Theraclion — Update 25 February 2016

Theraclion — Update 25 February 2016

Theraclion

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Theraclion

Fast-moving focus

Initiation of coverage

Healthcare equipment & services

26 February 2016

Price

€5.69

Market cap

€25m

Cash (€m) at 31 Aug 2015

4.7

Shares in issue

4.28m

Free float

14%

Code

ALTHE

Primary exchange

Alternext

Secondary exchange

N/A

Share price performance

%

1m

3m

12m

Abs

(0.1)

(9.1)

(29.1)

Rel (local)

3.8

(13.2)

(35.4)

52-week high/low

€10.75

€6.50

Business description

Theraclion, based in southern Paris, sells a high-precision, high-intensity ultrasound system (EchoPulse) in Europe and Asia for non-invasive treatment of benign breast and thyroid growths. A US clinical programme is underway. A single-use consumable is required per treatment.

Next events

Annual results

Q1 2016

Analysts

Dr John Savin MBA

+44 (0)20 3077 5735

Christian Glennie

+44 (0)20 3077 5727

Theraclion is a research client of Edison Investment Research Limited

Theraclion sells the CE-marked EchoPulse ultrasound device and one-time use EPack skin cooling system to treat benign but troublesome breast fibroadenomas (lumps) and palpable thyroid nodules. EchoPulse leaves no ugly scars and carries zero infection risk. Its innovation, Beamotion, speeds up therapy. US clinical trials are underway with possible marketing from 2019. In 2015, Theraclion sold or leased 12 systems for evaluation, mainly in Germany and Asia. In 2016, management expects to sell at least 20 systems. Cash at 31 August 2015 was €4.7m.

Year end

Revenue (€000s)

PBT*
(€000s)

EPS*
(c)

DPS
(c)

P/E
(x)

Yield
(%)

12/13

76

(4,370)

(133)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/14

820

(4,839)

(122)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/15e

1,762

(6,506)

(147)

0.0

N/A

N/A

12/16e

5,917

(4,540)

(92)

0.0

N/A

N/A

Note: *PBT and EPS are normalised, excluding intangible amortisation, exceptional items and share-based payments.

Breast fibroadenomas – fast, non-invasive treatment

At least 10% of women develop fibroadenomas: small hard lumps, 1-4cm, which can be very painful, often found in the upper, outer breast. These usually develop at a young age. Fibroadenomas are benign and usually stable, but only up to 50% regress naturally. After a year, 67% of FAs treated with EchoPulse decreased by 60% or more in volume. An initial 20-pt US study is underway. Theraclion may start to sell EchoPulse in the US from 2019 after a further clinical trial. The Beamotion upgrade speeds therapy times from 1-2 hours to about 20 minutes.

Thyroid nodules – treatment time cut five-fold

Thyroid nodules form on the margins of the neck thyroid gland with about 5% of adults developing palpable nodules; 95% are benign (biopsy needed). Most are cosmetic and symptomless but rarer hyperfunctioning nodules can produce symptoms due to excess hormone. Currently, nodules are removed by surgery so they are usually monitored. EchoPulse has the precision need to ablate nodules with over 40% mean shrinkage seen. In interim clinical data on seven patients, Beamotion, a new treatment programme, cut mean time from 83 to 17 minutes.

Valuation: Sensitive to use rates and US entry date

Theraclion management expects at least 60 installed units in Europe and Asia by the end of 2017, up from 15 to date. By 2025, Theraclion estimates 225 units operating in Europe and 300 in the US. EPack consumable use is crucial, with management expecting up to 240 per year per system generating a growing consumable revenue stream. For valuation purposes, we have applied probabilities of 80% to European unit sales, 65% to US unit sales (adding in regulatory risk) and 70% to EPack treatment rates. China and other Asian markets could be much bigger but we forecast cautiously. Using a 2% 2025 continuing growth rate and discounting cash flows at 12.5%, the indicative value is €10.09/share. Further funding of up to €10m may be needed between 2016 and 2018.

Investment summary

Theraclion was founded in 2004 as a spin-out from a French company, EDAP-TMS1. The company sells a high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) treatment device, EchoPulse, and integrated single-use cooling consumable, EPack, to treat benign breast tissue growths (fibroadenomas) and thyroid nodules. Theraclion sells direct in Europe and has a branch in Hong Kong with distributors elsewhere. US clinical trials started in 2014 with a de novo 510(k) planned. Theraclion listed on the Paris Altenext market in April 2014 raising €9.7m net at €14.50/share, plus a bond conversion of €1.5m at €9.43/share. Cumulative expenditure to Dec 2014 was €19.9m. It has 31 employees, half of whom are in development and clinical roles. An industry experienced CEO, Mr David Caulmartin, joined in September 2014 and Mr David Auregan joined as CFO in December 2015.

TDAP-TMS is an ultrasound company based in Lyon, France and is NASDAQ-listed (see elsewhere in report).

Valuation: Focused market with high potential margins

Theraclion management expects at least 60 installed units in Europe and Asia by the end of 2017, up from 15 to date with about 100 by 2018. By 2025, Theralion estimates there could be 225 units operating in Europe and 300 in the US. EPack consumable use is crucial with management expecting up to 240 per year per system generating a strong consumable revenue stream. For valuation purposes, we have applied probabilities of 80% to European unit sales, 65% to US unit sales (adding in regulatory risk) and 70% to EPack treatment rates. China and other Asian markets could be much bigger but we cautiously forecast about 60 units in 2025 at a 50% probability. Using a 2% 2025 continuing growth rate and discounting cash flows at 12.5%, the indicative value is €10.09/share. The estimate assumes an average tax rate of 24%. Further funding of up to €10m may be needed between 2016 and 2018 in either equity or loans, implying a diluted value of €7.20.

Financials: Cash needs to fund US trials and EU sales growth

Theraclion had 2015 sales of €1.76m, up from €0.82m in 2014. There are now 14 units in clinics at 16 sites (four sites share two systems). Cash at 31 August June 2015 was €4.7m after a €4m June 2015 placing and a €1.1m repayable advance from Bpifrance (a government agency) in July 2015. Theraclion benefits from cash R&D tax credits, worth €360k in H115. From 2019, Theraclion could be in profit with strong growth. Break-even is possible in 2018 if use rates are high.

Sensitivities: Valid

Novel medical device companies are hard to value because sales growth is heavily affected by the rate of change of medical practise and slow buying processes. Market sizes are hard to quantify for benign conditions but the market may expand as EchoPulse offers an effective, non-invasive and fast procedure (using Beamotion). Fibroadenoma treatment may be more of a private cosmetic market in some countries; thyroid is more a medical market and has about half the potential treatments compared to breast therapy. Theraclion has noted a reimbursement barrier in many European countries because EchoPulse does not fall into traditional reimbursement categories (IPO document). Adoption in markets with insurance systems (like Germany) seems faster than in centralised markets like the UK and France. Use in the US could be much higher due to private medicine and wider insurance cover. No definitive timeline is available for a US de novo 510(k) device approval using the 513(f) regulation; we estimate sales from 2019 after a multi-centre trial. The Chinese market could be very substantial but is likely to be very price sensitive beyond the private clinics in wealthy locations like Hong Kong; Korea and Japan are better prospects. Gaining high EPack sales is crucial since this generates recurring revenues from the rising installed base and higher volumes will improve the EPack gross margin to 60% or more. Truffle capital, the majority shareholder, has sold 254,885 shares since October 2015.

Company description: Breast and thyroid therapy

EchoPulse is a compact, standalone, CE-marked system for high-intensity ultrasound treatment using a single-use fluid cooling and focusing module: EPack. The EchoPulse device treats benign but troublesome breast fibroadenomas (Exhibit 1) and palpable thyroid nodules (Exhibit 2). EchoPulse is easy to use and leaves no scars, with no infection or surgical risks.

Exhibit 1: Breast fibroadenoma

Exhibit 2: Thyroid nodule

Source: Theraclion IPO document

Source: Theraclion IPO document

Exhibit 1: Breast fibroadenoma

Source: Theraclion IPO document

Exhibit 2: Thyroid nodule

Source: Theraclion IPO document

EchoPulse: The technology behind the therapy

EchoPulse, Exhibit 3, comprises:

a main body, which is on castors and movable, containing the power supply, a refrigeration system and a pumping system for the coolant (this uses two peristaltic pumps).

a control unit and screen to enable the treatment to be designed and programmed. The screen shows a real-time imaging ultrasound picture for tracking; and

a movable head and ultrasound generator system. The head orientation is precisely controlled so the beam can be focused to within a millimetre. The beam is focused through the bulb of cooling fluid the head cover clipped to the tip of the device. The head moves automatically.

Exhibit 3: EchoPulse

Source: Theraclion IPO document

The EPack cooling system is disclosed in patent WO2011064209A1. EPack, a sealed bag of special fluid, is inserted into the body of the unit and kept at 10°C. The fluid is pumped through a sealed head cover unit fastened in front of the ultrasound generator in the movable head, which is labelled as the ultra-fine membrane. This fluid:

1.

cools the surface of the skin preventing overheating of healthy tissue;

2.

“couples” the ultrasound beam to the skin to prevent any loss of power this would occur if the ultrasound travelled through air (no air bubbles are allowed); and

3.

focuses the beam, depending on the amount of fluid in the cover head, as the depth of the focus can be moved in and out by adjusting the volume of liquid in the head.

Each EPack has a radio frequency tag with an identification number to ensure traceability as the technical performance is crucial. The EchoPulse system records the tag and does not allow reuse.

For treatment, Exhibit 4, high-intensity ultrasound is focused into a narrow elliptical zone to heat tissue to about 80°C to kills cells and disrupt tissue.

Exhibit 4: Treatment of fibroadenoma

Source: Kovatcheva 2015. Note: The left image shows an ultrasound of the fibroadenoma as a vertical slice with planned treatment zones as ellipses. The middle image is a top-view schematic of the zone pattern. The right image shows a white treated area with red lines marking the safe limits of treatment.

Theraclion carefully controls the power and precision of delivery. Multiple zones are needed and are successively treated. The treatment region starts 5-11mm deep from the skin and can be up to 23mm deep. Precision is very important. In thyroid nodule ablation there are nearby delicate structures, like the trachea, oesophagus and carotid artery where the beam cannot go within 4mm. In fibroadenoma therapy, the proximity of the chest wall (at least 10mm gap) is a factor.

Beamotion: A new treatment algorithm using EchoPulse

In a further innovation, Theraclion has speeded up EchoPulse by up to five times using Beamotion technology.2 This potentially allows up to 10 treatments per day. The system was CE-marked in late 2015 and the first two commercial patients were treated in Germany in November. Treating the four fibroadenomas took 11, 15, 16 and 18 minutes, respectively. To achieve an effective reduction in volume of a nodule or fibroadenoma, not all the area needs to be treated as the fibroadenoma can be hollowed out. If used for cancer, a margin around the tumour would also need to be destroyed.

Beamotion zones are wider and shallower. In the original system the zones are 9mm deep and 2mm in diameter (at their widest) and the power is off while the head moves to the next zone. In Beamotion, the head moves while delivering the high-energy sound pulse so the zones are 7.3mm deep and 5mm wide.

High-intensity ultrasound therapy background

Exhibit 5 shows the main indications and suppliers of HIFU systems. This diversity means there is a lot of experience of ultrasound therapy. Some ultrasound therapies use an MRI scanner to direct the beam and to measure the temperature of the treated and surrounding areas, but this involves prolonged use (up to three hours) of very expensive equipment. Note that indications like prostate do not allow using cooling systems so temperature measurement is safer. Only Theraclion treats benign breast and thyroid growths. Both are easily visualised by ultrasound imaging.

Exhibit 5: High-intensity focused ultrasound indications other than breast fibroadenoma and thyroid nodule

Indication

Status and suppliers

Uterine fibroids

HIFU was first used for uterine fibroids: the FDA approved the Insightec product for this in 2004 and Phillips makes the Sonalleve product (not FDA approved). Both use MRI scanners.

Pain palliation of bone metastases

The FDA approved Insightec’s system for pain palliation of bone metastases in 2012; the Phillips system is also used for this but is not FDA approved.

Prostate ablation

The prostate is close to the rectal wall so ultrasound can be delivered by a rectal probe. The FDA approved the Sonacare and EDAP Ablatherm systems in late 2015 but only for ablation of normal tissue.

Cancer treatments

Outside the US, ultrasound is CE-marked and approved by other authorities, as in China, for treatment of localised, early-stage prostate and other accessible tumours often on an experimental basis. The Chinese company HAIFU has a range of systems, some CE-marked, to treat small bladder, pancreatic and liver cancers. EDAP has the MRI guided Zero system. These are not FDA approved. The treatment zones produced by ultrasound need to be overlapped outside the irregular cancer margin and cancer is not as distinct on imagining as fibrous begin growths (which are also generally more regular). Hence, ultrasound is more complex to use for effective cancer eradication. There have been clinical evaluations of MRI guided ultrasound treatment of breast cancer (for example Merckel 2013), but this is not a developed indication. Early-stage breast cancer can be effectively and quickly treated by lumpectomy.

Indication

Uterine fibroids

Pain palliation of bone metastases

Prostate ablation

Cancer treatments

Status and suppliers

HIFU was first used for uterine fibroids: the FDA approved the Insightec product for this in 2004 and Phillips makes the Sonalleve product (not FDA approved). Both use MRI scanners.

The FDA approved Insightec’s system for pain palliation of bone metastases in 2012; the Phillips system is also used for this but is not FDA approved.

The prostate is close to the rectal wall so ultrasound can be delivered by a rectal probe. The FDA approved the Sonacare and EDAP Ablatherm systems in late 2015 but only for ablation of normal tissue.

Outside the US, ultrasound is CE-marked and approved by other authorities, as in China, for treatment of localised, early-stage prostate and other accessible tumours often on an experimental basis. The Chinese company HAIFU has a range of systems, some CE-marked, to treat small bladder, pancreatic and liver cancers. EDAP has the MRI guided Zero system. These are not FDA approved. The treatment zones produced by ultrasound need to be overlapped outside the irregular cancer margin and cancer is not as distinct on imagining as fibrous begin growths (which are also generally more regular). Hence, ultrasound is more complex to use for effective cancer eradication. There have been clinical evaluations of MRI guided ultrasound treatment of breast cancer (for example Merckel 2013), but this is not a developed indication. Early-stage breast cancer can be effectively and quickly treated by lumpectomy.

Source: Edison Investment Research

Breast fibroadenoma indication

Breast fibroadenomas (FA) are benign solid tumours that develop in the fibrous subcutaneous connective tissue of the breast, Exhibit 1. FAs are typically 1-5 or 6cm in diameter, and multiple fibroadenomas in one or both breasts are found in 10-15% of patients. Goehring and Morahia (1997) estimated incidence with a peak of 115 per 100,000 in the 20-24 age cohort, Exhibit 6. 3 However, no systematic epidemiological study seems to have been carried out.

Using 2014 Eurostat data for the top five EU states plus Nordic states, Benelux and Switzerland (the best funded, medically developed states), this would be 55,000 new cases per year in the 127 million women aged 15-64. In the US, the incidence could be 47,000 cases from 104 million women. The market is probably based on prevalence since FAs are not necessarily detected immediately and can persist for many years.

FAs are usually managed conservatively with periodic evaluation. Greenberg 1998 noted that “the probability that a fibroadenoma would resolve after 5 years is approximately 50%, and the “lifetime” of a fibroadenoma is about 15 years”. All lesions require a biopsy and histology to rule out cancer and the rare condition of phyllodes tumour. About half of benign biopsy samples were of FA in a small analysis of US and Japanese patients (Schuerch 1982).4 The decision to treat might be affected by whether the FA is causing pain, breast deformation (a major consideration in teenagers) or is still growing.5 Younger women are more likely to opt for removal (Dent 1998). Note that use of in situ ablation means that detailed histology cannot be carried out to completely exclude cancer.

Kaufman (2004) noted in a surgical report on cryoablation that there are 1.3 million breast biopsies per year in the US and that 80% are benign. If half the benign are FAs, this implies about 500,000 diagnoses per year. However, Gosh 2005 found 38.9 benign breast biopsies per 10,000 women age-adjusted, which implies about up to 250,000 FA diagnoses of FA biopsy incidence is about 19/10,000 women aged 15-64.

A retrospective 10-year clinical review from a single US clinic (Sanders 2015) found 1,430 FA cases. Most resolved or patients did not return after biopsy confirmed FA. There were 83 patients whose FA continued to grow and of these 65 had the FA surgically removed and examined with nine having only a further biopsy. Two cases of the 74 examined were phyllodes tumour. This indicates a low treatment rate but is one clinic.

Exhibit 6: Estimated incidence rates per 100,000 women by age cohort

Source: Edison Investment Research based on Goehring and Morahia (1997)

Theraclion estimates the market at an incidence of 610,000 in the US and 640,000 in the EU. European reimbursement can be up to €2,000 (IPO document). In the US, the treatment will probably be reimbursed as CPT 19105 at $3,579 fully costed in a doctor’s office setting or at $345.92 at the marginal cost in a hospital facility; this is the code for existing products (Exhibit 5).

Exhibit 7: Theraclion breast fibroadenoma market estimates

Source: Theraclion IPO document

Thyroid nodules

Thyroid nodules will be left alone unless they are large, over 4cm, or cause pain or obstruct the throat. Autonomous hyper functioning nodules might be treated.6 Theraclion estimates the US market at 106,000 cases per year with 153,000 in Europe, Exhibit 8. The American Thyroid Association statement on thyroid nodules (Bryan 2015) notes that palpable thyroid nodules prevalence is approximately 5% in women and 1% in men. Incidence is about 0.09% per year or about 300,000 new cases in the US. Most will not be subject to any medical intervention. Autopsy and imaging studies frequently (in 30-60% of cases) find small, non-palpable benign nodules but have no clinical significance (Tan 1997). The clinical interest is in identifying thyroid tumours, of which there are about 63,000 cases a year in the US (SEER).

A low number, perhaps 1% (although data are hard to obtain) of nodules are hyperfunctioning and operate autonomously of the hormone regulatory system. This means they produce too much thyroid hormone but as the thyroid is regulated, the normal thyroid tissue will reduce its hormone output to compensate. Hyperthyroidism can accelerate metabolism, cause weight loss, give rapid or irregular heartbeat and make an individual nervous or irritable. Hyperfunctioning nodules are detected by administrating radioactive iodine (thyroid hormones contain iodine) so they show as hot spots on imaging. They may be treated with radioactive iodine (which damages to normal thyroid), managed with drugs or be resolved with thyroid surgery.

Exhibit 8: Theraclion estimates of Thyroid nodule treatment market

Source: Theraclion IPO document

Efficacy and alternative products

The most recent paper on FA treatment (Kovatcheva 2015) covered 51 FAs in 42 patients. Some FAs had two treatments. The initial volume range was wide: from 19.7ml to 0.34ml. If these FAs were spherical, the indicative diameters would be 3.4cm to 0.9cm with most probably under 2cm. Most FAs are stated to be in the 1-3cm range.7 The immediate effect was a 30% volume decrease after two months in 63% of the FA. As the sites healed, this improved significantly at six months. After a year, 67% of FAs decreased by 60% or more in volume (Exhibit 9) implying a fall in diameter of an average 35% (Exhibit 10).8 At baseline, 29.4% of patients experienced discomfort in daily activities and 35% experienced pain due to an FA. After a year, none experienced discomfort or pain. Persistent three-year volume reduction has been announced but no data were provided.

The volume of a sphere is V=43πr3 so volume falls quickly for a small decrease in radius. FAs tend to be roughly spherical and well defined on ultrasound. Note that thyroid nodules are irregular and often flatter.

The biggest volume reduction range was 89% and small FAs fell by 56%. The largest FA could have fallen in volume from 19.7ml to 2.1ml and in diameter (more relevant to the patient perhaps) from 3.4cm to 1.6cm. The effects on the diameters of the smaller FAs may have been less marked.

Exhibit 9: Reported fall in average volume

Exhibit 10: Estimated diameter (size) changes

Source: Edison Investment Research based on Kovatcheva 2015

Source: Edison Investment Research based on Kovatcheva 2015

Exhibit 9: Reported fall in average volume

Source: Edison Investment Research based on Kovatcheva 2015

Exhibit 10: Estimated diameter (size) changes

Source: Edison Investment Research based on Kovatcheva 2015

Thyroid ablation is more complex but clearly effective. For example, Korkusuz 2015 reported on EchoPulse treatment in 20 patients with 16 completing six-month follow-up and three requiring further treatment. The mean volume decreased from 4.96ml ± 2.79 to 2.91ml ± 2.43; this is stated as a 48.7% reduction ± 24.3% (P < .001), Exhibit 11, but arithmetically is 41%. The authors note that the accessibility of the target nodule was a limitation. It appears to us that while the data are excellent, studies to date remain small and the irregular shapes of nodules means that data are varied. As the installed base rises, it is likely that more clinical studies will be published.

Exhibit 11: Thyroid treatment outcomes in 20 patients

Source: Korkusuz 2015

Alternatives

The alternatives to EchoPulse for fibroadenomas are lumpectomy, radiofrequency ablation (RFA), laser ablation and cryotherapy. (Exhibit 12) Radiofrequency ablation can be used in thyroid.

Exhibit 12: Other medical procedures to treat fibroadenomas

Procedure

Notes

Breast surgery: lumpectomy

This is the same procedure as used for early-stage breast cancer but better called excisional breast biopsy rather than lumpectomy (a cancer procedure) It is quick to do as a procedure (20-30 minutes) and is immediately effective, but the overall hospital time due to admission and anaesthesia needed is much longer and adds to costs. Fibroadenomas are often in the upper breast so scars can be visible. It is the standard current treatment with endoscopic lumpectomy preferred for cosmetic reasons as the scar is smaller and can be hidden.

RFA

This involves inserting guides into the affected area and passing radio energy down the guide to heat the tissue at the tips. Accurate probe positioning is required for maximum efficacy. The probes are expensive and the procedure invasive. Radio ablation is normally used for palliative treatment of cancers such as liver and lung. There have been some studies on breast cancer (see review by Nguyen 2014). Devices include (but are not limited to) the Covidien Cool Tip and the Starburst by Angiodynamics. RFA has been tried with thyroid nodules with good results (Chi 2015).

Laser ablation

The Novilase device uses laser light is to heat breast tissue. The light is focused onto the fibroadenoma though a fibre optical cable inserted into the breast. A second temperature probe is inserted to monitor adjacent tissue to prevent overheating and local damage. Novilase gained FDA 510(k) clearance (K070353) in 2007. It is in a clinical study for breast cancer. There is a French subsidiary but no CE mark yet. Laser therapy has been used in clinical research for benign thyroid therapy but is not mainstream.

Cryotherapy

This involves freezing the fibroadenoma. Ice formation destroys the cells. To do this, a hollow probe is inserted and liquid nitrogen circulated. A supplier is IceCure Medical. The frozen area is monitored by ultrasound allowing precise control, it is claimed. There have been clinical studies, which report 73-97% shrinkage after three months (Niu 2012). However, breast cryotherapy is considered experimental and may not be reimbursed. The main surgical cryotherapy indication seems to be treating pre-cancerous cervical abnormalities.

Procedure

Breast surgery: lumpectomy

RFA

Laser ablation

Cryotherapy

Notes

This is the same procedure as used for early-stage breast cancer but better called excisional breast biopsy rather than lumpectomy (a cancer procedure) It is quick to do as a procedure (20-30 minutes) and is immediately effective, but the overall hospital time due to admission and anaesthesia needed is much longer and adds to costs. Fibroadenomas are often in the upper breast so scars can be visible. It is the standard current treatment with endoscopic lumpectomy preferred for cosmetic reasons as the scar is smaller and can be hidden.

This involves inserting guides into the affected area and passing radio energy down the guide to heat the tissue at the tips. Accurate probe positioning is required for maximum efficacy. The probes are expensive and the procedure invasive. Radio ablation is normally used for palliative treatment of cancers such as liver and lung. There have been some studies on breast cancer (see review by Nguyen 2014). Devices include (but are not limited to) the Covidien Cool Tip and the Starburst by Angiodynamics. RFA has been tried with thyroid nodules with good results (Chi 2015).

The Novilase device uses laser light is to heat breast tissue. The light is focused onto the fibroadenoma though a fibre optical cable inserted into the breast. A second temperature probe is inserted to monitor adjacent tissue to prevent overheating and local damage. Novilase gained FDA 510(k) clearance (K070353) in 2007. It is in a clinical study for breast cancer. There is a French subsidiary but no CE mark yet. Laser therapy has been used in clinical research for benign thyroid therapy but is not mainstream.

This involves freezing the fibroadenoma. Ice formation destroys the cells. To do this, a hollow probe is inserted and liquid nitrogen circulated. A supplier is IceCure Medical. The frozen area is monitored by ultrasound allowing precise control, it is claimed. There have been clinical studies, which report 73-97% shrinkage after three months (Niu 2012). However, breast cryotherapy is considered experimental and may not be reimbursed. The main surgical cryotherapy indication seems to be treating pre-cancerous cervical abnormalities.

Source: Edison Investment Research. Note: Sources as hyperlinks; see also Fornage 2014.

Market status

According to Theraclion (IPO document) the target EchoPulse market is 5,300 systems with a goal of an installed base of 300 units in the US and 225 in Europe by 2025 (January 2016 management presentation). China and Asia may add another 430 units. Reimbursement of the procedure takes up to three years per country to be agreed. In France, Theraclion has applied for a Forfait innovation grant to evaluate cost effectiveness in a trial, which eventually may speed uptake. In the UK uptake will be affected by a health economic appraisal – even then cash constraints may limit use although private use has already started with an EchoPuluse on Harley Street. Currently, the leading market for Theraclion is Germany where management estimates there are about 150,000 thyroid treatments per year. In October 2015, the first thyroid patients were treated with EchoPulse. Four insurance companies provide thyroid reimbursement.9 Insurance for fibroadenoma therapy in Germany is more extensive with more than one million people covered through nine insurers. In Italy, one insurer provides reimbursement. Theraclion has offices in the UK, France and Germany. Distributors are being appointed elsewhere. Other territories include Russia and Turkey (one system each delivered in 2014), Egypt with one order for 2016 delivery and Hong Kong where Theraclion has a subsidiary and one unit is under contract.

As an example, the Bürgerhospital Frankfurt is an endocrine surgery centre of excellence treating 1,400 patients a year. In October 2015, it rented an EchoPulse for six months to run a controlled evaluation study.

The 2015 trading update stated that there are now 14 EchoPulse systems in clinics (10 installed in 2015) with clinical users on 16 sites (two units are shared between four sites). Most are direct sales but an estimated three are leased or rented units undergoing evaluation, typically for six months. Theraclion does not plan to lease EchoPulse as there is substantial unmet demand. Production is currently a limiting factor with units being hand-built. An optimised production system should alleviate this in 2016 with, management anticipates, 20-25 sales or leases possible – mostly in H2.

US entry

The US regulatory stance has become more flexible in the last few years as the new 513(f) process enables a de novo 510(k) application based on more limited clinical data than a PMA. SonaCare used this route in October 2015, so there seems no reason why EchoPulse could not also be successful.10 The review, excluding questions, takes 120 days. Theraclion has a single-centre 20-patient fibroadenoma study running in the US at the University of Virginia (NCT02078011), which started enrolment in April 2014. When this concludes in H116, a larger multi-centre trial will probably be run with an assumed 12-month follow-up. Assuming that this trial completes recruitment by mid-2017, a de novo application could be lodged in 2018 and approval potentially gained for 2019 marketing. However, this timetable is not yet confirmed. Theraclion might be able to gain an earlier entry to the Canadian market as the process is less onerous.

The FDA modified the regulations based on a 2012 law and new guidance in 2014 so a new (de novo) device can either follow a 510(k) route if there is a similar approved device or ask for a de novo 513(f) ruling if there is no direct equivalent. The FDA then classes the device as either Type I or II or as a high-risk class III device. If class I or II, it can be approved with adequate clinical supporting data. The FDA approved the Sonable 450 ultrasound device under this process on 9 October 2015; following this, the EDAP Abtherm device was approved in November 2015 as a 510(k) based on equivalence to the Sonable 450. Both have a limited indication for tissue ablation. The FDA refused PMA applications to treat cancer.

Sensitivities

Novel medical device companies are hard to value accurately because initial sales growth is heavily affected by the rate of change of medical practise and slow buying processes. Market sizes are hard to quantify for benign conditions but the market may expand as EchoPulse offers an effective non-invasive and fast procedure. Fibroadenoma treatment may become more of a private cosmetic market in some countries; thyroid is more a medical market but with about half the potential treatments compared with breast therapy. Theraclion has noted a reimbursement barrier in many European countries because innovative procedures, like EchoPulse, do not fall into traditional reimbursement categories.11 Adoption in markets with insurance systems (like Germany) seems faster than in centralised markets like the UK and France. Use in the US could be much higher due to private medicine and wider insurance cover. No definitive timeline is available for a US de novo device approval. The Chinese market could be very substantial but is likely to be very price sensitive beyond the private clinics in wealthy locations like Hong Kong; Korea and Japan are better prospects. Gaining increased EPack sales is crucial since this generates recurring revenues. Truffle Capital, a majority shareholder, has been selling shares: 254,885 since October 2015, of which 215,000 were to a German investor. Any major overhang may affect share price performance.

As an example, TDAP-TMS (the company that licensed Theraclion) had H115 annualised sales of €27m and only gained its first US sales in late 2015 after the original PMA for cancer therapy was refused in 2014.

Valuation

For valuation purposes based on 2025, we have applied probabilities of 80% to 225 European unit sales and 65% to 300 US unit sales (adding in additional regulatory risk). EPack consumable use is crucial with management expecting up to 240 per year per system, which could be higher; increased volumes will improve the gross margin to more than 60%. A 70% probability is applied to EPack use rates until sales data become available. China and other Asian markets could be much bigger but we cautiously forecast about 60 units with a 50% probability. An additional marketing cost of 20% is assumed (starting at 10% in 2016) to adjust for distributor margins and for subsidiary costs. On a 10-year perspective, Theraclion is expected to develop into a highly profitable ongoing business, so a continuing value based on a 12.5% cost of capital (Edison standard) and a 2% terminal growth rate is used. A 24% average tax rate is assumed although the French headline corporate tax rate is 33.3%. Using these assumptions, the indicative value as of January 2016 is €10.09/share, Exhibit 13. Further capital of up to €10m may be needed in tranches between 2016 and 2018 in either equity or loans. At a share price of €5.69, the fully diluted value might be €7.20/share – although this number varies with the price.

Exhibit 13: Valuation table

Adjustments and assumptions

Percentages

Long-term growth

2%

Risk EU Units

80%

Risk US units

65%

Risk procedures

70%

Value factor (12.5% discount rate)

Unadjusted values

Adjusted values

NPV cash flows

26.7

7.3

NPV Terminal value

63.6

35.9

Indicative Value

90.4

43.1

Shares in issue

4.3

4.28

Value per share before any dilution

21.13

10.09

Source: Edison Investment Research

Financials

In 2015, Theraclion generated €1.76m of revenues, up from €0.82m in 2014. Most of the sold units had been classed as inventory and on loan with clinics. One had been a fixed asset so is reported as an exceptional item of €220k. In H1 (not fully published) consumable sales were €5.7k. Rental for systems was a further €32.7k. Separate figures for FY15 are not yet disclosed. Cost of goods (CoG) in H1 was a credit of €42. H1 operating costs were €3.5m comprising €1.9m in purchases and external costs and €1.74m of internal costs. Our forecast assumes 2016 sales of about €6m rising to over €9m in 2017. Theraclion gains cash from R&D tax credits, worth €360k in H115.

The April 2014 IPO on Alternext Paris raised net cash of €8.2m before loans.12 In 2015, €4m of was raised from the issue of 496,938 new shares for a total of €3,97m at €8 per share. A Bpifrance repayable advance of €1.1m was received in July (€0.9m in 2014). Cash on 31 August was €4.7m. The company will require further cash funding in 2016 and 2017; we assume up to €10m. A March 2015 agreement with Kepler Cheuvreux permits the issue of up to 400,000 new shares in tranches over 36 months but remains unused.

The IPO issued 750,120 shares at €14.50 each (par value €0.05). Expenses were €1.20m leaving €9.68m. A loan of €1.50m was then repaid leaving €8.18m cash. The company also converted bonds issued in 2013 to 1 nominally worth a further €1.45m at €9.43/share. Overall, equity increased by €11.14m net of expenses. Some 17,196 share options were exercised in H2 2014 at €3.90 raising €67k giving a net cash inflow from equity in 2014 of €8.25m. Year-end 2014 shares in issue increased from 2.9m to 3.8m. Capital increased by €11.2m.

Exhibit 14: Financial summary

€ 000

2013

2014

2015e

2016e

2017e

Year End December

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

IFRS

PROFIT & LOSS

Revenue

76

820

1,762

5,917

8,933

Cost of Sales

(43)

(391)

(1,474)

(2,993)

(3,681)

Gross Profit

33

428

289

2,924

5,252

EBITDA

(4,245)

(4,650)

(6,466)

(4,159)

(2,245)

Operating Profit (before amort. and except.)

(4,245)

(4,656)

(6,476)

(4,169)

(2,255)

Intangible Amortisation

(301)

(292)

(300)

(300)

(300)

Exceptionals

183

(18)

(6)

0

0

Other

0

0

0

0

0

Operating Profit

(4,363)

(4,966)

(6,782)

(4,469)

(2,555)

Net Interest

(125)

(183)

(30)

(30)

(30)

Profit Before Tax (norm)

(4,370)

(4,839)

(6,506)

(4,199)

(2,285)

Profit Before Tax (FRS 3)

(4,488)

(5,149)

(6,812)

(4,499)

(2,585)

Tax

378

526

600

600

600

Profit After Tax (norm)

(3,810)

(4,325)

(5,902)

(3,589)

(1,675)

Profit After Tax (FRS 3)

(4,111)

(4,623)

(6,212)

(3,899)

(1,985)

Average Number of Shares Outstanding (m)

2.9

3.5

4.0

4.3

4.3

EPS - normalised (c)

(133.5)

(122.0)

(146.6)

(83.8)

(39.1)

EPS - normalised and fully diluted (c)

(98.8)

(86.4)

(107.6)

(83.8)

(39.1)

EPS - (IFRS) (c)

(144.0)

(130.4)

(154.3)

(91.1)

(46.4)

Dividend per share (c)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Gross Margin (%)

NA

NA

NA

NA

NA

EBITDA Margin (%)

NA

NA

NA

NA

NA

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

NA

NA

NA

NA

NA

BALANCE SHEET

Fixed Assets

1,260

1,632

1,971

1,971

1,971

Intangible Assets

944

865

865

865

865

Tangible Assets

291

561

900

900

900

Fixed term investments

25

206

206

206

206

Current Assets

1,709

6,858

5,470

4,861

8,025

Stocks

601

1,298

1,000

1,000

1,250

Debtors

4

345

1,586

2,367

3,573

Cash

408

4,272

1,929

539

2,247

Other

697

943

955

955

955

Current Liabilities

(5,312)

(4,599)

(4,313)

(4,603)

(4,752)

Creditors

(1,170)

(1,544)

(1,258)

(1,548)

(1,697)

Short term borrowings

(4,142)

(3,055)

(3,055)

(3,055)

(3,055)

Long Term Liabilities

(1,435)

(900)

(2,000)

(2,000)

(2,000)

Long term borrowings

(1,400)

(900)

(2,000)

(2,000)

(2,000)

Other long term liabilities

(35)

0

0

0

0

Net Assets

(3,778)

2,991

1,128

229

3,244

CASH FLOW

Operating Cash Flow

(3,741)

(4,999)

(7,054)

(4,001)

(2,903)

Net Interest

(125)

(183)

(30)

(30)

(30)

Tax

0

0

0

0

0

Capex

(231)

(493)

(359)

(359)

(359)

Acquisitions/disposals

(172)

5

.

0

0

Financing

3,379

9,535

5,100

3,000

5,000

Dividends

0

0

0

0

0

Net Cash Flow

(890)

3,864

(2,343)

(1,390)

1,708

Opening net debt/(cash)

0

5,109

(523)

2,920

4,310

HP finance leases initiated

0

0

0

0

0

Other

(4,219)

1,768

(1,100)

0

0

Closing net debt/(cash)

5,109

(523)

2,920

4,310

2,602

Source: Edison Investment Research estimates, Theraclion reports

Contact details

Revenue by geography

102, rue Etienne Dolet
92240 Malakoff
France
Phone : +33 (0)1 55 48 90 70
http://www.theraclion.com/

N/A

Contact details

102, rue Etienne Dolet
92240 Malakoff
France
Phone : +33 (0)1 55 48 90 70
http://www.theraclion.com/

Revenue by geography

N/A

Management team

CEO: David Caulmartin

President: Jean-Yves Burel

David is healthcare specialist with 14 years' experience at GE Healthcare, covering EMEA and the US working in sales, marketing and development of new products, scanners and conventional radiology. From 2007 to 2011 he was global head of mammography. In 2012, David joined Alstom Thermal Power as VP responsible for M&A strategy. He is a graduate of Telecom Paris with a master in fundamental physics from Paris Diderot University and is also a certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt.

Jean-Yves is a former GE executive with 23 years' experience at GE Healthcare, in particular as vice-president hospital and healthcare solutions, commercial, operations and sales.

CFO: David Auregan

Deputy CEO: Sylvain Yon

David started his career with Arthur Andersen. David Auregan served from 2010 as CFO for EFESO Consulting (Alternext, ALEFE) where he helped to multiply the company’s value by three in five years. Previously, he worked as financial planning & analysis manager for Carrier and as financial analyst and cash flow project manager for GE Healthcare. David is a graduate of EDHEC and holds an MBA from Newcastle University. He is a certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt.

Since 2009, Sylvain was Theraclion’s vice president of research and development. Promoted to deputy CEO, with a particular focus on of Asian markets, Sylvain still leads the company's R&D, integration and services. Sylvain is a co-founder of Echosens, where he headed engineering activities until 2008 when it was acquired by a major player in the Chinese health industry. He is also the founder of several companies in the fields of acoustics and the Internet. Sylvain has a PhD in physics from Paris VII University and an engineering degree from ESPCI ParisTech, both in France.

Management team

CEO: David Caulmartin

David is healthcare specialist with 14 years' experience at GE Healthcare, covering EMEA and the US working in sales, marketing and development of new products, scanners and conventional radiology. From 2007 to 2011 he was global head of mammography. In 2012, David joined Alstom Thermal Power as VP responsible for M&A strategy. He is a graduate of Telecom Paris with a master in fundamental physics from Paris Diderot University and is also a certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt.

President: Jean-Yves Burel

Jean-Yves is a former GE executive with 23 years' experience at GE Healthcare, in particular as vice-president hospital and healthcare solutions, commercial, operations and sales.

CFO: David Auregan

David started his career with Arthur Andersen. David Auregan served from 2010 as CFO for EFESO Consulting (Alternext, ALEFE) where he helped to multiply the company’s value by three in five years. Previously, he worked as financial planning & analysis manager for Carrier and as financial analyst and cash flow project manager for GE Healthcare. David is a graduate of EDHEC and holds an MBA from Newcastle University. He is a certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt.

Deputy CEO: Sylvain Yon

Since 2009, Sylvain was Theraclion’s vice president of research and development. Promoted to deputy CEO, with a particular focus on of Asian markets, Sylvain still leads the company's R&D, integration and services. Sylvain is a co-founder of Echosens, where he headed engineering activities until 2008 when it was acquired by a major player in the Chinese health industry. He is also the founder of several companies in the fields of acoustics and the Internet. Sylvain has a PhD in physics from Paris VII University and an engineering degree from ESPCI ParisTech, both in France.

Principal shareholders Note that Truffle Capital is a seller

(%)

Truffle Capital

67

Free float

13

Management

6

Natixis

5

Aviva

3

G1J

2

Other

4

Companies named in this report

Phillips, EDAP, Novalase, SonaCare Insightec, IceCure Medical, Angiodynamics, Covidien

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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

Tourism Holdings — Update 24 February 2016

Tourism Holdings

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