas but may be unable to justify the value proposition or
otherwise develop a commercial market for products we develop in
these areas, if any. In that case, the return on investment in
these additional areas may be limited, which could negatively
affect our results of operations.
We
may be subject to damages resulting from claims that our employees
or we have wrongfully used or disclosed alleged trade secrets of
their former employers.
Many
of our employees were previously employed at hospitals,
universities or other medical device companies, including our
competitors or potential competitors. We could, in the future, be
subject to claims that these employees or we have used or disclosed
trade secrets or other proprietary information of their former
employers. Litigation may be necessary to defend against these
claims. If we fail in defending such claims, in addition to paying
monetary damages, we may lose valuable intellectual property rights
or personnel. Even if we are successful in defending against these
claims, litigation could result in substantial costs and be a
distraction to management. Incurring such costs could have a
material adverse effect on our financial condition, results of
operations and cash flow.
Software
errors or other defects may be discovered in our products and the
resulting performance issues may damage our business and our
reputation in the industry in which we operate.
Our
products incorporate many components, including sophisticated
computer software. Complex software frequently contains errors,
especially when first introduced. Because our products are designed
to be used to perform complex interventional procedures, we expect
that physicians and hospitals will have an increased sensitivity to
the potential for software defects. We cannot assure you that our
software or other components will not experience errors or
performance problems in the future. If we experience software
errors or performance problems, we would likely also
experience:
|
● |
loss
of revenue; |
|
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delay
in market acceptance of our products; |
|
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damage
to our reputation; |
|
● |
additional
regulatory filings; |
|
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product
recalls; |
|
● |
increased
service or warranty costs; and/or |
|
● |
product
liability claims relating to the software defects. |
Risks
Related to Regulatory and Legal Matters
If
we or the parties in our strategic collaborations fail to obtain or
maintain necessary FDA clearances or approvals for our medical
device products, or if such clearances or approvals are delayed, we
will be unable to continue to commercially distribute and market
our products.
Our
products are medical devices that are subject to extensive
regulation in the U.S. and in foreign countries where we do
business. Each medical device that we wish to market in the U.S.
must be designated as exempt from premarket approval or
notification, or first receive either a 510(k) clearance, de novo
approval, or a pre-market approval, or PMA, from the U.S. FDA
pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, or FD&C
Act. The FDA’s 510(k) clearance process usually takes from four to
12 months, but it can take longer. The process of obtaining PMA
approval is much more costly, lengthy, and uncertain, generally
taking from one to three years or even longer. Although we have
510(k) clearance for many of our products, including disposable
interventional devices, and we are able to market these products
commercially in the U.S., our business model relies significantly
on revenue from new disposable interventional devices, some of
which may not achieve FDA clearance or approval. We cannot assure
you that any of our devices will not be required to undergo the
lengthier and more burdensome PMA process. We cannot commercially
market any disposable interventional devices in the U.S. until the
necessary clearances or approvals from the FDA have been received.
In addition, we are working with third parties to co-develop
disposable products. In some cases, these companies are responsible
for obtaining appropriate regulatory clearance or approval to
market these disposable devices. If these clearances or approvals
are not received or are substantially delayed or if we are not able
to offer a sufficient array of approved disposable interventional
devices, we may not be able to successfully market our system to as
many institutions as we currently expect, which could have a
material adverse impact on our financial condition, results of
operations and cash flow.
Furthermore,
obtaining 510(k) clearances, de novo approvals, PMAs or PMA
supplement approvals, from the FDA could result in unexpected and
significant costs for us and consume management’s time and other
resources. The FDA could ask us to supplement our submissions,
collect non-clinical data, conduct clinical trials or engage in
other time-consuming actions, or it could simply deny our
applications. In addition, even if we obtain a 510(k) clearance, de
novo approvals, or PMA or PMA supplement approval, the clearance or
approval could be revoked or other restrictions imposed if
post-market data demonstrates safety issues or lack of
effectiveness. We cannot predict with certainty how, or when, the
FDA will act on our marketing applications. If we are unable to
obtain the necessary regulatory approvals, our financial condition
and cash flow may be adversely affected. Also, a failure to obtain
approvals may limit our ability to grow domestically and
internationally.
If
our strategic collaborations elect not to or we fail to obtain
regulatory approvals in other countries for products under
development, we will not be able to commercialize these products in
those countries.
In
order to market our products outside of the U.S., we and our
strategic collaborations or distributors must establish and comply
with numerous and varying regulatory requirements of other
countries regarding safety and efficacy. Approval procedures vary
among countries and can involve additional product testing and
additional administrative review periods. The time required to
obtain approval in other countries might differ from that required
to obtain FDA approval. The regulatory approval process in other
countries may include all of the risks detailed above regarding FDA
approval in the U.S. Regulatory approval in one country does not
ensure regulatory approval in another, but a failure or delay in
obtaining regulatory approval in one country may negatively impact
the regulatory process in others. Failure to obtain regulatory
approval in other countries or any delay or setback in obtaining
such approval could have the same adverse effects described above
regarding FDA approval in the U.S. In addition, we may rely on our
distributors and strategic collaborations, in some instances, to
assist us in this regulatory approval process in countries outside
the U.S. and Europe, for example, in Japan.
We
may fail to comply with continuing regulatory requirements of the
FDA and other authorities and become subject to enforcement action,
which may include substantial penalties.
Even
after product clearance or approval, we must comply with continuing
regulation by the FDA and other authorities, including the FDA’s
Quality System Regulation, or QSR, requirements, labeling and
promotional requirements and medical device adverse event and other
reporting requirements. Any failure to comply with continuing
regulation by the FDA or other authorities could result in
enforcement action that may include suspension or withdrawal of
regulatory approvals, recalling products, ceasing product
manufacture and/or marketing, seizure and detention of products,
paying significant fines and penalties, criminal prosecution and
similar actions that could limit product sales, delay product
shipment and harm our profitability. Congress could amend the
FD&C Act, and the FDA could modify its regulations promulgated
under this law or its policies in a way to make ongoing regulatory
compliance more burdensome and difficult.
Additionally,
any modification to an FDA 510(k) cleared or de novo-approved
device that could significantly affect its safety or effectiveness,
or that would constitute a major change in its intended use,
requires a new 510(k) clearance. Modifications to a PMA approved
device or its labeling may require either a new PMA or PMA
supplement approval, which could be a costly and lengthy process.
In addition, if we are unable to obtain approval for key
applications, we may face product market adoption barriers that we
cannot overcome. In the future, we may modify our products after
they have received clearance or approval, and we may determine that
new clearance or approval is unnecessary. We cannot assure you that
the FDA would agree with any of our decisions not to seek new
clearance or approval. If the FDA requires us to seek clearance or
approval for any modification that we determined to not require
clearance or approval in the first instance, we could be subject to
enforcement sanctions and we also may be required to cease
marketing or recall the modified product until we obtain FDA
clearance or approval which could also limit product sales, delay
product shipment and harm our profitability.
In
many foreign countries in which we market our products, we are
subject to regulations affecting, among other things, product
standards, packaging requirements, labeling requirements, import
restrictions, tariff regulations, duties and tax requirements. Many
of these regulations are similar to those of the FDA or other U.S.
regulations. In addition, in many countries the national health or
social security organizations require our products to be qualified
before procedures performed using our products become eligible for
reimbursement. Failure to receive, or delays in the receipt of,
relevant foreign qualifications could have a material adverse
effect on our business, financial condition and results of
operations. Due to the movement toward harmonization of standards
in Europe, we expect a changing regulatory environment
characterized by a shift from a country-by-country regulatory
system to a Europe-wide single regulatory system. We cannot predict
the timing of this harmonization and its effect on us. Adapting our
business to changing regulatory systems could have a material
adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results of
operations. If we fail to comply with applicable foreign regulatory
requirements, we may be subject to fines, suspension, or withdrawal
of regulatory approvals, product recalls, seizure of products,
operating restrictions and criminal prosecution.
In
addition, we are subject to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,
anti-bribery, antitrust and anti-competition laws, and similar laws
in foreign countries. Any violation of these laws by our
distributors or agents or by us could create a substantial
liability for us and also cause a loss of reputation in the market.
From time to time, we may face audits or investigations by one or
more government agencies, compliance with which could be costly and
time-consuming, and could divert our management and key personnel
from our business operations. An adverse outcome under any such
investigation or audit could subject us to fines or other
penalties, which could adversely affect our business and financial
results.
Our
suppliers, subcontractors, or we may fail to comply with the FDA
quality system regulation or other quality
standards.
Our
manufacturing processes must comply with the FDA’s QSR, which
covers the methods and documentation of the design, testing,
production, control, quality assurance, labeling, packaging and
shipping of our products. The FDA enforces the QSR through
inspections. We cannot assure you that we or our suppliers or
subcontractors would pass such an inspection. The European Union
recently adopted new EN ISO 13485:2016 standards, and we have been
certified to these standards. If we or our suppliers or
subcontractors fail to comply with the FDA regulation or EN ISO
13485:2016 standards, we or they may be required to cease all or
part of our operations for some period of time until we or they can
demonstrate that appropriate steps have been taken to comply with
such standards or face other enforcement action, such as a public
warning letter, untitled letter, fines, injunctions, civil
penalties, seizures, operating restrictions, partial suspension or
total shutdown of production, refusing requests for 510(k)
clearance, de novo petitions, or PMA approval of new products,
withdrawing 510(k) clearance, de novo approvals, or PMA approvals
already granted, and/or criminal prosecution. We cannot be certain
that our facilities or those of our suppliers or subcontractors
will comply with the FDA or EN ISO 13485:2016 standards in future
audits by regulatory authorities. Failure to pass such an
inspection could force a shutdown of manufacturing operations, a
recall of our products or the imposition of other enforcement
sanctions, which would significantly harm our revenue and
profitability. Further, we cannot assure you that our key component
suppliers are or will continue to be in compliance with applicable
regulatory requirements and quality standards and will not
encounter any manufacturing difficulties. Any failure to comply
with the FDA’s QSR or EN ISO 13485:2016, by us or our suppliers,
could significantly harm our available inventory and product sales.
Further, any failure to comply with FDA’s QSR, by us or our
suppliers, could result in the FDA refusing requests for and/or
delays in 510(k) clearance, de novo approval, or PMA approval of
new products.
If
we fail to comply with health care regulations, we could face
substantial penalties and our business, operations and financial
condition could be adversely affected.
While
we do not control referrals of health care services or bill
directly to Medicare, Medicaid or other third-party payors, many
health care laws and regulations apply to our business. We are
subject to health care fraud and patient privacy regulation by the
federal government, the states in which we conduct our business,
and internationally. The regulations that may affect our ability to
operate include:
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the
federal healthcare program Anti-Kickback Statute, which prohibits,
among other things, persons from soliciting, receiving or providing
remuneration, directly or indirectly, to induce either the referral
of an individual, for an item or service or the purchasing or
ordering of a good or service, for which payment may be made under
federal health care programs such as the Medicare and Medicaid
programs; |
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federal
false claims laws which prohibit, among other things, individuals
or entities from knowingly presenting, or causing to be presented,
claims for payment from Medicare, Medicaid, or other third-party
payors that are false or fraudulent, and which may apply to
entities like us if we provide coding and billing advice to
customers; |
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the
federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of
1996, or HIPAA, which prohibits executing a scheme to defraud any
health care benefit program or making false statements relating to
health care matters and which also imposes certain requirements
relating to the privacy, security and transmission of individually
identifiable health information; and the applicable Privacy and
Security Standards of HITECH, the Health Information Technology for
Economic and Clinical Health Act, which is Title XIII of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act; |
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state
law equivalents of each of the above federal laws, such as
anti-kickback and false claims laws which may apply to items or
services reimbursed by any third-party payor, including commercial
insurers, and state laws governing the privacy of health
information in certain circumstances, many of which differ from
each other in significant ways and often are not preempted by
HIPAA, thus complicating compliance efforts, including the
California Consumer Privacy Act, or CCPA, which is introduces new
and far-reaching law data privacy compliance burdens on many
organizations doing business in California who collect personal
information about California residents; |
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the
General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, which imposes
requirements for controllers and processors of personal data and is
in effect across the European Economic Area, or EEA, such as
imposing higher standards when obtaining consent from individuals
to process their personal data, requiring more robust disclosures
to individuals, strengthening individual data rights, shortening
timelines for data breach notifications, limiting retention periods
and secondary use of information, increasing requirements
pertaining to health data as well as pseudonymised data, and
imposing additional obligations when we contract third-party
processors in connection with the processing of personal
data; |
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federal
self-referral laws, such as the Stark Anti-Referral Law, which
prohibits a physician from making a referral to a provider of
certain health services with which the physician or the physician’s
family member has a financial interest; |
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federal
and state Sunshine laws, which require manufacturers of certain
medical devices to collect and report information on payments or
transfers of value to physicians and teaching hospitals, as well as
investment interests held by physicians and their immediate family
members; and |
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regulations
pertaining to receipt of CE mark for our products marketed outside
of the United States and submission to periodic regulatory audits
in order to maintain these regulatory approvals. |
If
our operations are found to be in violation of any of the laws
described above or any other governmental laws or regulations that
apply to us, we may be subject to penalties, including civil and
criminal penalties, damages, fines, loss of reimbursement for our
products under federal or state government health programs such as
Medicare and Medicaid and the curtailment or restructuring of our
operations. Any penalties, damages, fines, curtailment, or
restructuring of our operations could adversely affect our ability
to operate our business and our financial results. The risk of our
being found in violation of these laws is increased by the fact
that many of them have not been fully interpreted by the regulatory
authorities or the courts, and their provisions are open to a
variety of interpretations. Any action against us for violation of
these laws, even if we successfully defend against it, could cause
us to incur significant legal expense and divert our management’s
attention from the operation of our business. Moreover, to achieve
compliance with applicable federal and state privacy, security, and
electronic transaction laws, we may be required to modify our
operations with respect to the handling of patient information.
Implementing these modifications may prove costly. At this time, we
are not able to determine the full consequences to us, including
the total cost of compliance, of these various federal and state
laws.
Healthcare
policy changes, including the potential repeal or amendment of any
existing legislation, may have a material adverse effect on
us.
In
response to perceived increases in health care costs in recent
years, there have been and continues to be proposals by the federal
administration, members of Congress, state governments, regulators
and third-party payors to control these costs and, more generally,
to reform the U.S. healthcare system.
Decisions
by both the federal and state governments on funding priorities for
various healthcare programs impact the finances of our customers on
an ongoing and recurring basis. Such decisions may impact
purchasing decisions of a customer.
Changes
to, or repeal of, the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (PPACA), which different administrations and certain members of
Congress have affirmatively indicated that they will pursue, could
materially and adversely affect our business and financial
position, and results of operations. Even if the PPACA is not
amended or repealed, the administration could propose changes
impacting implementation of the PPACA, which could materially and
adversely affect our financial position or operations. However, we
cannot currently predict the content, timing or impact that any
such future legislation will have on our business.
The
application of state certificate of need regulations and compliance
by our customers with federal and state licensing or other
international requirements could substantially limit our ability to
sell our products and grow our business.
Some
states require health care providers to obtain a certificate of
need or similar regulatory approval prior to the acquisition of
high-cost capital items such as our products. In many cases, a
limited number of these certificates are available. As a result of
this limited availability, hospitals and other health care
providers may be unable to obtain a certificate of need for the
purchase of our systems. Further, the sales and installation cycle
of our robotic magnetic navigation systems may be longer in
certificate of need states due to the time it takes our customers
to obtain the required approvals. In addition, our customers must
meet various federal and state regulatory and/or accreditation
requirements in order to receive payments from government-sponsored
health care programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, receive full
reimbursement from third party payors, and maintain their
customers. Our international customers may be required to meet
similar or other requirements. Any lapse by our customers in
maintaining appropriate licensure, certification or accreditation,
or the failure of our customers to satisfy the other necessary
requirements under government-sponsored health care programs or
other requirements could cause our sales to decline.
Hospitals
or physicians may be unable to obtain reimbursement from
third-party payors for procedures using our products, or
reimbursement for procedures may be insufficient to recoup the
costs of purchasing our products.
We
expect that U.S. hospitals will continue to bill various
third-party payors, such as Medicare, Medicaid and other government
programs and private insurance plans, for procedures performed with
our products, including the costs of the disposable interventional
devices used in these procedures. If, in the future, our disposable
interventional devices do not fall within U.S. reimbursement
categories and our procedures are not reimbursed, or if the
reimbursement is insufficient to cover the costs of purchasing our
system and related disposable interventional devices, the adoption
of our systems and products would be significantly slowed or
halted, and we may be unable to generate sufficient sales to
support our business. Our success in international markets also
depends upon the eligibility of our products for reimbursement
through government-sponsored health care payment systems and
third-party payors. In both the U.S. and foreign markets, health
care cost-containment efforts are prevalent and are expected to
continue. These efforts could reduce levels of reimbursement
available for procedures involving our products and, therefore,
reduce overall demand for our products as well. A failure to
generate sufficient sales could have a material adverse impact on
our financial condition, results of operations and cash
flow.
Our
costs could substantially increase if we receive a significant
number of warranty claims or have other significant, uninsured
liabilities.
We
generally warrant each of our products against defects in materials
and workmanship for a period of 12 months following the
installation of our system. If product returns or warranty claims
increase, we could incur unanticipated additional expenditures for
parts and service. In addition, our reputation and goodwill in the
interventional lab market could be damaged. Unforeseen warranty
exposure in excess of our established reserves for liabilities
associated with product warranties could materially and adversely
affect our financial condition, results of operations and cash
flow.
Moreover,
for certain risks, we do not maintain insurance coverage because of
cost and/or availability. In addition, in the future, we may not
continue to maintain certain existing insurance coverage or
adequate levels of coverage. Premiums for many types of insurance
have increased significantly in recent years and, depending on
market conditions and our circumstances, in the future, certain
types of insurance, such as directors’ and officers’ insurance, may
not be available on acceptable terms or at all. Because we retain
some portion of our insurable risks and, in some cases, we are
entirely self-insured, unforeseen or catastrophic losses in excess
of insurance coverage could require us to pay substantial amounts,
which may have a material adverse impact on our business, financial
condition, results of operations, or cash flows.
Risks
Related to Our Common Stock
Our
principal stockholders continue to own a large percentage of our
voting stock, and they have the ability to substantially influence
matters requiring stockholder approval.
Certain
of our directors and individuals or entities affiliated with them
as well as other principal stockholders beneficially own or control
a substantial percentage of the outstanding shares of our common
stock. Accordingly, these stockholders acting as a group, will have
substantial influence over the outcome of corporate actions
requiring stockholder approval, including the election of
directors, any merger, consolidation or sale of all or
substantially all of our assets or any other significant corporate
transaction. These stockholders may also delay or prevent a change
of control, even if such a change of control would benefit our
other stockholders. This significant concentration of stock
ownership may adversely affect the trading price of our common
stock due to investors’ perception that conflicts of interest may
exist or arise.
Future
issuances of our securities could dilute current stockholders’
ownership.
As of
December 31, 2021, we had 5.6 million shares of our common stock
issuable upon conversion of our Series B Convertible Preferred
Stock and 45.3 million shares of our common stock issuable upon
conversion of our Series A Convertible Preferred Stock. Our Series
A Convertible Preferred Stock bears dividends at a rate of six
percent (6.0%) per annum, which are cumulative and accrue daily
from the date of issuance on the $1,000 stated value. Such
dividends will not be paid in cash, except in connection with any
liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company or any
redemption of the Series A Convertible Preferred Stock. Instead,
the value of the accrued dividends is added to the liquidation
preference of the Series A Convertible Preferred Stock and will
increase the number of shares of common stock issuable upon
conversion, which will dilute the ownership of our common
stockholders.
In
addition, a significant number of shares of our common stock are
subject to issuance under our existing stock incentive plans and we
may request the ability to issue additional such securities. We may
also decide to raise additional funds through public or private
debt or equity financing to fund our operations. While we cannot
predict the effect, if any, that future sales of debt, our common
stock, other equity securities or securities exercisable for or
convertible into our common stock or other equity securities or the
availability of any of the foregoing for future sale, will have on
the market price of our common stock, it is likely that sales of
substantial amounts of our common stock (including shares issued
upon the exercise of stock options and stock appreciation rights,
the vesting of the CEO Performance Share Unit Award and restricted
stock units, or the conversion of any convertible securities
outstanding now or in the future, including the Series A and Series
B Convertible Preferred Shares), will dilute the ownership of our
existing stockholders and that the perception that such sales could
occur, will adversely affect prevailing market prices for our
common stock.
Further,
the Series A Convertible Preferred Stock rank senior to our common
stock as to distributions and payments upon the liquidation,
dissolution and winding up of the Company. No such distributions or
payments upon the liquidation, dissolution and winding up of the
Company may be made to holders of common stock unless and until the
holders of the Series A Convertible Preferred Shares have received
the stated value of $1,000 per share plus any accrued and unpaid
dividends. Until all Series A Convertible Preferred Shares have
been converted or redeemed, no dividends may be paid on the common
stock without the express written consent of the holders of a
majority of the outstanding Series A Convertible Preferred Shares.
In the event that dividends or other distributions of assets are
made or paid by the Company to the holders of the common stock, the
holders of Series A Convertible Preferred Shares are entitled to
participate in such dividend or distribution on an as-converted
basis. Any such distributions or payments upon the liquidation,
dissolution or winding up of the Company may dilute the ownership
interests of our existing stockholders.
We
have never paid dividends on our common stock, and we do not
anticipate paying any cash dividends in the foreseeable
future.
We
have paid no cash dividends on any of our classes of common stock
to date and we currently intend to retain our future earnings to
fund the development and growth of our business. As a result,
capital appreciation, if any, of our common stock will be an
investor’s sole source of gain for the foreseeable
future.
Our
certificate of incorporation and bylaws, Delaware law, and one of
our collaboration agreements contain provisions that could
discourage a takeover.
Our
certificate of incorporation and bylaws and Delaware law contain
provisions that might enable our management to resist a takeover.
These provisions may:
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discourage,
delay or prevent a change in the control of our company or a change
in our management; |
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adversely
affect the voting power of holders of common stock; and |
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limit
the price that investors might be willing to pay in the future for
shares of our common stock. |
In
addition, our collaboration agreement with Biosense Webster
contains provisions that may similarly discourage a takeover and
negatively affect our share price as described above under
“Business-Strategic Relationships”.
Evolving
regulation of corporate governance and public disclosure may result
in additional expenses and continuing uncertainty.
Changing
laws, regulations and standards relating to corporate governance
and public disclosure, including SEC regulations such as the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act have in
the past created uncertainty for public companies. We continue to
evaluate and monitor developments with respect to new and proposed
rules and cannot predict or estimate the amount of the additional
compliance costs we may incur or the timing of such costs. These
new or changed laws, regulations and standards are subject to
varying interpretations, in many cases due to their lack of
specificity, and as a result, their application in practice may
evolve over time as new guidance is provided by courts and
regulatory and governing bodies. This could result in uncertainty
regarding compliance matters and higher costs necessitated by
ongoing revisions to disclosure and governance practices.
Maintaining appropriate standards of corporate governance and
public disclosure may result in increased general and
administrative expense and a diversion of management time and
attention from revenue-generating activities to compliance
activities. In addition, if we fail to comply with new or changed
laws, regulations and standards, regulatory authorities may
initiate legal proceedings against us and our business and
reputation may be harmed.
Our
future operating results may be below securities analysts’ or
investors’ expectations, which could cause our stock price to
decline.
The
revenue and income potential of our products and our business model
are unproven, and we may be unable to generate significant revenue
or grow at the rate expected by securities analysts or investors.
In addition, our costs may be higher than we, securities analysts,
or investors expect. If we fail to generate sufficient revenue or
our costs are higher than we expect, our results of operations will
suffer, which in turn could cause our stock price to decline. Our
results of operations will depend upon numerous factors,
including:
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demand
for our products; |
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the
performance of third-party contract manufacturers and component
suppliers; |
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our
ability to develop sales and marketing capabilities; |
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the
success of our strategic relationships with two multinational
fluoroscopy system manufacturers and one provider of catheters and
electrophysiology mapping systems; |
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our
ability to develop, introduce and market integrated next generation
systems and/or alternatives to our current strategic relationships
with fluoroscopy system manufacturers and the catheter and
electrophysiology mapping system provider on a timely
basis; |
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our
ability to develop, introduce and market new or enhanced versions
of our products on a timely basis; |
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our
ability to obtain regulatory clearances or approvals for our new
products; and |
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our
ability to obtain and protect proprietary rights. |
Our
operating results in any particular period may not be a reliable
indication of our future performance. In some future quarters, our
operating results may be below the expectations of securities
analysts or investors. If this occurs the price of our common stock
will likely decline.
We
expect that the price of our common stock could fluctuate
substantially, possibly resulting in class action securities
litigation.
While
our common stock is traded on the NYSE American Market, trading
volume may be limited or sporadic. The market price of our common
stock has experienced, and may continue to experience, substantial
volatility. During 2021, our common stock traded between $4.31 and
$10.30 per share, on trading volume ranging from approximately
93,800 to 4.5 million shares per day. The market price of our
common stock will be affected by a number of factors,
including:
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actual
or anticipated variations in our results of operations or those of
our competitors; |
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the
receipt or denial of regulatory approvals; |
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announcements
of new products, technological innovations or product advancements
by us or our competitors; |
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developments
with respect to patents and other intellectual property
rights; |
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changes
in earnings estimates or recommendations by securities analysts or
our failure to achieve analyst earnings estimates; |
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developments
in our industry; and |
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participants
in the market for our common stock may take short positions with
respect to our common stock. |
These
factors, as well as general economic, credit, political and market
conditions, may materially adversely affect the market price of our
common stock. As with the stock of many other public companies, the
market price of our common stock has been particularly volatile
during the recent period of upheaval in the capital markets and
world economy. This excessive volatility may continue for an
extended period of time following the filing date of this report.
Furthermore, the stock prices of many companies in the medical
device industry have experienced wide fluctuations that have often
been unrelated to the operating performance of these companies.
Volatility in the price of our common stock on the NYSE American
Market may depress the trading price of our common stock, which
could, among other things, allow a potential acquirer of the
Company to purchase a significant amount of our common stock at low
prices. In addition, the volatility of our stock price could lead
to class action securities litigation being filed against us, which
could result in substantial costs and a diversion of our management
resources, which could significantly harm our business.
If
we fail to continue to meet all applicable NYSE American Market
requirements and the NYSE American determines to delist our common
stock, the delisting could adversely affect the market liquidity of
our common stock, which would impair the value of your investment
and ultimately harm our business by limiting our access to equity
markets for capital raising.
Our
common stock is currently listed on the NYSE American Market. We
currently meet the continued listing standards of NYSE American.
However, we cannot guarantee that we will be able to continue to
comply with the required standards in order to maintain a listing
of our common stock on the NYSE American. If we fail to continue to
meet all applicable NYSE American requirements in the future and
the NYSE American determines to delist our common stock, the
delisting could adversely affect the market liquidity of our common
stock, which would adversely affect our ability to obtain financing
for the continuation of our operations, as a result, harming our
business. This delisting could also impair the value of your
investment.
Risks
Related to the February 2021 CEO Performance Stock Unit
Grant
We
will incur significant additional stock-based compensation expense
over the term of the CEO Performance Award regardless of whether or
not any of the milestones are achieved.
As
described in Note 9 of the accompanying notes to the consolidated
financial statements in Part II, Item 8 of this Form 10-K, on
February 23, 2021, the Company`s Board of Directors, upon
recommendation of the Compensation Committee, approved the grant of
the Performance Share Unit Award (“CEO Performance Award”) pursuant
to the CEO Performance Share Unit Award Agreement (the “PSU
Agreement”), to David L. Fischel, the Company’s Chief Executive
Officer. Under the terms of the PSU Agreement, we will incur
significant additional stock-based compensation expense over the
term of the award regardless of whether or not any of the
milestones are achieved as the probability of meeting the ten
market capitalization milestones is not considered in determining
the timing of expense recognition. The expense will be recognized
on an accelerated basis through 2030. Total stock-based
compensation recorded as operating expense for the CEO Performance
Award was $6.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2021. As of
December 31, 2021, the Company had approximately $51.3 million of
total unrecognized stock-based compensation expense remaining under
the CEO Performance Award if Mr. Fischel continues to serve as CEO,
or in a similar capacity, through 2030. This additional stock-based
compensation expense, incurred regardless of whether or not any
milestones are achieved, increases the difficulty for the Company
to achieve a profitable position as measured by generally accepted
accounting principles.
Our
stockholders may experience substantial dilution upon payout of
shares under the CEO Performance Award.
If
Mr. Fischel achieves all the milestones specified in the CEO
Performance Award, by increasing the Company’s market
capitalization to $5.5 billion for the specified period, he will
receive 13,000,000 shares of common stock subject to the vesting
requirements in the agreement. If (i) all 13,000,000 shares of
common stock subject to the PSU Agreement were to become fully
vested, outstanding and held by Mr. Fischel; (ii) all other shares
of common stock and stock units held by Mr. Fischel were fully
vested and were outstanding; (iii) estimated dilution as a result
of potential exercises or conversions from existing grants to
employees and non-employee directors and the outstanding
convertible preferred stock were to be considered; and (iv) there
were no other dilutive events of any kind, Mr. Fischel would
beneficially own approximately 10% of the outstanding shares of
Stereotaxis common stock after the dilutive events described above
and without considering the impact of any other potential future
dilutive events or the potential sale of stock required to pay
taxes upon the vesting of the restricted stock units.
Certain
provisions in the PSU Agreement may discourage a change in control
of the Company even if such a transaction would otherwise be
beneficial to our stockholders.
Under
the terms of the CEO Performance Award, in the event of a change in
control of the Company, the market capitalization formula will be
modified to equal the total amount of consideration paid to all
equity holders of the Company, with the number of shares to be
issued pursuant to the CEO Performance Grant giving effect to such
valuation. For all valuations above $1.0 billion in connection with
a change in control, partial credit for the next following tranche
shall be allocated pro rata based on the market capitalization in
such change in control. Any vested shares upon such a change in
control will vest and be paid at the time of the consummation of
the change in control, and the service component of the CEO
Performance Award will otherwise be disregarded. These terms may
discourage potential business partners from pursuing a merger or
acquisition, even if the merger or acquisition would be viewed
favorably by, or be beneficial to, our other
stockholders.
We
are highly dependent on the services of Mr. Fischel, and our
compensation package, including the CEO Performance Award, may fail
to retain him.
Since
assuming the role of CEO in February 2017, Mr. Fischel has
revitalized the Company’s commercial capabilities, strengthened its
financial position, and led the development of a robust innovation
strategy, and stockholders have benefited substantially, with
Stereotaxis’ stock appreciating substantially. However, between
February 2017 and December 2020, Mr. Fischel served as CEO without
drawing a salary or any other form of cash or equity compensation
for his work as CEO, and currently his only compensation is an
annual salary of $60,000, which is substantially below market.
While the Board believes that the CEO Performance Award provides
substantial future benefit to all its stockholders and incentivizes
Mr. Fischel to serve as CEO for the long term, there is no
assurance that Mr. Fischel will continue as CEO.
General
Risk Factors
General
economic conditions could materially adversely impact
us.
Our
operating performance is dependent upon economic conditions in the
United States and in other countries in which we operate.
Uncertainty about current global economic conditions and future
global economic conditions may cause customers to delay purchasing
or installation decisions or cancel existing orders. The robotic
magnetic navigation systems and Odyssey Solution are
typically purchased as part of a larger overall capital project and
an economic downturn or the lack of a robust recovery might make it
more difficult for our customers, including distributors, to obtain
adequate financing to support the project or to obtain requisite
approvals. Any delay in purchasing decisions or cancellation of
purchasing commitments may result in a decrease in our revenues. A
credit crisis could further affect our business if key suppliers
are unable to obtain financing to manufacture our products or
become insolvent and we are unable to manufacture product to meet
customer demand. If the United States and global economy becomes
sluggish or deteriorates for a longer period than we anticipate, we
may experience a material negative decrease on the demand for our
products which may, in turn, have a material adverse effect on our
revenue, profitability, financial condition, ability to raise
additional capital and the market price of our stock.
We
may lose key personnel or fail to attract and retain replacement or
additional personnel.
We
are highly dependent on the principal members of our management, as
well as our scientific and sales staff. Attracting and retaining
qualified personnel will be critical to our success, and
competition for qualified personnel is intense. We may not be able
to attract and retain personnel on acceptable terms given the
competition for qualified personnel among technology and healthcare
companies and universities. The loss of personnel or our inability
to attract and retain other qualified personnel could harm our
business and our ability to compete. In addition, the loss of
members of our scientific staff may significantly delay or prevent
product development and other business objectives. A loss of key
sales personnel could result in a reduction of revenue. In
addition, if we outsource certain employee functions that were
formerly handled in-house, our personnel costs could
increase.
We
face currency and other risks associated with international
operations.
We
intend to continue to devote significant efforts to marketing our
systems and products outside of the U.S. This strategy will expose
us to numerous risks associated with international operations,
which could adversely affect our results of operations and
financial condition, including the following:
|
● |
currency
fluctuations that could impact the demand for our products or
result in currency exchange losses; |
|
● |
export
restrictions, tariff and trade regulations and foreign tax
laws; |
|
● |
customs
duties, export quotas or other trade restrictions; |
|
● |
travel
restrictions or bans; |
|
● |
economic
and political instability; |
|
● |
war
or other military conflicts, such as the current hostilities
between Russia and Ukraine, and any related impact on macroeconomic
conditions as a result of such conflict; and |
|
● |
shipping
delays. |
In
addition, contracts may be difficult to enforce and receivables may
be difficult to collect through a foreign country’s legal
system.
ITEM
1B. |
UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS |
We
have not received any written comments regarding our periodic or
current reports from the staff of the SEC that were issued 180 days
or more preceding the end of our 2021 fiscal year and that remain
unresolved.
On March 1, 2021, the Company entered into an office lease
agreement (the “Lease”) with Globe Building Company (the
“Landlord”), under which the Company will lease executive office
space and manufacturing facilities of approximately 43,100 square
feet of rentable space located at 710 N. Tucker Boulevard, St.
Louis, Missouri (the “Premises”) that will serve as the Company’s
new principal executive and administrative offices and
manufacturing facility. Lease payments commenced January 1, 2022
and the lease has a term of ten years, with two renewal options of
five years each. The
new lease space includes approximately 23,000 square feet of office
space and 20,100 square feet of demonstration and assembly space.
The Company gained access to
the Premises in the third quarter 2021 to begin constructing
leasehold improvements. In the fourth quarter of 2021, the Company
received an occupancy permit and relocated its operations to the
new leased space.
The Company’s previous primary facilities were also located in St.
Louis, Missouri and the Company leased approximately 52,000 square
feet of office space and 12,000 square feet of demonstration and
assembly space under a lease agreement that ended December 31,
2021.
In
August 2016, the Company entered into an agreement to sublease
approximately 11,000 square feet of office space immediately and an
additional 16,000 square feet of office space beginning in January
of 2017. The sublease ended December 31, 2021.
We
lease approximately 2,200 square feet of office space in Maple
Grove, Minnesota, under a lease agreement through October 31, 2023,
and have leased office space in Amsterdam, The Netherlands through
August 31, 2022. In addition, we lease an office space in Beijing,
China under a lease agreement through November 29, 2023.
ITEM
3. |
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS |
The
Company is involved from time to time in various lawsuits and
claims arising in the normal course of business. Although the
outcomes of these lawsuits and claims are uncertain, the Company
does not believe any of them are likely to have a material adverse
effect on our business, financial condition or results of
operations.
As
previously disclosed, on April 29, 2021, a putative class action
complaint was filed in Delaware Chancery Court by Richard Barre, a
purported shareholder, against the Company and its current
directors, as defendants (the “Action”). The complaint alleged
breaches of fiduciary duty against the defendants based on alleged
disclosure deficiencies in the definitive proxy statement (the
“Proxy Statement”) filed by the Company on April 9, 2021 relative
to the vote at the Company’s 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
that was to be held on May 20, 2021 (the “2021 Stockholder
Meeting”) seeking stockholder approval of issuance of shares under
the Performance Share Unit Award (the “CEO Performance Award”)
granted to David L. Fischel, the Company’s chief executive officer.
The complaint sought various remedies, including a preliminary
injunction seeking to enjoin the vote at the 2021 Stockholder
Meeting to approve the issuance of shares for the CEO Performance
Award.
Although
the Company believed that the claims were wholly without merit and
that no further disclosure was required to supplement the Proxy
Statement under applicable law, as previously disclosed, the
Company filed a supplement to the Proxy Statement on May 10, 2021
(the “Proxy Supplement”) addressing the alleged disclosure claims
in order to eliminate the burden, expense, and uncertainties
inherent in such litigation, and without admitting any liability or
wrongdoing. On May 12, 2021, the plaintiff withdrew the motion for
a preliminary injunction and voluntarily dismissed the Action,
reserving the right to apply for an award of attorneys’ fees and
reimbursement of expenses.
On
May 21, 2021, the Chancery Court approved a stipulation under which
the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the Action with prejudice as to
itself only, but without prejudice as to any other putative class
member. The Chancery Court retained jurisdiction solely for the
purpose of adjudicating the anticipated application of plaintiff’s
counsel for an award of attorneys’ fees and reimbursement of
expenses in connection with the supplemental disclosures included
in the Proxy Supplement.
The
Company subsequently agreed to pay $675,000 to the plaintiff’s
counsel for attorneys’ fees and expenses in full satisfaction of
the claim for attorneys’ fees and expenses in the Action. The
Chancery Court has not been asked to review, and will pass no
judgment on, the payment of the attorneys’ fees and expenses or
their reasonableness.
ITEM
4. |
MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES |
Not
applicable.
PART II
ITEM
5. |
MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER
MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES |
PRICE
RANGE OF COMMON STOCK
Our
common stock began trading on the NASDAQ Global Market under the
symbol “STXS” on August 12, 2004 and was transferred to the NASDAQ
Capital Market effective August 19, 2013. On August 4, 2016 our
common stock was transferred to the OTCQX® Best Market
and on September 6, 2019 our common stock was transferred to the
NYSE American Market.
As of
February 28, 2022, there were approximately 417 stockholders of
record of our common stock, although we believe that there is a
significantly larger number of beneficial owners of our common
stock.
ITEM
6. |
SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA |
Not
applicable.
ITEM
7. |
MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS |
The
following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction
with our financial statements and notes thereto included in this
report on Form 10-K. Operating results are not necessarily
indicative of results that may occur in future
periods.
This
report includes various forward-looking statements that are subject
to risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control.
Our actual results could differ materially from those anticipated
in these forward looking statements as a result of various factors,
including those set forth in Item 1A. “Risk Factors.”
Forward-looking statements discuss matters that are not historical
facts. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to,
discussions regarding our operating strategy, sales and marketing
strategy, regulatory strategy, our industry generally, overall
economic conditions, our financial condition, liquidity and capital
resources, our results of operations, and the impact of the ongoing
coronavirus (“COVID-19”) pandemic and our responses to it. Such
statements include, but are not limited to, statements preceded by,
followed by or that otherwise include the words “believes,”
“expects,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “estimates,” “projects,”
“can,” “could,” “may,” “will,” “would,” or similar expressions. For
those statements, we claim the protection of the safe harbor for
forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. You should not unduly rely on these
forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date on
which they were made. They give our expectations regarding the
future but are not guarantees. We undertake no obligation to update
publicly or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a
result of new information, future events or otherwise, unless
required by law.
Overview
Stereotaxis
is a pioneer and global leader in surgical robotics for minimally
invasive endovascular intervention. We design, manufacture and
market robotic systems, instruments and information systems for the
interventional laboratory. Our proprietary robotic technology,
Robotic Magnetic Navigation, fundamentally transforms endovascular
interventions using precise computer-controlled magnetic fields to
directly control the tip of flexible interventional catheters or
devices. Direct control of the tip of an interventional device, in
contrast to all manual hand-held devices that are controlled from
their handle, can improve the precision, stability, reach and
safety of these devices during procedures.
Our
primary clinical focus has been electrophysiology, specifically
cardiac ablation procedures for the treatment of arrhythmias.
Cardiac ablation has become a well-accepted therapy for arrhythmias
and a multi-billion-dollar medical device market with expectations
for substantial long-term growth. We have shared our aspiration and
a product strategy to expand the clinical focus of our technology
to several additional endovascular indications including coronary,
neuro, and peripheral interventions.
There
is substantial real-world evidence and clinical literature for
Robotic Magnetic Navigation in electrophysiology. Hundreds of
electrophysiologists at over one hundred hospitals globally have
treated over 100,000 arrhythmia patients with our robotic
technology. Clinical use of our technology has been documented in
over 400 clinical publications. Robotic Magnetic Navigation is
designed to enable physicians to complete more complex
interventional procedures with greater success and safety by
providing image-guided delivery of catheters through the blood
vessels and chambers of the heart to treatment sites. This is
achieved using externally applied computer-controlled magnetic
fields that govern the motion of the working tip of the catheter,
resulting in improved navigation. The more flexible atraumatic
design of catheters driven using magnetic fields may reduce the
risk of patient harm and other adverse events. Performing the
procedure from a control cockpit enables physicians to complete
procedures in a safe location protected from x-ray exposure, with
greater ergonomics, and improved efficiency. We believe these
benefits can be applicable in other endovascular indications where
navigation through complex vasculature is often challenging or
unsuccessful and generates significant x-ray exposure.
Our
primary products include the Genesis RMN System, the
Odyssey Solution, and other related devices. We also offer
to our customers the Stereotaxis Imaging Model S x-ray System and
other accessory devices.
The
Genesis RMN System is designed to enable physicians to
complete more complex interventional procedures by providing
image-guided delivery of catheters through the blood vessels and
chambers of the heart to treatment sites. This is achieved using
externally applied magnetic fields that govern the motion of the
working tip of the catheter, resulting in improved navigation,
efficient procedures, and reduced x-ray exposure.
The
Odyssey Solution consolidates lab information onto one large
integrated display, enabling physicians to view and control all the
key information in the operating room. This is designed to improve
lab layout and procedure efficiency. The system also features a
remote viewing and recording capability called Odyssey
Cinema, which is an innovative solution that delivers
synchronized content for optimized workflow, advanced care, and
improved productivity. This tool includes an archiving capability
that allows clinicians to store and replay entire procedures or
segments of procedures. This information can be accessed from
locations throughout the hospital local area network and over the
global Odyssey Network providing physicians with a tool for
clinical collaboration, remote consultation, and
training.
We
promote our full suite of products in a typical hospital
implementation, subject to regulatory approvals or clearances. This
implementation requires a hospital to agree to an upfront capital
payment and recurring payments. The upfront capital payment
typically includes equipment and installation charges. The
recurring payments typically include disposable costs for each
procedure, equipment service costs beyond the warranty period, and
ongoing software updates. In hospitals where our full suite of
products has not been implemented, equipment upgrade or expansion
can be implemented upon purchasing of the necessary upgrade or
expansion.
We
have received regulatory clearances and registration necessary for
us to market the Genesis RMN System in the U.S. and Europe,
and we are in the process of obtaining necessary registrations for
extending our markets in other countries. Our prior generation
robotic magnetic navigation system, the Niobe System, and
the Odyssey Solution, Cardiodrive, and various
disposable interventional devices have received regulatory
clearance in the U.S., Europe, Canada, China, Japan and various
other countries. We have received the regulatory clearance,
licensing and/or CE Mark approvals that allow us to market the
Vdrive and Vdrive Duo Systems with the V-CAS,
V-Loop and V-Sono devices in the U.S., Canada and
Europe. Stereotaxis Imaging Model S x-ray System is CE marked and
cleared by the FDA.
Not
all products have and/or require regulatory clearance in all of the
markets we serve. Please refer to “Regulatory Approval” in Item 1
for a description of the regulatory clearance, licensing, and/or
approvals we currently have or are pursuing.
As of
December 31, 2021, we had approximately $10.1 million of backlog,
consisting of outstanding purchase orders and other commitments for
these systems. Of the December 31, 2021 backlog, we expect
approximately 78% to be recognized as revenue over the course of
2022. We had backlog of approximately $6.9 million as of December
31, 2020. There can be no assurance that we will recognize such
revenue in any particular period or at all because some of our
purchase orders and other commitments are subject to contingencies
that are outside our control. These orders and commitments may be
revised, modified or canceled, either by their express terms, as a
result of negotiations or by project changes or delays. In
addition, the sales cycle for the robotic magnetic navigation
system is lengthy and generally involves construction or renovation
activities at customer sites. Consequently, revenues and/or orders
resulting from sales of our robotic magnetic navigation system can
vary significantly from one reporting period to the
next.
We
have strategic relationships with technology leaders in the global
interventional market. Through these strategic relationships we
provide compatibility between our robotic magnetic navigation
system and digital imaging and 3D catheter location sensing
technology, as well as disposable interventional devices. The
maintenance of these strategic relationships, or the establishment
of equivalent alternatives, is critical to our commercialization
efforts. There are no guarantees that any existing strategic
relationships will continue, and efforts are ongoing to ensure the
availability of integrated systems and devices and/or equivalent
alternatives. We cannot provide assurance as to the timeline of the
ongoing availability of such compatible systems or our ability to
obtain equivalent alternatives on competitive terms or at
all.
COVID-19
Pandemic
Prior
to the spread of COVID-19, we were experiencing procedure trends
consistent with the fourth quarter of 2019. We also saw strength in
new capital orders. Beginning in January 2020, we saw a substantial
reduction in robotic procedures in Asia Pacific, especially in
China. By the height of the pandemic in that region, weekly
procedures decreased to approximately 40% of the average rate
experienced in the fourth quarter. As the COVID-19 pandemic
subsided in China in March 2020, procedure volume began to recover
and, by the end of the first quarter of 2020, we were seeing weekly
procedures in the Asia Pacific region approach 70% of the fourth
quarter average rates. Procedure disruption in other geographies
was not significant until the middle of March 2020, when the
worldwide impact of COVID-19 intensified. By the end of March,
procedures in the U.S and Europe, which represent the majority of
our procedures, declined to approximately 70% of the weekly
procedure rate experienced in the fourth quarter of 2019. As the
pandemic spread throughout the first quarter of 2020, various local
restrictions on travel, mandatory closures, social distancing
protocols and shelter-in-place orders negatively impacted our
ability to complete installation and service activities, which
resulted in declines in system and service revenue in the first
quarter. Our supply-chain also experienced some impact as some
suppliers struggled to source sub-components in February when most
factories in China were seemingly closed. These issues were mostly
alleviated by the end of the first quarter with the opening of the
Chinese economy. During the first quarter, we also took proactive
actions to reduce the risk that a prolonged future reduction in
Chinese manufacturing might have on us. During the early portion of
the second quarter, weekly procedures in the United States and
Europe continued to decline, reaching approximately 40% of fourth
quarter 2019 levels by the middle of April. In May, with the
reopening of various regions, procedures in both geographies began
to recover and by the end of June, procedures were approximating
the level seen before the pandemic. During the second quarter of
2020, weekly procedure rates in Asia Pacific continued to improve,
eventually reaching the pre-pandemic weekly procedure rate. During
the third quarter of 2020, weekly procedures continued to recover
and approached the levels seen before the pandemic. During the
fourth quarter of 2020, periodic resurgence of COVID-19 caused
hospitals and patients in some areas to again postpone procedures.
Overall, weekly procedures during the fourth quarter remained
generally consistent with the recovery seen in the third
quarter.
During
the first quarter of 2021, periodic resurgences of COVID-19 and the
delayed rollout of vaccines in some geographies continued to impact
our procedure volumes. Overall, procedure volumes improved slightly
compared to the fourth quarter 2020 and were approximately 5%
higher than the first quarter of 2020. While procedures in the Asia
Pacific region had recovered to pre-pandemic levels, procedures in
other geographies remained impacted with total procedures
approximately 15% below those seen in the first quarter of 2019.
During the second quarter of 2021, as the rollout of vaccines
continued in the US and were varied in other geographies, overall
procedure volumes for the second quarter 2021 remained fairly
consistent with the first quarter of 2021 and were nearly 40%
higher than the second quarter of 2020. During the third and fourth
quarters of 2021, a resurgence of COVID and hospital staffing
shortages depressed procedure volumes. Overall procedure volumes
fell in the third quarter of 2021 by approximately 9% as compared
to the third quarter of 2020 and overall procedure volumes in the
fourth quarter of 2021 fell by approximately 8% as compared to the
fourth quarter of 2020.
We
have experienced some challenges and disruptions due to the
pandemic such as worldwide supply chain disruptions, including
shortages and inflationary pressures, and logistics delays which
makes it difficult for us to source parts and ship our products.
Our customers have also experienced similar supply chain issues as
well as labor shortages, both of which have contributed to delayed
hospital construction project timelines. While concerns
remain, we
are generally able to conduct normal business activities albeit in
a more deliberate manner than prior to the pandemic.
Ongoing
Even
with the rollout of effective vaccines, we do not expect all
markets to recover at the same pace. The ongoing impact that the
pandemic will have on our business will likely continue to vary by
individual geography based on the extent of the outbreak in each
area, the timing of vaccine distribution, specific governmental
restrictions and the availability of testing capabilities, personal
protective equipment, and hospital facilities, as well as decisions
by our vendors, suppliers, customers and, ultimately, patients in
response to the pandemic, none of which we are able to currently
and accurately predict. While we cannot reliably estimate the depth
or length of the impact, we continue to anticipate significant,
periodic disruptions to our procedures volumes, service activities
and system placements in 2022. In addition, we would expect that
capital system orders will continue to experience some
delay.
Capital
markets and worldwide economies continue to be significantly
impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the outlook for 2022 depends
on future developments, including but not limited to: the length
and severity of ongoing outbreaks (including further new variants
beyond Delta and Omicron, which may be more contagious, more severe
or less responsive to treatment or vaccines), the effectiveness of
containment actions, and the timing of vaccinations and achievement
of herd immunity. The impact on local and/or global economies is
uncertain, including ongoing risk of recession. Such economic
disruptions, including a recession, could have a material adverse
effect on our long-term business as hospitals continue to monitor
and adjust capital and overall spending or redirect such spending
to treatments related directly to the pandemic. To date, our
manufacturing operations and supply chains have been manageably
impacted, but we cannot guarantee that such will not be impacted
further in the future. If our manufacturing operations or supply
chains are materially interrupted, it may not be possible for us to
timely manufacture relevant products at required levels, or at all.
A material reduction or interruption to any of our manufacturing
processes could have a material adverse effect on our business,
operating results, and financial condition. Further, the COVID-19
pandemic and local actions, such as “shelter-in-place” orders and
restrictions on our ability to travel and access our customers or
temporary closures of our facilities or the facilities of our
suppliers and their contract manufacturers, could also
significantly impact our sales and our ability to ship our products
and supply our customers. Any of these events could negatively
impact the number of procedures performed and the number of system
placements and have a material adverse effect on our business,
financial condition, results of operations, or cash
flows.
Critical
Accounting Policies and Estimates
Our
discussion and analysis of our financial condition and results of
operations are based on our financial statements, which have been
prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting
principles. The preparation of these financial statements requires
us to make estimates and judgments that affect the reported amounts
of assets, liabilities, revenue and expenses and related
disclosures. We review our estimates and judgments on an ongoing
basis. We base our estimates and judgments on historical experience
and on various other assumptions that we believe to be reasonable
under the circumstances. Actual results may differ from these
estimates. We believe the following accounting policies are
critical to the judgments and estimates we use in preparing our
financial statements.
Revenue Recognition
The
Company accounts for revenue in accordance with Accounting
Standards Codification Topic 606 (“ASC 606”), Revenue from
Contracts with Customers.
We
generate revenue from the initial capital sales of systems as well
as recurring revenue from the sale of our proprietary disposable
devices, from royalties paid to the Company on the sale by Biosense
Webster of co-developed catheters, and from other recurring revenue
including ongoing software updates and service
contracts.
In
accordance with Accounting Standards Codification Topic 606 (“ASC
606”), “Revenue from Contracts with Customers,” we account for a
contract with a customer when there is a legally enforceable
contract between the Company and the customer, the rights of the
parties are identified, the contract has commercial substance, and
collectability of the contract consideration is probable. We record
our revenue based on consideration specified in the contract with
each customer, net of any taxes collected from customers that are
remitted to government authorities.
For
contracts containing multiple products and services the Company
accounts for individual products and services as separate
performance obligations if they are distinct, which is if a product
or service is separately identifiable from other items in the
bundled package, and if a customer can benefit from it on its own
or with other resources that are readily available to the customer.
The Company recognizes revenues as the performance obligations are
satisfied by transferring control of the product or service to a
customer.
For
arrangements with multiple performance obligations, revenue is
allocated to each performance obligation based on its relative
standalone selling price. Standalone selling prices are based on
observable prices at which the Company separately sells the
products or services. If a standalone selling price is not directly
observable, then the Company estimates the standalone selling price
considering market conditions and entity-specific factors
including, but not limited to, features and functionality of the
products and services and market conditions. The Company regularly
reviews standalone selling prices and updates these estimates as
necessary.
Our
revenue recognition policy affects the following revenue streams in
our business as follows:
Systems:
|
Contracts
related to the sale of systems typically contain separate
obligations for the delivery of system(s), installation and an
implied obligation to provide software enhancements if and when
available for one year following installation. Revenue is
recognized when the Company transfers control to the customer,
which is generally at the point when acceptance occurs that
indicates customer acknowledgment of delivery or installation,
depending on the terms of the arrangement. Revenue from the implied
obligation to deliver software enhancements if and when available
is recognized ratably typically over the first year following
installation of the system as the customer receives the right to
software updates throughout the period and is included in Other
Recurring Revenue. The Company’s system contracts generally do not
provide a right of return. Systems are generally covered by a
one-year assurance type warranty; warranty costs were approximately
$0.2 million and less than $0.1 million for the years ended
December 31, 2021 and 2020, respectively. |
Disposables:
|
Revenue
from sales of disposable products is recognized when control is
transferred to the customers, which generally occurs at the time of
shipment, but can also occur at the time of delivery depending on
the customer arrangement. Disposable products are covered by an
assurance type warranty that provides for the return of defective
products. Warranty costs were not material for the periods
presented. |
Royalty:
|
The
Company is entitled to royalty payments from Biosense Webster,
payable quarterly based on net revenues from sales of the
co-developed catheters. |
Other Recurring Revenue:
|
Other
recurring revenue includes revenue from product maintenance plans,
other post warranty maintenance, and the implied obligation to
provide software enhancements if and when available for a specified
period, typically one year following installation of our systems.
Revenue from services and software enhancements is deferred and
amortized over the service or update period, which is typically one
year. Revenue related to services performed on a time-and-materials
basis is recognized when performed. |
Sublease Revenue:
|
A
portion of our principal executive office was subleased to a third
party through 2021. In accordance with Financial Accounting Standards Board
(“FASB”) Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2016-02,
Leases (Topic 842), the Company recorded sublease income as
revenue. |
The
Company invoices its customers based on the billing schedules in
its sales arrangements. Contract assets primarily represent the
difference between the revenue that was recognized based on the
relative selling price of the related performance obligations and
the contractual billing terms in the arrangements. Customer
deposits primarily relate to future system sales but can also
include deposits on disposable sales. Deferred revenue is primarily
related to service contracts, for which the service fees are billed
up-front, generally quarterly or annually, and for amounts billed
in advance for system contracts for which some performance
obligations remain outstanding. For service contracts, the
associated deferred revenue is generally recognized ratably over
the service period. For system contracts, the associated deferred
revenue is recognized when the remaining performance obligations
are satisfied. See Note 2 to the financial statements for
additional detail on deferred revenue. The Company did not have any
impairment losses on its contract assets for the periods
presented.
Assets Recognized from the Costs to Obtain a Contract with a
Customer
The
Company has determined that sales incentive programs for the
Company’s sales team meet the requirements to be capitalized as the
Company expects to generate future economic benefits from the
related revenue generating contracts after the initial capital
sales transaction. The costs capitalized as contract acquisition
costs included in prepaid expenses and other assets in the
Company’s balance sheets were $0.2 million and $0.3 million as of
December 31, 2021 and 2020, respectively. The Company did not incur
any impairment losses during any of the periods
presented.
Leases
The
Company accounts for leases in accordance with ASU No. 2016-02
“Leases” (Topic 842) and all subsequent ASUs that modified Topic
842. A lease is defined as a contract, or part of a contract, that
conveys the right to control the use of identified property, plant
or equipment for a period of time in exchange for consideration.
The Company determines if a contract contains a lease at inception.
For contracts where the Company is the lessee, operating leases are
included in operating lease right-of-use (“ROU”) assets and
operating lease liability on the Company’s balance sheet. The
Company currently does not have any finance leases.
Operating
lease ROU assets and operating lease liabilities are recognized
based on the present value of the future minimum lease payments
over the lease term at commencement date. ROU assets also include
any initial direct costs incurred and any lease payments made at or
before the lease commencement date, less lease incentives received.
The Company uses its incremental borrowing rate based on the
information available at the commencement date in determining the
lease liabilities as the Company’s leases generally do not provide
an implicit rate. Lease terms may include options to extend or
terminate when the Company is reasonably certain that the option
will be exercised. Lease expense is recognized on a straight-line
basis over the lease term.
The
Company also has lease arrangements with lease and non-lease
components. The Company elected the practical expedient not to
separate non-lease components from lease components for the
Company’s operating leases. Additionally, the Company applies the
short-term lease measurement and recognition exemption in which
right of use assets and lease liabilities are not recognized for
leases less than twelve months.
As
disclosed in Note 6, on March 1, 2021, the Company entered into an
office lease agreement (the “Lease”) with Globe Building Company
(the “Landlord”), under which the Company is leasing executive
office space and manufacturing facilities of approximately 43,100
square feet of rentable space located at 710 N. Tucker Boulevard,
St. Louis, Missouri (the “Premises”) that serves as the Company’s
new principal executive and administrative offices and
manufacturing facility. Lease payments commenced on January 1, 2022
and the lease has a term of ten years, with two renewal options of
five years each. The minimum annual rent under the terms of the
Lease ranges from approximately $0.8 million in 2022 to $1.0
million in 2031.
The
Company gained access to the Premises in the third quarter 2021 to
begin constructing leasehold improvements. In accordance with ASC
842, the Company recorded a ROU asset and lease liability. The
initial recognition of the ROU asset and lease liability was $5.9
million. In the fourth
quarter of 2021, the Company received an occupancy permit and
relocated its operations to the new leased space.
Cost of Contracts
Costs
of systems revenue include direct product costs, installation labor
and other costs, estimated warranty costs, and initial training and
product maintenance costs. These costs are recorded at the time of
sale. Costs of disposable revenue include direct product costs and
estimated warranty costs and are recorded at the time of sale. Cost
of revenue from services and license fees are recorded when
incurred. Cost of sublease revenue is recorded on a straight-line
basis.
Stock-based Compensation
Stock
compensation expense, which is a non-cash charge, results from
stock option, non-qualified stock options, stock appreciation
rights, and restricted share grants made to employees, directors,
and third-party consultants at the fair value of the grants. For
time-based awards, the fair value of options and stock appreciation
rights granted was determined using the Black-Scholes valuation
method which gives consideration to the estimated value of the
underlying stock at the date of grant, the exercise price of the
option, the expected dividend yield and volatility of the
underlying stock, the expected life of the option and the
corresponding risk-free interest rate. The fair value of the grants
of restricted shares and units was determined based on the closing
price of our stock on the date of grant. Stock compensation expense
for options, stock appreciation rights and for time-based
restricted share grants and units is amortized on a straight-line
basis over the vesting period of the underlying issue, generally
over four years except for grants to directors which are generally
earned over a period of six months. Stock compensation expense for
performance-based restricted shares, if any, is amortized on a
straight-line basis over the anticipated vesting period and is
subject to adjustment based on the actual achievement of
objectives. Compensation expenses related to grants to
non-employees are re-measured quarterly through the vesting date.
Compensation expense is recognized only for those options expected
to vest, net of actual forfeitures. Estimates of the expected life
of options have been based on the average of the vesting and
expiration periods, which is the simplified method under general
accounting principles for share-based payments. Estimates of
volatility utilized in calculating stock-based compensation have
been prepared based on historical data. Actual experience to date
has been consistent with these estimates.
For market-based awards, stock-based compensation expense is
recognized over the minimum service period regardless of whether or
not the market target is probable of being achieved. The fair value
of such awards is estimated on the grant date using Monte Carlo
simulations.
The
amount of compensation expense to be recorded in future periods may
increase if we make additional grants of options, stock
appreciation rights or restricted shares. The amount of expense to
be recorded in future periods may decrease if the requisite service
periods are not completed.
Valuation of Inventory
We
value our inventory at the lower of the actual cost of our
inventory, as determined using the first-in, first-out (FIFO)
method, or its current net realizable value. We periodically review
our physical inventory for excess, obsolete, and potentially
impaired items and reserve accordingly. Our reserve estimate for
excess and obsolete is based on expected future use. Excess
manufacturing overhead costs attributable to idle facility expenses
or abnormally low production volumes are excluded from inventory
and recorded as an expense in the period incurred.
Income Taxes
Deferred
tax assets and liabilities are determined based on the difference
between the financial statement and tax basis of assets and
liabilities using the enacted tax rates in effect for the year in
which the differences are expected to affect taxable income.
Valuation allowances are established when necessary to reduce
deferred tax assets to the amounts expected to be realized. We have
established a valuation allowance against the entire amount of our
deferred tax assets net of liabilities because we are not able to
conclude, due to our history of operating losses, that it is more
likely than not that we will be able to realize any portion of the
deferred tax assets.
In
assessing whether and to what extent deferred tax assets are
realizable, we consider whether it is more likely than not that
some portion or all of the deferred tax assets will not be
realized. The ultimate realization of deferred tax assets is
dependent upon the generation of future taxable income during the
periods in which those temporary differences become deductible. We
consider projected future taxable income and tax planning
strategies in making this assessment. Based upon the level of
historical taxable losses, limitations imposed by Section 382 of
the Internal Revenue Code and projections for future losses over
periods which the deferred tax assets are deductible, we determined
that a 100% valuation allowance of deferred tax assets net of
liabilities was appropriate.
Results
of Operations
Comparison
of the Years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020
Revenue.
Revenue increased from $26.6 million for the year ended December
31, 2020, to $35.0 million for the year ended December 31, 2021, an
increase of approximately 32%. Revenue from sales of systems
increased from $3.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2020,
to $11.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2021, an increase
of approximately 208%, driven by increased system sales volumes in
the current year period. Revenue from sales of disposable
interventional devices, service and accessories increased to $22.9
million for the year ended December 31, 2021, from $22.0 million
for the year ended December 31, 2020, an increase of approximately
4%, driven by higher procedure volumes partially offset by slightly
lower service revenue. Sublease revenue was $1.0 million for the
years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020.
Cost
of Revenue. Cost of revenue increased from $7.7 million for the
year ended December 31, 2020, to $11.8 million for the year ended
December 31, 2021, an increase of approximately 54%. As a
percentage of our total revenue, overall gross margin decreased to
66% for the year ended December 31, 2021, from 71% for the year
ended December 31, 2020 driven by changes in product mix. Cost of
revenue for systems sold increased from $3.7 million for the year
ended December 31, 2020 to $7.5 million for the year ended December
31, 2021, primarily due to increased system sales volumes in the
current year period. Gross margin for systems increased from less
than negative $0.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2020 to
positive $3.6 million for the year ended December 31, 2021. Cost of
revenue for disposables, service, and accessories increased to $3.3
million for the year ended December 31, 2021 from $3.0 million for
year ended December 31, 2020 driven by increased disposable sales
volumes and higher expenses incurred under service contracts in the
current year period. Gross margin for disposables, service and
accessories was 86% for the current year period compared to 87% for
the year ended December 31, 2020. Cost of sublease revenue was $1.0
million for both the years ended December 31, 2021 and
2020.
Research
and Development Expense. Research and development expense
increased from $8.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2020,
to $10.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2021, an increase
of approximately 25%. This
increase was primarily due to higher project spending and measured
hiring in the current year period.
Sales
and Marketing Expense. Sales and marketing expense increased
from $11.2 million for the year ended December 31, 2020 to $11.9
million for the year ended December 31, 2021, an increase of
approximately 7%. This
increase was primarily due to increased sales and marketing
activities as normal activities resume following the height of the
pandemic as well as higher compensation related
costs.
General
and Administrative Expense. General and administrative expenses
include finance, information systems, legal, and general management
expenses. General and administrative expense increased from $6.4
million for the year ended December 31, 2020 to $14.0 million for
the year ended December 31, 2021, an increase of approximately
120%. This increase was
primarily driven by higher stock-based compensation expense for the
previously announced CEO Performance Award and the appreciating
stock price as well as higher professional service fees in the
current year period.
Interest
Income (Expense). Net interest expense was less than $0.1
million for the year ended December 31, 2021, and net interest
income was less than $0.1 million for the year ended December 31.
2020.
Income Taxes
Realization
of deferred tax assets is dependent upon future earnings, the
timing and amount of which are uncertain. Accordingly, net deferred
tax assets have been fully offset by valuation allowances as of
December 31, 2021, and December 31, 2020 to reflect these
uncertainties. We may not be able to utilize all of these loss
carryforwards prior to their expiration. As of December 31, 2021,
we had gross federal net operating loss carryforwards of
approximately $120.1 million. The federal net operating loss
carryforwards reflect accumulated book losses reduced for the 2013
IRC Section 382 ownership change limitation of $255.6 million and
approximately $123.3 million of book/tax differences and expiration
of unused carryforwards. The federal net operating loss
carryforwards generated prior to the 2018 tax year will expire
between 2030 and 2037. The federal net operating loss generated
during and beyond 2018 will be carried forward indefinitely as a
result of changes in the tax law following the Tax Cuts and Jobs
Act. As of December 31, 2021, we had gross state net operating loss
carryforward of approximately $37.6 million which will expire at
various dates between 2022 and 2041 if not utilized.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
Liquidity refers to the liquid financial assets available to fund
our business operations and pay for near-term obligations. These
liquid financial assets consist of cash and cash equivalents. We
are continuously and critically reviewing our liquidity and
anticipated capital requirements in light of the significant
uncertainty created by the COVID-19 pandemic.
As of
December 31, 2021, our accumulated deficit was $498.7 million with
cash and cash equivalents of $40.1 million, inclusive of restricted
cash. Since inception, we have financed our operations primarily
through cash generated by operations and proceeds from our debt and
stock offerings.
Capital
Resources
As of
December 31, 2021, the Company did not have any debt.
Revolving
Line of Credit
The
Company had a working capital line of credit with its primary
lender, Silicon Valley Bank that matured on June 30, 2020 and was
not renewed.
Paycheck
Protection Program
The
Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (“CARES Act”)
was enacted on March 27, 2020 in the United States. Among the
provisions contained in the CARES Act was the creation of the
Paycheck Protection Program that provides for Small Business
Administration (“SBA”) Section 7(a) loans for qualified small
businesses. In general, the loan could be forgiven as long as the
funds were used for payroll related expenses as well as rent and
utilities paid during the twenty-four-week period from the date of
the loan and as long as certain headcount and salary/wage levels
were maintained. On April 10, 2020, the Company was informed by its
lender, Midwest BankCentre (the “Bank”), that the Bank received
approval from the SBA to fund the Company’s request for a loan
under the SBA’s Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP Loan”). Per the
terms of the PPP Loan, the Company received total proceeds of
approximately $2.2 million from the Bank on April 20, 2020. In
accordance with the loan forgiveness requirements of the CARES Act,
the Company used the full proceeds from the PPP Loan primarily for
payroll costs, rent and utilities. In March 2021, the Company
applied for loan forgiveness and in June 2021, full loan
forgiveness was granted by the SBA. The Company recognized a net
gain from debt extinguishment of approximately $2.2 million upon
forgiveness.
2020 Equity Financing
As
disclosed in Note 9, on May 25, 2020, the Company entered into a
Securities Purchase Agreement with certain accredited investors,
whereby it, in a direct registered offering, agreed to issue and
sell to the investors an aggregate of 3,658,537 shares of the
Company’s common stock, $0.001 par value per share, at a price of
$4.10 per share. The Company received net proceeds of approximately
$15.0 million, after offering expenses.
Liquidity
The
following table summarizes our cash flow by operating, investing
and financing activities for years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020
(in thousands):
|
|
Year Ended
December 31, |
|
|
|
2021 |
|
|
2020 |
|
Cash flow
used in operating activities |
|
$ |
(2,946 |
) |
|
$ |
(3,512 |
) |
Cash flow
used in investing activities |
|
|
(1,397 |
) |
|
|
(71 |
) |
Cash flow
provided by financing activities |
|
|
547 |
|
|
|
17,340 |
|
Net
cash used in operating activities. We used approximately $2.9
million and $3.5 million of cash in operating activities during the
years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020, respectively. The decrease
in cash used in operating activities was driven by lower working
capital requirements during the current year period.
Net
cash used in investing activities. We used $1.4 million and
less than $0.1 million of cash in investing activities during the
years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020, respectively. The increase
in cash used in investing activities was driven by the purchases of
equipment and design and build-out costs associated with our new
facility.
Net
cash provided by financing activities. We generated
approximately $0.5 million and 17.3 million of cash for the years
ended December 31, 2021 and 2020, respectively. The cash generated
in the current year period was driven by the proceeds from issuance
of stock from exercises of stock options, net of issuance costs,
and proceeds from our employee stock purchase program. The cash
generated in the year ended December 31, 2020 was primarily driven
by the net proceeds of $15.0 million received from the May 2020
Securities Purchase Agreement and $2.2 million of proceeds received
from the Paycheck Protection Program loan.
At
December 31, 2021, we had working capital of approximately $38.1
million, compared to a working capital of approximately $39.1
million at December 31, 2020. The decrease in working capital was
primarily driven by the net loss incurred during the year ended
December 31, 2021.
The
Company had a working capital line of credit with its primary
lender, Silicon Valley Bank that matured on June 30, 2020 and was
not renewed.
Our
principal source of liquidity is cash provided by operations and by
the issuance of common stock through the exercise of stock options
and our employee stock purchase program as well as cash received
from past equity raises. The Company believes the cash and cash
equivalents on hand as of December 31, 2021 will be sufficient to
meet its obligations as they become due in the ordinary course of
business for at least 12 months following the date of the financial
statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, as well as
for periods beyond that 12-month period. Our cash requirements
depend on numerous factors, including success of clinical adoption
within the installed base of robotic magnetic systems, new
placements of capital systems, the resources we devote to
developing and supporting our products, and other factors. We
expect to continue to fund our operations with cash resources
primarily generated from the proceeds of our past equity raises and
from our working capital. In the future, we may finance cash needs
through the sale of other equity securities or non-core assets,
strategic collaboration agreements, debt financings or through
distribution rights.
Off-Balance
Sheet Arrangements
We do
not currently have, nor have we ever had, any relationships with
unconsolidated entities or financial partnerships, such as entities
often referred to as structured finance or special purpose
entities, which would have been established for the purpose of
facilitating off-balance sheet arrangements or other contractually
narrow or limited purposes. In addition, we do not engage in
trading activities involving non-exchange traded contracts. As a
result, we are not materially exposed to any financing, liquidity,
market or credit risk that could have arisen if we had engaged in
these relationships.
ITEM
8. |
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA |
Financial
Statements
Index
To Financial Statements
All
other schedules have been omitted because they are not applicable,
or the required information is shown in the Financial Statements or
the Notes thereto.
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting
Firm
To
the Shareholders and the Board of Directors of Stereotaxis,
Inc.
Opinion
on the Financial Statements
We
have audited the accompanying balance sheets of Stereotaxis, Inc.
(the Company) as of December 31, 2021 and 2020, the related
statements of operations, convertible preferred stock and
stockholders’ equity, and cash flows for each of the two years in
the period ended December 31, 2021, and the related notes and the
financial statement schedule listed in the Index at Item 15(a)
(collectively referred to as the “financial statements”). In our
opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of the Company at December 31,
2021 and 2020, and the results of its operations and its cash flows
for each of the two years in the period ended December 31, 2021, in
conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting
principles.
Basis
for Opinion
These
financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the
Company’s financial statements based on our audits. We are a public
accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board (United States) (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 financial statements
are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud.
The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to
perform, an audit of its internal control over financial reporting.
As part of our audits we are required to obtain an understanding of
internal control over financial reporting but not for the purpose
of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s
internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express
no such opinion.
Our
audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of
material misstatement of the 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 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 financial
statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis
for our opinion.
Critical
Audit Matters
The
critical audit matters communicated below are matters arising from
the current period audit of the financial statements that were
communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee
and that: (1) relate to accounts or disclosures that are material
to the financial statements and (2) involved especially
challenging, subjective, or complex judgments. The communication of
the critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on
the financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by
communicating the critical audit matters below, providing separate
opinions on the critical audit matters or on the accounts or
disclosures to which they relate.
Systems
Revenue Recognition |
|
|
|
Description of the Matter |
|
As
discussed in Note 2 to the financial statements, the Company
generates revenue from initial capital sales of systems as well as
recurring revenue from the sale of proprietary disposable devices,
from royalties paid to the Company for co-developed catheters, and
revenue from ongoing software updates and service contracts. The
Company’s contracts for system sales generally have multiple
performance obligations.
Auditing
the timing and amount of revenue recognized for system sales
required significant auditor judgment because it involves several
subjective management assumptions and estimates including the
identification of performance obligations within the contracts, the
estimation of the standalone selling price of each performance
obligation, the allocation of transaction price to each performance
obligation, and a determination of the timing of the satisfaction
of the performance obligation.
|
|
|
|
How We Addressed the Matter in Our Audit |
|
To
test system revenue, our audit procedures included, among others,
testing management’s identification of the performance obligations
and the allocation of the transaction price to each performance
obligation by performing an independent assessment of customer
contracts and comparing our assessment to that of management. We
also tested management’s estimated standalone selling prices for
its identified performance obligations based on actual prices
charged for similar products and services sold on a standalone
basis. We also tested management’s assertion that control was
transferred to the customer by inspecting documentation supporting
the transfer of control on contracts. |
|
|
|
Valuation
of CEO Performance Award |
|
|
|
Description
of the Matter |
|
As
discussed in Note 9 to the consolidated financial statements, the
Company granted to David L. Fischel, the Company’s Chief Executive
Officer, a share-based compensation award, consisting of an
aggregate of 13,000,000 performance share units of the Company’s
common stock. The award vests in ten tranches based on whether
certain market capitalization milestones are met. The Company
estimated the grant date fair value of the award using the Monte
Carlo simulation model and recognized stock-based compensation
expense of $6.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2021
related to this award.
Auditing
the Company’s valuation of the aforementioned award was challenging
because of the subjective auditor judgment necessary in evaluating
the propriety of the complex valuation methodologies and
significant assumptions used in estimating the fair value of the
award as of the grant date and estimating the vesting period of
each tranche of the award. Such significant assumptions include
volatility of the Company’s common stock price, risk free interest
rate and grant term.
|
|
|
|
How
We Addressed the Matter in Our Audit
|
|
To
test the valuation award, our procedures included, among others,
involving our internal valuation specialists and evaluating and
testing the valuation methodologies and significant assumptions
stated above. For example, we performed independent comparative
calculations to estimate volatility of the Company’s common stock
price and compared our estimates with those of the Company,
assessed the appropriateness of the model utilized by the Company
to calculate the grant term and correlated recognition of
compensation expense. |
/s/
Ernst & Young LLP |
|
We
have served as the Company’s auditor since 2002. |
|
St. Louis, Missouri |
|
March
10, 2022 |
|
STEREOTAXIS,
INC.
BALANCE SHEET
See
accompanying notes.
STEREOTAXIS,
INC.
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
See
accompanying notes.
STEREOTAXIS,
INC
STATEMENTS OF CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK AND STOCKHOLDERS’
EQUITY
Year
Ended December 31, 2020
Year
Ended December 31, 2021
|
|
Convertible
Preferred Stock
Series A (Mezzanine)
|
|
|
Convertible
Preferred
Stock Series B |
|
|
Common
Stock |
|
|
Additional
Paid-In
|
|
|
Treasury |
|
|
Accumulated |
|
|
Total
Stockholders’
Equity |
|
|
|
Shares |
|
|
Amount |
|
|
Shares |
|
|
Amount |
|
|
Shares |
|
|
Amount |
|
|
Capital |
|
|
Stock |
|
|
Deficit |
|
|
(Deficit) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Balance
at December 31, 2020 |
|
|
22,513 |
|
|
$ |
5,605,323 |
|
|
|
5,610,121 |
|
|
$ |
5,610 |
|
|
|
73,694,203 |
|
|
$ |
73,694 |
|
|
$ |
522,709,846 |
|
|
$ |
(205,999 |
) |
|
$ |
(487,959,233 |
) |
|
$ |
34,623,918 |
|
Issuance
of common stock |
|
|
|
|
|
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- |
|
|
|
332,232 |
|
|
|
333 |
|
|
|
429,473 |
|
|
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
429,806 |
|
Share-based
compensation |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
325,954 |
|
|
|
325 |
|
|
|
9,362,582 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9,362,907 |
|
Components
of net loss |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(10,715,623 |
) |
|
|
(10,715,623 |
) |
Employee
stock purchase plan |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19,699 |
|
|
|
20 |
|
|
|
117,585 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
117,605 |
|
Preferred
stock conversion |
|
|
(126 |
) |
|
|
(21,555 |
) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
246,152 |
|
|
|
246 |
|
|
|
21,309 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
21,555 |
|
Balance
at December 31, 2021 |
|
|
22,387 |
|
|
$ |
5,583,768 |
|
|
|
5,610,121 |
|
|
$ |
5,610 |
|
|
|
74,618,240 |
|
|
$ |
74,618 |
|
|
$ |
532,640,795 |
|
|
$ |
(205,999 |
) |
|
$ |
(498,674,856 |
) |
|
$ |
33,840,168 |
|
See
accompanying notes.
STEREOTAXIS,
INC.
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
See
accompanying notes.
STEREOTAXIS,
INC.
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Notes
to Financial Statements
In
this report, “Stereotaxis”, the “Company”, “Registrant”, “we”,
“us”, and “our” refer to Stereotaxis, Inc. and its wholly owned
subsidiaries. Genesis RMN®, Niobe®,
Navigant®, Odyssey®, Odyssey
Cinema™, Vdrive®, Vdrive Duo™,
V-CAS™, V-Loop™, V-Sono™,
QuikCAS™ and Cardiodrive® are trademarks of
Stereotaxis, Inc. All other trademarks that appear in this report
are the property of their respective owners.
1. Description of
Business
Stereotaxis
designs, manufactures and markets robotic systems, instruments and
information systems for the interventional laboratory. Our
proprietary robotic technology, Robotic Magnetic Navigation,
fundamentally transforms endovascular interventions using precise
computer-controlled magnetic fields to directly control the tip of
flexible interventional catheters or devices. Direct control of the
tip of an interventional device, in contrast to all manual
hand-held devices that are controlled from their handle, can
improve the precision, stability, reach and safety of these devices
during procedures.
Our
primary clinical focus has been electrophysiology, specifically
cardiac ablation procedures for the treatment of arrhythmias.
Cardiac ablation has become a well-accepted therapy for arrhythmias
and a multi-billion-dollar medical device market with expectations
for substantial long-term growth. We have shared our aspiration and
a product strategy to expand the clinical focus of our technology
to several additional endovascular indications including coronary,
neuro, and peripheral interventions.
There
is substantial real-world evidence and clinical literature for
Robotic Magnetic Navigation in electrophysiology. Hundreds of
electrophysiologists at over one hundred hospitals globally have
treated over 100,000 arrhythmia patients with our robotic
technology. Clinical use of our technology has been documented in
over 400 clinical publications. Robotic Magnetic Navigation is
designed to enable physicians to complete more complex
interventional procedures with greater success and safety by
providing image-guided delivery of catheters through the blood
vessels and chambers of the heart to treatment sites. This is
achieved using externally applied computer-controlled magnetic
fields that govern the motion of the working tip of the catheter,
resulting in improved navigation. The more flexible atraumatic
design of catheters driven using magnetic fields may reduce the
risk of patient harm and other adverse events. Performing the
procedure from a control cockpit enables physicians to complete
procedures in a safe location protected from x-ray exposure, with
greater ergonomics, and improved efficiency. We believe these
benefits can be applicable in other endovascular indications where
navigation through complex vasculature is often challenging or
unsuccessful and generates significant x-ray exposure.
Our
primary products include the Genesis RMN System, the
Odyssey Solution, and other related devices. We also offer
to our customers the Stereotaxis Imaging Model S x-ray System and
other accessory devices.