Nexstim — Update 25 April 2016

Nexstim — Update 25 April 2016

Nexstim

Analyst avatar placeholder

Written by

Nexstim

Sham surprise shows stroke

Strategic update

Healthcare equipment & services

25 April 2016

Price

€1.33

Market cap

€11m

Cash (€m) as at 31 Dec 2015

6.9

Shares in issue

8.0m

Free float

69%

Codes

NXTMH
NXTMS

Primary exchange

Nasdaq First North Finland

Secondary exchange

Nasdaq First North Sweden

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

20.9

(77.8)

(73.9)

Rel (local)

23.0

(77.2)

(70.3)

52-week high/low

€7.49

€1.04

Business description

Nexstim has navigated non-invasive brain stimulation technology. This is used to plan brain surgery (NBS) sold in US and EU. The NBT system is being developed to promote rehabilitation after stroke (NBT). NBT Phase III data implies a strong effect but the overall trial was inconclusive.

Next events

FDA de novo 510(k)

Q216

H1 results

17 August 2016

Analyst

John Savin PhD

+44 (0)20 3077 5735

Nexstim is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

The partly unblinded Phase III data, stopped after a futility analysis, show that two-thirds of treated patients showed meaningful clinical improvements, but also that the ‘active’ sham patients had similar responses. Nexstim will unblind the study, giving 138+ patients worth of data in Q2. The company aims to file an FDA de novo 510(k) application in Q316, which might give some US sales from mid-2017 if the FDA agrees. The system can already be sold in the EU. Extra trials to secure reimbursement are likely to be needed and indications such as depression could be developed. Nexstim has cash to last until Q316. The CEO left on 20 April; the chairman is acting as CEO.

Year
end

Revenue
(€m)

PBT*
(€m)

EPS*
(€)

DPS
(€)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/14

2.21

(10.21)

(1.43)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/15

2.53

(9.55)

(6.22)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/16e

3.14

(8.93)

(8.12)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/17e

4.23

(7.07)

(5.94)

0.0

N/A

N/A

Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding amortisation of acquired intangibles, exceptional items and share-based payments. EPS is also adjusted by potential new shares.

Active sham comparator in stroke Phase III

To get a realistic sham (placebo) treatment in Phase III, the magnetic coil was partly activated in the sham group to produce a sound and scalp ‘tingling’ effect, as in active treatment. The ‘active’ sham is assumed to have produced an effect similar to treatment since both groups performed better than historical norms. The comparable outcomes triggered the 29 February futility finding.

An attempt at FDA clearance

Nexstim is unbinding the Phase III with over 138 patients (out of 199). Nexstim will use this data plus additional occupational therapy information to apply to the FDA for a de novo 510(k). This will probably take about nine to 12 months from mid-2016, but the data may not support a stroke claim. If the FDA grants approval, further trials will be needed. In the EU, Navigated Brain Therapy (NBT) can be sold now for stroke and depression indications, but may not be funded on these data. Navigated Brain Stimulation (NBS) is sold for brain mapping in the US and EU.

Valuation: Complex data needs a cautious projection

Nexstim will require more cash, on a revised model about €13m to 2017, although this is currently uncertain, compared to a previous estimate of €50m. The reduction is due to the stroke delay but further trials (unknown costs) will be needed to gain reimbursement. Trials in severe depression could access this developing market. On an indication-independent valuation scenario, we project peak sales of 50 NBS systems at 70% probability and up to 100 NBT system sales per year (indication independent estimate) at 55% probability, using 100 and 1,250 disposable tracking devices per year each. This could generate €146m in revenues by 2030. This indicates a pre-dilution value of €3.58/ share (formerly €15.7 per share), but dilution could reduce this to approximately €1.56 per share by 2017.

Company description: Magnetic brain stimulation

Nexstim is a medtech company using non-invasive brain stimulation for brain mapping and therapy. It sells a system that generates pulses of a high-intensity focused magnetic field: repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS). The diagnostic version of the system enables high precision mapping of brain motor and speech functions (NBS). This is done after a high resolution MRI scan, which shows the individual’s brain morphology. This gained a CE-mark in 2003 and FDA clearance in 2009. These systems are sold in the EU and US with an installed based estimated at over 130 systems. Nexstim is developing a therapeutic version for rehabilitating stroke patients (Navigated Brain Therapy, NBT). In a Phase III study, a February 2016 futility analysis showed that the active and control groups were producing similar, high response rates. Nexstim intends to file a de novo 510(k) in Q216 for a US marketing authorisation for a stroke claim. Other indications could include severe depression, tinnitus, neuropathic pain and memory regain in dementia.

Nexstim was formed in 2000 and has been primarily backed by venture capital. So far, shareholders have invested €55m and the Finnish Funding Agency for Innovation, Tekes, has contributed a €500k capital loan and a €2,697k interest-bearing R&D loan. The last funding (of €5.3m) was in late 2015 and the company has cash to last until Q316. Nexstim is based in Helsinki, Finland, with offices in the US and Germany. It now has 33 employees. The former CEO, Janne Huhtala, left the company on 20 April; the chairman, Martin Jamieson, will act as interim CEO role until a substantive replacement is appointed.

Transcranial magnetic stimulation

The Nexstim system (NBS) is shown in Exhibit 1. It uses repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) administered over multiple sessions to affect brain functionality (Exhibit 2).

Exhibit 1: Nexstim’s NBS system in its speech mapping configuration

Source: Nexstim. Note: The therapy TMS set-up is similar but without a screen in front of the patient.

There are two products:

NBS allows very accurate functional mapping of motor and speech functions before brain surgery. For motor functions, this is done by stimulating a small brain region and measuring any muscle response using an electric sensor. A disposable head-worn tracking device allows reproducible positioning and can be correlated with the 3D MRI brain image. This allows the surgeon to avoid critical areas wherever possible.

In NBT, the same disposable tracking device and MRI scan data are used to position the coil relative to the brain to deliver a series of magnetic pulses to the wrist extension motor location with a few millimetres reproducibility. While many aspects of NBS are the same as for NBT, they are not interchangeable. NBS offers more extensive diagnostic capabilities and user interface, while NBT houses specific applications focusing on targeting and dose calibration.

Exhibit 2: Brain function and rTMS

Brain function

Notes

Magnetic field

High intensity, focused (2-3 Tesla) magnetic field that extends up to a maximum of about 3.5cm into the brain cortex. This is applied in short bursts lasting around 150 microseconds. Magnetic fields have an associated electrical field and, at this intensity and duration, will trigger electrical signals in the nerve cells: neurons.

Neuronal action

Neurons respond to stimuli received though a dense network of input fibres (dendrites) and if triggered send a single signal (a biochemical-based electrical pulse called an action potentials) out via its one axon, potentially over a metre or more. The axon links to multiple other neurons.

Cortex

The cortex (outer layer of the brain) lies just below the skull. It directs overall motor movement and carries out higher-level functions like speech and higher-level emotions. In motor responses, activation of specific muscles is done automatically in the midbrain, just above the spinal cord.

Gyrus

To get an increased surface area, the cortex is folded to increase surface area and reduce connection distance. Each ridge is called a gyrus. MRI scans show the 3D morphology of the brain and gyrus pattern; scans are uploaded into the Nexstim system and assist navigation.

Brain adaption and rTMS

Although all human brains have a similar lay out of functionality, this differs in detail between individuals. Mature neurons (brain cells) do not reproduce but they alter the number and strength of the multiple inputs depending on what signals they receive. This adaption is how the brain learns. rTMS therapy aims to ‘reset’ these connections. This takes time so multiple sessions are required.

Action of TMS

Nexstim can vary the depth of magnetic field penetration. The field has a very narrow oval cross-section at its effective intensity that narrows sharply as it extends deeper into the brain. This means that a large number of neurons at the gyrus surface are activated but fewer are affected at the deepest extent of the field.

Brain function

Magnetic field

Neuronal action

Cortex

Gyrus

Brain adaption and rTMS

Action of TMS

Notes

High intensity, focused (2-3 Tesla) magnetic field that extends up to a maximum of about 3.5cm into the brain cortex. This is applied in short bursts lasting around 150 microseconds. Magnetic fields have an associated electrical field and, at this intensity and duration, will trigger electrical signals in the nerve cells: neurons.

Neurons respond to stimuli received though a dense network of input fibres (dendrites) and if triggered send a single signal (a biochemical-based electrical pulse called an action potentials) out via its one axon, potentially over a metre or more. The axon links to multiple other neurons.

The cortex (outer layer of the brain) lies just below the skull. It directs overall motor movement and carries out higher-level functions like speech and higher-level emotions. In motor responses, activation of specific muscles is done automatically in the midbrain, just above the spinal cord.

To get an increased surface area, the cortex is folded to increase surface area and reduce connection distance. Each ridge is called a gyrus. MRI scans show the 3D morphology of the brain and gyrus pattern; scans are uploaded into the Nexstim system and assist navigation.

Although all human brains have a similar lay out of functionality, this differs in detail between individuals. Mature neurons (brain cells) do not reproduce but they alter the number and strength of the multiple inputs depending on what signals they receive. This adaption is how the brain learns. rTMS therapy aims to ‘reset’ these connections. This takes time so multiple sessions are required.

Nexstim can vary the depth of magnetic field penetration. The field has a very narrow oval cross-section at its effective intensity that narrows sharply as it extends deeper into the brain. This means that a large number of neurons at the gyrus surface are activated but fewer are affected at the deepest extent of the field.

Source: Edison Investment Research

Despite a long history of use of various TMS machines and multiple trials over several decades, the robust evidence for rTMS remains limited. A detailed 2014 European consensus statement (Lefaucher et al, 2014) found differing degrees of evidence, Exhibit 3. Note that many other indications have been tested, often in small-scale studies. The area is still developing, however, and a hand-held, user-operated TMS device was FDA cleared in 2015 for migraine pain.

Exhibit 3: European 2014 clinical consensus on rTMS clinical efficacy

Level of evidence

Indication

Notes

Good evidence

Chronic pain

Severe depression treated with high frequency pulses

Three FDA-approved devices (Exhibit 9). The UK assessment from NICE (IPG542 Dec 2015) is that Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation for depression may be used with normal arrangements for clinical governance and audit

Probable efficacy

Depression treated with low frequency pulses

Schizophrenia

Low frequency contralesional treatment of motor stroke

The Nexstim indication but note this is a 2014 review so only accessed some Phase II data

Possible efficacy

Tinnitus and auditory hallucinations

Source: Edison Investment Research adapted from Lefaucher et al, 2014

Clinical evidence for NBT in stroke

Stroke survivors face multiple challenges. A majority (80%) suffer weakness in one side of the body (hemiparesis). Most stroke patients are given rehabilitation to help regain function, Exhibit 4.

Patients with only upper body disabilities are often assessed using the Upper Limb Fugl-Meyer Assessment (UEFM) shown in Exhibit 5. UEFM quantifies the patient’s limb movements. Each aspect is scored as none (0), partial (1) or full (2); there are 63 parameters (126 points) assessed in total of which 33 relate to motor functions. A total score of 90/126 is assessed as recovery. Nexstim states that it focuses on the 33 motor parameters although published abstracts simply note use of UEFM. There are several other scoring and assessment systems.

Exhibit 4: Post-stroke treatment therapies and assessment

Therapy/assessment method

Description

Fugl-Meyer Upper Limb Assessment

The most widely used scale used to evaluate individuals recovering from stroke. The UEFM scale consists of sub-scales that relate motor functions, sensation, range of motion and pain (Exhibit 5). The original 1975 Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA) was of the whole body

Overall recovery process

To restore upper limb function, the first three months after a stroke are crucial. The recovery pattern is predictable and tends to level off after three months; a modest one- or two-point improvement on the FMA score is typical and rarely more than four or five points even with intense rehab. In fact, 55-75 % of patients present upper limb hemiparesis three to six months after the stroke.

Occupational therapy (OT)

Assesses and treats people with a physical, mental, or cognitive disorder to develop or recover daily living and work skills. Occupational therapy focuses on practical solutions and educating the patient and their family to improve daily activities, such as dressing or shopping.

Physiotherapy physical therapy/(PT)

Aims to remediate impairments and promote mobility, function and quality of life through diagnosis and physical intervention, using physical agents, mechanical force, adaptive devices and movements. Electrical stimulation on the muscles may also help restore control.

Therapy/assessment method

Fugl-Meyer Upper Limb Assessment

Overall recovery process

Occupational therapy (OT)

Physiotherapy physical therapy/(PT)

Description

The most widely used scale used to evaluate individuals recovering from stroke. The UEFM scale consists of sub-scales that relate motor functions, sensation, range of motion and pain (Exhibit 5). The original 1975 Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA) was of the whole body

To restore upper limb function, the first three months after a stroke are crucial. The recovery pattern is predictable and tends to level off after three months; a modest one- or two-point improvement on the FMA score is typical and rarely more than four or five points even with intense rehab. In fact, 55-75 % of patients present upper limb hemiparesis three to six months after the stroke.

Assesses and treats people with a physical, mental, or cognitive disorder to develop or recover daily living and work skills. Occupational therapy focuses on practical solutions and educating the patient and their family to improve daily activities, such as dressing or shopping.

Aims to remediate impairments and promote mobility, function and quality of life through diagnosis and physical intervention, using physical agents, mechanical force, adaptive devices and movements. Electrical stimulation on the muscles may also help restore control.

Source: NHS Direct, Nexstim and Edison Investment Research

Exhibit 5: Fugl-Meyer upper limb assessment scoring

Score area

Subscore

Total score

Upper extremity

36

Wrist

10

Hand

14

Co-ordination/speed

6

Total upper extremity score motor parameters

66

Sensation

12

Passive joint motion

24

Joint pain

24

Overall score

126

Nexstim Phase II data: Contrastim1

  Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) to Contralesional Hemisphere in Patients With Stroke for Upper Limb Recovery.

In the Phase II, NCT01049802, 29 patients were recruited between three and 12 months after their stroke. All had moderate/severe one-sided upper limb impairment. There were two groups: 19 active and 10 sham treatment. The Phase II study was detailed in a presentation abstract at the International Stroke Conference 2014. The data were being updated in the presentation as the final four patients completed their six-month follow-up after abstract submission. The data, Exhibit 5, showed a 13.8 point improvement in the treated group vs a 7.1 point improvement in the sham group. The reported statistical significance was p<0.05.

The calculated time course (by Edison) of average scores is shown in Exhibit 6 including the six-week treatment period and subsequent one-week, one-month and six-month follow-ups. The sham-treated patients had a higher average baseline score (31.5 vs 23.8 treated). Stroke trials are always variable and the effect of two extra treated and two further strongly performing sham patients narrowed the gap relative to the 2014 preliminary data (based on 17 treated and eight sham patients). The active treatment narrowed the gap by the end of treatment, after which recovery was steady. Note that averages can be skewed in small groups by a few very low or very high scores.2

  For example, in the sham group, the initial eight patients had a combined gain of 33 (average 4.1) points, but the last two contributed 38 points (overall average 7.1).

The definition of a clinical improvement is 4.25-7.25 (see analysis by Page, 2012); Nexstim used a five-point gain as a clinical benchmark, but did not differentiate in assessing outcome scores as patient responses are very variable. We note that the procedure targeted wrist motion so it would be interesting to see if this aspect improved.

Nexstim notes that at six months, 84% of treated patients made at least five points of progress as against 50% of sham patients. This compares to about two-thirds of patients in the active group in the now ended Phase III, where the sham data are stated to be similar. It should be noted that a large subgroup of Phase II patients ceased rehabilitation after the six-week treatment period (nine treated patients and six sham), but the difference was not statistically significant.

Exhibit 6: Contrastim response after six months

Exhibit 7: Contrastim average score time course

Source: Edison Investment Research, based on Harvey 2014. Note: No error range is available for the six-month endpoint.

Source: Edison Investment Research, based on Harvey 2014

Exhibit 6: Contrastim response after six months

Source: Edison Investment Research, based on Harvey 2014. Note: No error range is available for the six-month endpoint.

Exhibit 7: Contrastim average score time course

Source: Edison Investment Research, based on Harvey 2014

Phase III: Beyond futility

The Navigated Inhibitory rTMS to Contralesional Hemisphere (NICHE) trial Phase III study (NCT02089464) recruited 199 patients with two groups: active and sham, Exhibit 8.

Exhibit 8: NICHE Phase III

Inclusion criteria

Comparator

Treatment*

Endpoint

Q116e

Moderate/severe one-sided upper limb impairment after any stroke three to 12 months before

Semi-active sham treatment

3x weekly for six weeks

Change in UEFM score after six months.

Futility stop at (138+ patients) Analysis of available six-month data in Q216

Source: Nexstim

The NICHE Phase III trial ran from May 2014 at 12 rehabilitation sites in the US. The trial included two interim futility analyses; the second of these was triggered at the end of February at a point when all 199 patients had been treated. This showed that the trial could not meet its primary endpoint. Management decided to unblind the study with 138+ patients having completed the six-month assessment so having a full data set. Nexstim does not believe that more patient data will improve the case.

It has been disclosed that the NICHE protocol differed from Contrastim in that the sham group was partly active to give the scalp-tingling sensation of treatment. This sham protocol is not disclosed and Nexstim intends to file a patent on it. It is not certain that a treatment protocol patent is enforceable, if granted, but it could stop a direct competitor promoting it. The Brainsway H-coil rTMS system contains a sham coil that generates an “active” sham that feels like treatment. The Neuronetics rTMS system now claims a device to minimise scalp effects (Exhibit 9 below).

At this stage, investors cannot distinguish between an active sham with treatment efficacy, a strong placebo effect or, worse, that both active and sham treatments had little effect relative to rehabilitation. Nexstim believes that it can make a regulatory case for an active sham effect since both groups did better than would normally be expected.

Interestingly, an update (Kakuda 2016) on the large but uncontrolled 15-day protocol being run in Japan found a significant upper extremity response relative to baseline. Two 20-minute sessions of low-frequency stimulation (MagVenture’s system) to the contralesional hemisphere were provided with occupational therapy every day (excluding Sunday). The difference for 1,725 patients on discharge was an average of 4.1±4.2 on the Fugl-Meyer score (46.8 to 50.9). This was below the threshold for clinical significance set by Nexstim, but was statistically significant p<0.001.

Clinical assumptions made

The case for treatment rests on several hypotheses, each with various lines of published clinical evidence. Unfortunately, in many academic studies, the sample sizes are small and different trials can be contradictory. This is partly a function of the brain itself, since whereas the general pattern of brain function is constant, individuals will differ and the brain adapts. Management believes that other systems are less reproducible than Nexstim’s navigated technology, but many of these also have sophisticated tracking and use MRI 3D images. Exhibit 9 reviews concepts behind the trial.

Exhibit 9: Basis of Nexstim stroke hypothesis

Method

Evidence

Contralateral approach

The brain has two hemispheres linked by extensive connections. The decisions about what movement to make are made in the outer regions of the brain, the cortex (grey matter) close to the skull, and so accessible to magnetic fields. The hemispheres operate so that the left hemisphere controls the right arm and hand, whereas the right hemisphere controls the left arm and hand. The terminology can be convoluted. Ipsi means same, contra means opposite.

Transcallosal inhibition

It is known that when we are doing a movement with one side of the body only, for example buttoning a shirt with the right hand, then the left side of the brain (directing the buttoning action) sends inhibitory signals to the right side motor cortex to stop movement by the left hand. This is called transcallosal inhibition (across the cortex). Normally, the two hemispheres balance each other but after a stroke there is an imbalance. It is therefore theorised that the unaffected contralesional hemisphere continues to send inhibitory signals to the damaged, ipsilesional hemisphere and so hinders recovery.

Navigation

Locating the motor location in the brain hemisphere that has suffered a stroke (ipsilesional) is much more difficult. It is easier to find the location in the unaffected, contralesional hemisphere.

Inhibition vs excitation

Reducing contralesional inhibition should enable better motor function and enhanced recovery in the damaged, ipsilesional hemisphere. Observations suggest that giving one pulse per second (1Hz) causes an inhibition on the neurons. Williams (2010) showed this contralateral inhibitory effect in healthy individuals. Takeuchi (2005), which found an effect in the immediate ability of patients to complete a pinch movement. However, Rose (2014) ran a small 22-patient trial over four weeks using contralesional inhibition and found no effect. A large Cochrane review (Hao 2013) found no consistent pattern in various transcranial studies. It is also thought that pulse rates of 20 per second (20Hz) or more excite the neurons. Kim (2014) tested both contralesional 1Hz inhibition and ipsilesional 20Hz stimulation in a small study, but found no differences. Note that only the Nexstim system is navigated and so potentially has the highest reproducibility.

Need for occupational therapy

TMS alone is insufficient, as while it might facilitate new learning of motor skills, it does not provide the pathway stimulation needed to replace the motor skills lost due to the stroke. Hence, any study of TMS has the procedure itself to verify but also the effectiveness of the occupational therapy as a variable.

Source: Edison Investment Research based on cited sources

Approval and marketing: A US possibility?

Nexstim intends to file for a de novo 510(k) for NBT with the FDA (Exhibit 10). This might take six to 12 months for a review. As highly labour-intensive physical and occupational therapies are currently the only widely used treatments for post-stroke motor disabilities, this may encourage the FDA to allow use. If the application is refused, it is likely to be because the FDA does not accept that the clinical evidence base is yet adequate.

Exhibit 10: De novo 510(k) process

Aspect

Comments

Why de novo?

The process is called de novo since there is no equivalent approved device: 510(k) applications claim have the same efficacy as an existing, approved, system. Previously to this now well understood procedure, the FDA required a full set of clinical data (pre-market approval, PMA) for devices with no equivalence; the same as a high-risk Class III device. Note a de novo 510(k) approval does not guarantee reimbursement.

Process

If Nexstim submits an application and the FDA states it is Class III (as no equivalent device, which there is not), Nexstim within 30 days will ask for a risk-based assessment under regulation 513(a)(1). The FDA may then, after safety assessment and within 60 days, class the device as Class II requiring clinical evidence as appropriate so enabling a 510(k) approval without an equivalent device.

Predicate device status

If NBT is approved de novo for stroke, it then acts as the 510(k) equivalent device for other TMS systems for stroke. Three systems for treating depression are on the US market: from Neuronetics, Brainsway and MagVenture, Exhibit 12 details other TMS systems The Neuronetics system was originally approved by the de novo 510(k) route in 2008, see FDA letter. None of these companies has gained a stroke indication in the US though some have run some studies. However, a de novo NBT approval means they might run small studies and apply.

Success chances

Edison cannot assess if the de novo approval is likely to succeed or not especially given the minimal data to date, but notes that Nexstim’s NBS, the same product in effect, is already approved for analysis and there is plenty of general evidence of rTMS safety with three approved therapy systems already (plus one single pulse device). The FDA issued a set of TMS safety guidelines in 2011.

However, we take the view that the FDA is likely to need a clear efficacy signal to approve a de novo device as it acts as a predicate in that indication. The FDA would also find it hard to argue that devices approved for depression could not be used for stroke unless a rigorous sham controlled study for each device showed efficacy unless it had also required this from the predicate device (NBT). The FDA is not likely to want multiple stroke devices on the market without clear efficacy data, which Nexstim may have.

Aspect

Why de novo?

Process

Predicate device status

Success chances

Comments

The process is called de novo since there is no equivalent approved device: 510(k) applications claim have the same efficacy as an existing, approved, system. Previously to this now well understood procedure, the FDA required a full set of clinical data (pre-market approval, PMA) for devices with no equivalence; the same as a high-risk Class III device. Note a de novo 510(k) approval does not guarantee reimbursement.

If Nexstim submits an application and the FDA states it is Class III (as no equivalent device, which there is not), Nexstim within 30 days will ask for a risk-based assessment under regulation 513(a)(1). The FDA may then, after safety assessment and within 60 days, class the device as Class II requiring clinical evidence as appropriate so enabling a 510(k) approval without an equivalent device.

If NBT is approved de novo for stroke, it then acts as the 510(k) equivalent device for other TMS systems for stroke. Three systems for treating depression are on the US market: from Neuronetics, Brainsway and MagVenture, Exhibit 12 details other TMS systems The Neuronetics system was originally approved by the de novo 510(k) route in 2008, see FDA letter. None of these companies has gained a stroke indication in the US though some have run some studies. However, a de novo NBT approval means they might run small studies and apply.

Edison cannot assess if the de novo approval is likely to succeed or not especially given the minimal data to date, but notes that Nexstim’s NBS, the same product in effect, is already approved for analysis and there is plenty of general evidence of rTMS safety with three approved therapy systems already (plus one single pulse device). The FDA issued a set of TMS safety guidelines in 2011.

However, we take the view that the FDA is likely to need a clear efficacy signal to approve a de novo device as it acts as a predicate in that indication. The FDA would also find it hard to argue that devices approved for depression could not be used for stroke unless a rigorous sham controlled study for each device showed efficacy unless it had also required this from the predicate device (NBT). The FDA is not likely to want multiple stroke devices on the market without clear efficacy data, which Nexstim may have.

Source: Edison Investment Research, FDA databases

Market aspects

If the FDA approves the indication, Nexstim still has to gain reimbursement and medical acceptance. The indication is already CE-marked in Europe so can be sold now. Further trials are likely to be needed and an economic study required. The treatment of post-acute stroke varies by geography, but typically involves occupational and physical therapy.

In Europe, stroke patients often receive prolonged (up to 60 days) hospital-based monitoring to minimise the risk of recurrence of stroke and to ensure compliance with rehabilitation therapies. The Nexstim system fits neurological department needs very well, but further systems may be needed in the rehabilitation-focused departments, which are less technology orientated.

In the US, Medicare covers about two-thirds of stroke patients (due to age) with the rest having other insurance cover. The US procedure is a short period of acute care in hospital: a three-day stay is needed to qualify for Medicare rehabilitation care. Patients then move to Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNF) for care and rehabilitation as required. Medicare pays the first 20 days fully then there is a co-payment of about $157 per day for another 80 days ($12,560). There is no Medicare care for more than 100 days after a hospital admission. Private insurers, if they cover the procedure, will have their own arrangements but these may be similar. This may create a market gap as SNF locations with occupational and rehabilitation capabilities would not necessarily be the natural place for a sophisticated TMS system like NBT.

In the US, it is also necessary to get Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes for reimbursement. The existing rTMS market for depression may offer an analogy. There are two codes for depression: one to set up the treatment, another for repetitive sessions. No national reimbursement is yet available; see the Blue Cross policy, which considers rTMS as investigational. A 2009 economic study in depression assumed a price of $300 per session. However, there is some evidence of end user prices at $400-500 per session or $15,000 for a six-week course. The cost in Europe, where available, is about $319 per rTMS session (Vallejo-Torres 2015).

Modelling the stroke market

The business plan assumes a low cost per instrument, to gain placements, of about €80,000 with a cost per use for the disposable tracking system, used for navigation, of €80 (about US$90). This is a significant proportion of a possible $300-overall procedure value. Patients could receive 18 treatments so €1,800 per patient to Nexstim. A provider will also have the device cost and maintenance; systems are stated by Nexstim to have a seven-year working life (€11,500 per year in depreciation), although this may be an overestimate as older systems are still functioning.

Our previous assessment from October 2015 of the market potential was €1.42bn in consumables and €171m in devices at peak (2030) based on the annual incidence of stroke in the US and Europe, adjusted for acute deaths. If the FDA allows marketing and if strong efficacy evidence to can be gained, this forecast could still be valid. However, the potential need for more robust evidence to ensure reimbursement is assumed to push this back till at least 2021. Given the lack of data and uncertain regulatory position, Edison has replaced this model with a more conservative sales projection that does not depend on a specific market. This is discussed under Valuation.

NBS for pre-surgical mapping of the brain

The Navigated Brain Stimulation System (NBS), sold since 2008, has assumed a much greater importance being Nexstim’s only US-approved product. NBS is the only clinical system approved by the FDA for motor and speech mapping prior to surgery; there are also research use systems available as investigational devices. NBS is also CE-marked and Nexstim is the only company with a speech module on the European market, see Exhibit 12 detailing other TMS systems.

Mapping works when a tumour is eloquent, that is it occurs in regions of the brain that enable the individual to interact with and process the world, via motor actions, tool use and speech. Mapping can show that the motor or speech cortex is not directly involved in the lesion, allowing surgery to proceed and remove more tumour mass. To enable speech mapping, a NexSpeech module is added to NBS, which includes a separate monitor, an air-cooled coil and software to map and analyse the speech areas of the brain.

Apart from TMS-based mapping, which is ideally done in advance of surgery to enable accurate planning but can be done intraoperatively, the only alternative is direct cortical stimulation (DCS). DCS involves placing electrodes directly on the brain during the operation, but before lesion resection. DCS speech mapping is a stressful and difficult procedure, as the patient has to be awake during the operation (intraoperative) while electric stimulation is applied to the brain. DCS is performed in only a few locations globally.

Clinical data

NBS has shown to have a beneficial effect on operating decisions regarding the size and location of the operable area. Surgeons are often reluctant to remove brain tissue to avoid damaging the patient further and may not even operate. Mapping removes this uncertainty, Exhibit 11.

Exhibit 11: NBS surgical studies

Study

Size

Outcomes

Kreg (2014)

100 patients with 100 historic matched controls

An exploratory study in Munich found that 12% of NBS assessed patients improved after surgery vs 1% on intraoperative assessment, p=0.006.

Frey (2014)

250 patients with 115 match historic controls

This well designed study was run at the Charité hospital, Berlin The resection volume (amount of brain tissue removed) rose in 35.2% of cases with a few patients (3.5%) having smaller resected volumes. Patients had either glioma (48%), a brain metastasis (35%) or another lesion (17%). There was no overall progression-free survival advantage relative to a matched historic control group although progression-free survival in the less severe Grade II glioma 18-patient sub group was 22.4 months vs 15.4 months for pre-matched controls, p<0.05. There was no overall survival difference vs controls, although functional outcomes were perceived as better. The study analysis was inevitably limited for ethical reasons by the open-label design and need to use a matched control group.

Source: Edison Investment Research based on cited sources.

Frey et al commented: “The integration of navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation into the surgical workflow crucially improves preoperative planning, patient counseling, and surgical procedures and leads to longer progression-free survival rates and better neurological outcomes by expanding the indications and extent of resection.”

NBS market and strategy

Speech and motor cortex mapping with NBS require auxiliary technologies such as neuronavigators (visualisation aid of the brain) and stereotactic tools (3D coordinate system for disease targeting), used by an estimated 1,870 and 520 hospitals; NBS is compatible with all these tools. The US and Europe represent around 80% of the global market potential with an estimated (Nexstim data) 82,000 brain surgical operations per year. Nexstim sold 120 units up to December 2014. The list price is stated by management to be about €210k, but Nexstim sells many systems through distributors so the reported value will be much lower and an approximate 25% discount is assumed, to about €165k each in 2015. In late 2014, there was a change to the NBS system when a reusable tracker device was replaced by a disposable unit. Disposables are assumed to cost €122 each, although the difference to the tracker unit used for NBT, at a lower price, is not clear.

Nexstim has so far targeted key opinion leaders at leading universities and teaching hospitals in the fields of neurosurgery and radiology, notably in the US and Germany, using a small sales and marketing team. Reimbursement codes for pre-surgical mapping using NBS already exist in the US in the form of an emerging technology code (CPT III) and in Germany (OPS).

Other indications and competition

Nexstim is still focused on stroke. However, it would make sense to broaden the base of indications and the obvious and fastest target is severe depression, with plenty of clinical data. There are, however, multiple TMS systems available (Exhibit 12).

Exhibit 12: TMS systems and other electrical brain stimulation and robotic rehabilitation systems

Company (Device)

Comment

Nexstim (NBT System)

Showed no difference to an “active” sham treatment in Phase III trials but de novo 510(k) planned with FDA approval possible but not certain in 2017.

Nexstim (NBS System)

Over 130 units placed and FDA 510(k) approval in 2009 for motor mapping. Added speech mapping functionality on 510(k) in 2011. NBS uses MRI scan data though sophisticated software. Has a disposable head mounted tracking sensor (introduced late 2014 to replace a reusable tracking device). Claims highly precise navigation.

Neuronetics (Neurostar)

Private US, no sales disclosed

Neuronetics claims to have 600 systems installed and to have treated over 25,000 patients (website). The Neurostar device was approved de novo in 2008 and has been subject to further developments with the latest 510(k) approval in 2014. As the coil is freely positioned over a patient’s head, it might be applicable to stroke therapy. The system has a “Coil Positioning System” which “assures repeatable and accurate depression treatment” using a head tracking laser device (disposable) and an algorithm that selects the optimal location. Such systems can be used to map motor functions. The SenStar device attached to the coil reduces scalp “tingling”. It could be potentially used for multiple applications. Neuronetics is a private US company. It also has a series of clinical academic studies running, for example in schizophrenia.

Brainsway (Deep TMS)

Listed Israeli company (TSE), €57m mkt cap, with a US subsidiary

Brainsway gained a 510(k) approval in 2012. The Deep TMS device has the “H-Coil” in a helmet-like configuration. 2015 turnover was NIS26.5m (€6.2m) with a loss of NIS15.9m (€3.7m). Sales doubled from 2013 to 2014. There are some systems in private medicine in Europe. Brainsway has an extensive clinical trials programme. For example, a 98-patient study in Obsessive compulsive disorder is due to complete in H216. A Phase II trial in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults reported positive results in February 2016. The H-coil has a sham component, which resembles an actual treatment (scalp tingle and noise) enabling easy running of placebo-controlled trials.

MagVenture (MagVita)

Denmark

The main system, MagVita, gained a CE mark in 2011 and was 510(k) cleared in July 2015 for drug resistant major depressive disorder. The MagPro diagnostic system was approved under 510(k) in 2010 for stimulation of peripheral nerves with other uses being investigational. MagVenture sells a wide range of TMS equipment.

neuroConn

German company offering products and clinical services

A German company selling a variety of brain stimulating products and services (via three clinics, two in Holland, one in Germany) including direct electrical transcranial brain stimulation (not magnetic) via electrode pads attached to the scalp. The Brainsight TMS diagnostic system is available from Rogue Research. The products are CE marked.

Mag & More (PowrerMap)

German company

This German company produces the high-quality TMS “PowerMag” system using infrared sensors to position the figure of eight magnetic coil reproducibly and with precision and align to MRI scan data via a head tracking device (see website). The system uses an algorithm to plan treatment and can be linked to EMG (muscle) sensors to provide diagnostics. The products are CE marked but the company does not seem to have run clinical studies. It offers a variety of system configurations for different users with navigated being the flagship.

Brain Science Tools

Dutch company

The company sells the navigated Neural Navigation software that integrates MRI data with TMS responses for brain function mapping. The product and software are CE marked. Tracking uses a weak magnetic field and head sensor. It is a compact and transportable system at a price claimed as reasonable.

Rogue Research

US company

Sells a variety of research systems including the Brainsight TMS diagnostic system that links to EMG and MRI scan data with sophisticated mapping and visualisation software. Over 400 Brainsight units are claimed in use worldwide but the product is for research use and does not appear to be FDA registered or CE marked.

eNeura Therapeutics

US company

eNeura’s Spring TMS utilises single-pulse TMS to prevent migraine with aura pain. It is a handheld device positioned over the back of the head by the user. It is not suitable for stroke. It was approved de novo in 2015.

Cervel Neurotech

(US)

Investigational TMS system in clinical development. Uses “multiple magnetic coils placed directly on the scalp …to steer the magnetic field toward the specific network of brain regions associated with a particular disorder”.

Cortical implants

Method of stimulating the brain through implants placed directly on the cortex. Difficult, requires invasive surgery. However, if deep brain stimulation is needed, this is the only way since magnetic fields only stimulate the cortex.

Robotics/exoskeletons (Ekso Bionics, Rewalk, Rex Bionics)

No conclusive evidence that peripheral nerve stimulation using exoskeletons improve rehab outcomes beyond intensive conventional rehabilitation.

Company (Device)

Nexstim (NBT System)

Nexstim (NBS System)

Neuronetics (Neurostar)

Private US, no sales disclosed

Brainsway (Deep TMS)

Listed Israeli company (TSE), €57m mkt cap, with a US subsidiary

MagVenture (MagVita)

Denmark

neuroConn

German company offering products and clinical services

Mag & More (PowrerMap)

German company

Brain Science Tools

Dutch company

Rogue Research

US company

eNeura Therapeutics

US company

Cervel Neurotech

(US)

Cortical implants

Robotics/exoskeletons (Ekso Bionics, Rewalk, Rex Bionics)

Comment

Showed no difference to an “active” sham treatment in Phase III trials but de novo 510(k) planned with FDA approval possible but not certain in 2017.

Over 130 units placed and FDA 510(k) approval in 2009 for motor mapping. Added speech mapping functionality on 510(k) in 2011. NBS uses MRI scan data though sophisticated software. Has a disposable head mounted tracking sensor (introduced late 2014 to replace a reusable tracking device). Claims highly precise navigation.

Neuronetics claims to have 600 systems installed and to have treated over 25,000 patients (website). The Neurostar device was approved de novo in 2008 and has been subject to further developments with the latest 510(k) approval in 2014. As the coil is freely positioned over a patient’s head, it might be applicable to stroke therapy. The system has a “Coil Positioning System” which “assures repeatable and accurate depression treatment” using a head tracking laser device (disposable) and an algorithm that selects the optimal location. Such systems can be used to map motor functions. The SenStar device attached to the coil reduces scalp “tingling”. It could be potentially used for multiple applications. Neuronetics is a private US company. It also has a series of clinical academic studies running, for example in schizophrenia.

Brainsway gained a 510(k) approval in 2012. The Deep TMS device has the “H-Coil” in a helmet-like configuration. 2015 turnover was NIS26.5m (€6.2m) with a loss of NIS15.9m (€3.7m). Sales doubled from 2013 to 2014. There are some systems in private medicine in Europe. Brainsway has an extensive clinical trials programme. For example, a 98-patient study in Obsessive compulsive disorder is due to complete in H216. A Phase II trial in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in adults reported positive results in February 2016. The H-coil has a sham component, which resembles an actual treatment (scalp tingle and noise) enabling easy running of placebo-controlled trials.

The main system, MagVita, gained a CE mark in 2011 and was 510(k) cleared in July 2015 for drug resistant major depressive disorder. The MagPro diagnostic system was approved under 510(k) in 2010 for stimulation of peripheral nerves with other uses being investigational. MagVenture sells a wide range of TMS equipment.

A German company selling a variety of brain stimulating products and services (via three clinics, two in Holland, one in Germany) including direct electrical transcranial brain stimulation (not magnetic) via electrode pads attached to the scalp. The Brainsight TMS diagnostic system is available from Rogue Research. The products are CE marked.

This German company produces the high-quality TMS “PowerMag” system using infrared sensors to position the figure of eight magnetic coil reproducibly and with precision and align to MRI scan data via a head tracking device (see website). The system uses an algorithm to plan treatment and can be linked to EMG (muscle) sensors to provide diagnostics. The products are CE marked but the company does not seem to have run clinical studies. It offers a variety of system configurations for different users with navigated being the flagship.

The company sells the navigated Neural Navigation software that integrates MRI data with TMS responses for brain function mapping. The product and software are CE marked. Tracking uses a weak magnetic field and head sensor. It is a compact and transportable system at a price claimed as reasonable.

Sells a variety of research systems including the Brainsight TMS diagnostic system that links to EMG and MRI scan data with sophisticated mapping and visualisation software. Over 400 Brainsight units are claimed in use worldwide but the product is for research use and does not appear to be FDA registered or CE marked.

eNeura’s Spring TMS utilises single-pulse TMS to prevent migraine with aura pain. It is a handheld device positioned over the back of the head by the user. It is not suitable for stroke. It was approved de novo in 2015.

Investigational TMS system in clinical development. Uses “multiple magnetic coils placed directly on the scalp …to steer the magnetic field toward the specific network of brain regions associated with a particular disorder”.

Method of stimulating the brain through implants placed directly on the cortex. Difficult, requires invasive surgery. However, if deep brain stimulation is needed, this is the only way since magnetic fields only stimulate the cortex.

No conclusive evidence that peripheral nerve stimulation using exoskeletons improve rehab outcomes beyond intensive conventional rehabilitation.

Source: Nexstim and Edison Investment Research.

For example, Brainsway gained 510(k) approval by showing in a 230-patient, 16-week therapy trial in depression that 38.5% of active treatment patients responded (response = a gain of 50% plus in the scoring system) vs 21.3% sham therapy, p=0014. The five-week remission rate was 32.6% active vs 16.6% sham, p=0.005. Neuronetics using different criteria showed a 13.4% remission from depression as against 5% on sham therapy, p=0.017 in 197 patients. With three FDA-approved systems and more with CE marking, the market already looks well covered and Neuronetics is well established, with over 600 systems. However, major demand has yet to develop and as it does reimbursement should become standard. For example, Neuronetics thinks it worthwhile identifying clinics that treat over 20 patients in a year as having higher expertise.

The precise navigation of NBT may offer clinical advantages. Other indications, Exhibit 3 above, are less secure, but it is possible that a tail of other applications will be verified such as OCD and ADHD; some might become big markets but the need for repeated rTMS sessions over several weeks might limit the potential. TMS might also have a role in memory stimulation. Bagherzadeh et al (2016) showed an effect in health individuals and this might, with further trials, translate into a benefit in elderly patients.

Sensitivities

The obvious sensitivity relates to whether the FDA will allow a de novo 510(k). This is hard to assess given that the NICHE trial did not achieve its primary endpoint. In any event, a decision is not likely till late 2016 at the earliest and H117 is more realistic. If positive, Nexstim will need to establish clinical acceptance and reimbursement almost certainly needing another clinical study. Europe is an accessible market now but the issues of acceptance and reimbursement are made more complex by the underlying fragmentation of the market. Nexstim may also need to develop simpler and cheaper systems that are more suited to routine occupational therapy centres such as the SNF used in the US. While the stroke saga is unfolding, in our view, Nexstim should develop other indications. A 200-patient depression study would give an entry to what is still an underdeveloped market. There are other possible markets like pain and tinnitus. Nexstim is well placed to develop its technology and the rTMS clinical market is still at an early growth stage.

Valuation

As management has not confirmed a revised strategy, the new valuation is based on a scenario developed by Edison and not based on any specific indication, in which Nexstim sells up to 50 NBS units and up to 100 NBT units per year at 70% (unchanged) and 55% (formerly 70%) probability, respectively. NBS reflects commercial uncertainties not technical risk. NBT’s 55% probability is an overall assessment of the probability of gaining a stroke indication quickly (moderate), the probability that another indication could be accessed (high but data needed) and the intangible benefits of NBT navigation (moderate to high as no comparison data are available). Exhibit 13 shows these assumptions (before risk adjustment), which give a 2030 indicative revenue of €146m. This can be compared to Exhibit 12 in the September 2015 initiation note. The strategy is focused on building disposable tracker volumes; device use rates are hard to forecast.

Exhibit 13: Market assumptions used for valuation

 

Units

Disposable Tacker units

Overall total

€m

 

Unit sales (2030)

Price €k (2016)

Value €m (2030)*

Trackers/ unit

Installed Units

Tracker Price 2016 €

Value 2030

€m

Servicing

€m

NBS

49

165

10

100

606**

122

9

2

22

NBT

94

80

10

1250

940

80

112

3

124

 

20

121

5

146

Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: *2% inflation from 2018; **New system, total of 723 including an estimated (Edison) 117 pre Q314 NBS systems.

So far, Nexstim’s revenues are from the sale of NBS equipment and servicing. Unit NBS list price is over €200k but Nexstim will receive a lower price after the distributor discount; this is all opaque. In Q414, a new NBS system was launched, which uses a single-use tracker with an RF chip. The original NBS system used a reusable headset. This means that the base of an estimated 117 old-style NBS units (120 NBS units installed by December 2014) generates no consumable revenues.

Nexstim plans for an operational life of seven years per system, modelled in the previous estimates. This is now not modelled, as in reality this will depend on use rates and machine reliability. A further change is that we assume price inflation of 2% (formerly price deflation was assumed), as the market still appears to have substantial growth potential.

There are no real forecasting indicators for NBT given current uncertainty, but the installed base projected is about 1.5 times the current Neuronetics base, which seems reasonable given the Nexstim claim of precise NBT navigation and the possibility of a stroke indication. A marketing cost of 17.5% of sales has been added to reflect the extra costs and discounts needed, but device marketing can be slow (sales were lower than hoped in 2015 due to some contract delays) and the fixed costs can be high. Previously, sales costs were included in the overall cost forecast.

Valuation depends on the installed base and NBT use rates. There is no data, but Edison assumes five NBT treatments per day for 50 weeks a year. Volumes could be much higher, perhaps 10 per day, or lower. The NBS use rate is assumed to be 100 per year.

A key value element is cash. Nexstim is funded to Q316 on management’s current plans. Further trials, if feasible, will take more investment. NBT sales will take more time than previously envisaged but immediate marketing costs will be lower. There is therefore a significant dilution element that is currently hard to assess. In the previous model this was assumed at €50m to drive US marketing. An estimate of €13m in equity to 2017 is made on the basis of a more stable cost base but this figure is subject to high uncertainty. Any post 2018 funding is treated as debt.

Exhibit 14 shows a breakdown of the discounted free cash flow over 2016-30 used in our valuation.

Exhibit 14: Discounted cash flow breakdown

 

Probability

DCF (€m)

Value of NBS revenues

70%

72.6

Value of NBT revenues

55%

119.2

Probability adjusted revenues

191.8

CoG

(21.1)

Expenses

(135.3)

Finance

(1.5)

Tax

(5.5)

Total

28.5

Working capital adjustments

(4.4)

Present value of FCFs 2016-30e

 

2.3

Source: Edison Investment Research

The terminal value, based on a 2030 projected cash flow of €20.4m, is €156m in 2030. This is based on a 1% long-term growth rate and a 12.5% discount rate. A terminal growth rate is used as device markets have long product life cycles. Discounted to 2016, this is valued at €29.9m. Exhibit 15 shows a pre-dilution value of €28.7m or €3.58/share. However, subtracting the possible cash need to 2017 (as new shares) implies a value of about €1.56 (fully diluted, including options). The number of shares in 2017 depends on the prices at which new shares are issued, so this dilution estimate is only a very approximate guide.

Exhibit 15: Valuation breakdown

€m unless otherwise stated

 

 

Values

PV cash flows

 

 

2.3

PV of terminal value

Terminal growth rate

1.0%

29.9

Total PV

 

 

32.2

Loans Dec 2015

 

 

(3.6)

Equity value Feb 2016

 

 

28.7

Shares in issue Dec 2015 (m)

 

 

8.01

Value per share (€)

 

 

3.58

New equity assumed to 2017 at 2% discount rate

 

(12.8)

Diluted value

 

 

15.8

Options (n)

 

 

0.7

Diluted value per share (€)

 

 

1.56

Source: Edison Investment Research

Financials

In 2015, unit sales (10 units) were €1.985k with other sales of €0.543k, up from €415k in 2014. It is assumed that at least €400k is from service revenues so perhaps €145k was consumable sales.

The cost of goods was €995k, of which €174k was allocated to inventory using Finnish accounting standards. Nexstim purchases units from a manufacturer and has no in-house assembly; the manufacturer changed in 2015 so costs may also have altered in the period; some delayed orders were noted by management. The disposable sells for €122 (before distributor discount) and generates a revenue stream; on Edison estimates, this might have been over 1,100 procedures in 2015 but this was not disclosed.

The cash outflow in 2015 was about €9m pre-financing. This is forecast to drop to an outflow of about €8.4m in 2016, although this depends on further clinical trial and regulatory costs. Cash was €6.9m at the year-end, stated to be sufficient until the end of Q316. Nexstim carried out a capital raise of €5.3m gross at the end of 2015. A capital loan from Tekes of €0.5m is being repaid from 2017 at €100k per year. There is also a Tekes long-term loan of €2.7m at favourable rates.

Exhibit 16 has financial results and Edison forecasts.

Exhibit 16: Financial summary

€000

2014

2015

2016e

2017e

Year end 30 June

FAS

FAS

FAS

FAS

PROFIT & LOSS

Revenue

2,210

2,528

3,140

4,231

Cost of Sales

(638)

(821)

(685)

(1,381)

Gross Profit

1,572

1,707

2,456

2,850

EBITDA

(7,422)

(9,984)

(8,715)

(6,860)

Operating Profit (before GW and except)

(7,568)

(10,096)

(8,725)

(6,870)

Intangible Amortisation

(231)

(274)

(250)

(250)

Exceptionals

-

-

-

-

Operating Profit

(7,800)

(10,370)

(8,975)

(7,120)

Other

-

-

-

-

Net Interest

(2,646)

544

(200)

(200)

Profit Before Tax (norm)

(10,214)

(9,552)

(8,925)

(7,070)

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

(10,445)

(9,826)

(9,175)

(7,320)

Tax

-

(1)

-

-

Profit After Tax (norm)

(10,214)

(29,670)

(38,218)

(43,682)

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

(10,445)

(9,827)

(9,175)

(7,320)

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

7.1

8.0

8.3

14.6

EPS - normalised (€)

(1.43)

(6.22)

(8.12)

(5.49)

EPS - FRS 3 (€)

(1.46)

(3.74)

(4.63)

(3.00)

Dividend per share (€)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Gross Margin (%)

71.1

67.5

78.2

67.4

EBITDA Margin (%)

-335.8

-394.9

-277.5

-162.1

Operating Margin (before GW and except.) (%)

-342.4

-399.4

-277.9

-162.4

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

979

974

974

974

Intangible Assets

527

631

631

631

Tangible Assets

442

333

333

333

Other

10

10

10

10

Current Assets

13,014

8,233

4,264

4,853

Stocks

247

421

421

421

Debtors

930

659

550

1,004

Cash

11,484

6,875

3,016

3,144

Other

354

277

277

283

Current Liabilities

(1,928)

(2,417)

(2,724)

(2,732)

Creditors

(1,382)

(1,084)

(1,291)

(1,300)

Short term borrowings

(134)

(384)

(484)

(484)

Short term leases

0

0

0

0

Other

(412)

(948)

(948)

(948)

Long Term Liabilities

(3,475)

(3,245)

(3,145)

(3,045)

Long term borrowings

(3,405)

(3,197)

(3,097)

(2,997)

Long term leases

0

0

0

0

Other long term liabilities

(71)

(47)

(47)

(47)

Net Assets

8,590

3,545

(630)

50

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

(7,146)

(9,065)

(8,399)

(7,312)

Net Interest

(640)

(544)

(200)

(200)

Tax

0

0

0

0

Capex

(860)

(380)

(260)

(260)

Acquisitions/disposals

0

0

0

0

Financing

18,818

5,280

5,000

8,000

Dividends

0

0

0

0

Other

300

100

0

(100)

Net Cash Flow

10,473

(4,609)

(3,859)

128

Opening net debt/(cash)

2,529

(7,945)

(3,293)

565

HP finance leases initiated

-

-

-

-

Other inc loans

0

(43)

-

100

Closing net debt/(cash)

(7,945)

(3,293)

565

337

Source: Edison Investment Research, Nexstim accounts. Note: FAS = Finnish Accounting Standards.

Edison, the investment intelligence firm, is the future of investor interaction with corporates. Our team of over 100 analysts and investment professionals work with leading companies, fund managers and investment banks worldwide to support their capital markets activity. We provide services to more than 400 retained corporate and investor clients from our offices in London, New York, Frankfurt, Sydney and Wellington. Edison is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority. Edison Investment Research (NZ) Limited (Edison NZ) is the New Zealand subsidiary of Edison. Edison NZ is registered on the New Zealand Financial Service Providers Register (FSP number 247505) and is registered to provide wholesale and/or generic financial adviser services only. Edison Investment Research Inc (Edison US) is the US subsidiary of Edison and is regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison Investment Research Limited (Edison Aus) [46085869] is the Australian subsidiary of Edison and is not regulated by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. Edison Germany is a branch entity of Edison Investment Research Limited [4794244]. www.edisongroup.com

DISCLAIMER
Copyright 2016 Edison Investment Research Limited. All rights reserved. This report has been commissioned by Nexstim and prepared and issued by Edison for publication globally. All information used in the publication of this report has been compiled from publicly available sources that are believed to be reliable, however we do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of this report. Opinions contained in this report represent those of the research department of Edison at the time of publication. The securities described in the Investment Research may not be eligible for sale in all jurisdictions or to certain categories of investors. This research is issued in Australia by Edison Aus and any access to it, is intended only for "wholesale clients" within the meaning of the Australian Corporations Act. The Investment Research is distributed in the United States by Edison US to major US institutional investors only. Edison US is registered as an investment adviser with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Edison US relies upon the "publishers' exclusion" from the definition of investment adviser under Section 202(a)(11) of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and corresponding state securities laws. As such, Edison does not offer or provide personalised advice. We publish information about companies in which we believe our readers may be interested and this information reflects our sincere opinions. The information that we provide or that is derived from our website is not intended to be, and should not be construed in any manner whatsoever as, personalised advice. Also, our website and the information provided by us should not be construed by any subscriber or prospective subscriber as Edison’s solicitation to effect, or attempt to effect, any transaction in a security. The research in this document is intended for New Zealand resident professional financial advisers or brokers (for use in their roles as financial advisers or brokers) and habitual investors who are “wholesale clients” for the purpose of the Financial Advisers Act 2008 (FAA) (as described in sections 5(c) (1)(a), (b) and (c) of the FAA). This is not a solicitation or inducement to buy, sell, subscribe, or underwrite any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. This document is provided for information purposes only and should not be construed as an offer or solicitation for investment in any securities mentioned or in the topic of this document. A marketing communication under FCA Rules, this document has not been prepared in accordance with the legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research.
Edison has a restrictive policy relating to personal dealing. Edison Group does not conduct any investment business and, accordingly, does not itself hold any positions in the securities mentioned in this report. However, the respective directors, officers, employees and contractors of Edison may have a position in any or related securities mentioned in this report. Edison or its affiliates may perform services or solicit business from any of the companies mentioned in this report. The value of securities mentioned in this report can fall as well as rise and are subject to large and sudden swings. In addition it may be difficult or not possible to buy, sell or obtain accurate information about the value of securities mentioned in this report. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance. Forward-looking information or statements in this report contain information that is based on assumptions, forecasts of future results, estimates of amounts not yet determinable, and therefore involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of their subject matter to be materially different from current expectations. For the purpose of the FAA, the content of this report is of a general nature, is intended as a source of general information only and is not intended to constitute a recommendation or opinion in relation to acquiring or disposing (including refraining from acquiring or disposing) of securities. The distribution of this document is not a “personalised service” and, to the extent that it contains any financial advice, is intended only as a “class service” provided by Edison within the meaning of the FAA (ie without taking into account the particular financial situation or goals of any person). As such, it should not be relied upon in making an investment decision. To the maximum extent permitted by law, Edison, its affiliates and contractors, and their respective directors, officers and employees will not be liable for any loss or damage arising as a result of reliance being placed on any of the information contained in this report and do not guarantee the returns on investments in the products discussed in this publication. FTSE International Limited (“FTSE”) © FTSE 2016. “FTSE®” is a trade mark of the London Stock Exchange Group companies and is used by FTSE International Limited under license. All rights in the FTSE indices and/or FTSE ratings vest in FTSE and/or its licensors. Neither FTSE nor its licensors accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the FTSE indices and/or FTSE ratings or underlying data. No further distribution of FTSE Data is permitted without FTSE’s express written consent.

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

Level 15, 171 Featherston St

Wellington 6011

New Zealand

Frankfurt +49 (0)69 78 8076 960

Schumannstrasse 34b

60325 Frankfurt

Germany

London +44 (0)20 3077 5700

280 High Holborn

London, WC1V 7EE

United Kingdom

New York +1 646 653 7026

245 Park Avenue, 39th Floor

10167, New York

US

Sydney +61 (0)2 9258 1161

Level 25, Aurora Place

88 Phillip St, Sydney

NSW 2000, Australia

Wellington +64 (0)48 948 555

Level 15, 171 Featherston St

Wellington 6011

New Zealand

Research: Healthcare

Selvita — Update 25 April 2016

Selvita

Continue Reading

Subscribe to Edison

Get access to the very latest content matched to your personal investment style.

Sign up for free