Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Date

Wednesday, November 12, 2025 at 4:30 p.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Robert P. Ragusa
  • Chief Financial Officer — Aaron Freidin
  • President — Joshua J. Ofman
  • Chief Scientific Officer and President International — Harpal S. Kumar
  • Chief Commercial Officer — Andrew John Partridge

Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email [email protected]

Takeaways

  • Revenue -- $36.2 million, representing a 26% increase compared to 2024, with $32.8 million from screening and $3.4 million from development services.
  • Gallery Test Volume Growth -- more than 45,000 tests sold in the quarter, up 39% year over year.
  • Commercial Penetration -- Approximately 420,000 Gallery commercial tests sold through September 30 by more than 16,000 healthcare providers.
  • International Expansion -- Strategic collaboration with Samsung aims to commercialize Gallery in South Korea and other Asian markets, with Samsung agreeing to a $110 million equity investment, and commercial launch in Canada through MedCan partnership.
  • Private Placement -- Completed a $325 million private placement, boosting liquidity.
  • Clinical Data—PATHFINDER II -- Pre-specified analysis of 25,000 participants showed a sevenfold increase in overall cancer detection rate when combining Gallery with recommended screenings; Gallery's positive predictive value (PPV) was 61.6%, and specificity was 99.6% (false positive rate 0.4%).
  • Clinical Data—SIMPLIFY Study -- Updated analysis increased Gallery's PPV in symptomatic patients to 84.2% after long-term registry follow-up, with approximately one-third of initial "false positives" diagnosed with cancer upon subsequent review.
  • Non-GAAP Adjusted Gross Margin -- Achieved a non-GAAP adjusted gross margin of 55%, a 14-percentage-point increase year over year, driven by automation and volume-related cost improvements.
  • Net Loss -- $89 million, a 29% improvement compared to 2024.
  • Cash Position -- $547.1 million at quarter end, rising to approximately $850 million including October private placement; does not include the pending Samsung investment.
  • Cash Burn Guidance -- Reduced full-year burn guidance to no more than $290 million, down from $310 million, and representing an approximate 50% decrease vs. 2024.
  • Regulatory Milestones -- Management refined FDA PMA modular submission timeline to Q1 2026, expressing increased confidence in schedule.

Summary

GRAIL (GRAL 1.96%) reported accelerating Gallery test adoption across providers and confirmed new international initiatives, including a pending $110 million Samsung equity investment. Management tightened FDA PMA submission guidance to Q1 2026 as multiple pivotal data readouts approach. Updated cash burn projections and recently completed financing suggest liquidity extends into 2030, allowing continued execution of stated milestones without reliance on the pending Samsung funds.

  • Chief Scientific Officer Harpal S. Kumar clarified that the NHS evaluation team alone has reviewed year-one NHS Gallery trial data, stating that, "Only the NHS evaluation team has seen that data so far," and full results are expected in 2026.
  • Chief Commercial Officer Andrew John Partridge pointed to a year-end price promotion and improved breadth and depth of provider prescribing—supported by digital channel integrations and increased repeat testing—as factors underlying recent volume growth.
  • Chief Financial Officer Aaron Freidin explained that cost improvements are attributable to higher throughput automation, "four to five times more samples per flow cell compared to the older version," and fixed cost leverage from increased lab volume.

Industry glossary

  • MSAT: Multi-cancer screening assay test—detects multiple cancer types in asymptomatic populations using a single blood sample.
  • PPV (Positive Predictive Value): The proportion of positive test results that are true positives, signifying likelihood of actual disease among those testing positive.
  • CSO (Cancer Signal of Origin): Test output indicating the tissue or organ site where a cancer signal is detected.
  • PMA (Premarket Approval): The FDA regulatory process for evaluating the safety and efficacy of medical devices such as diagnostic tests.
  • ASP (Average Selling Price): The average price realized per test or unit sold during a specific reporting period.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Robert P. Ragusa: Thanks, operator, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today. On the call are Robert Ragusa, our Chief Executive Officer; Aaron Freidin, Chief Financial Officer; Joshua J. Ofman, President; Harpal S. Kumar, Chief Scientific Officer and President International; and Andrew John Partridge, Chief Commercial Officer. We will be making forward-looking statements on this call based on current expectations. It is our intent that all statements other than statements of historical fact, including statements regarding our anticipated financial results and commercial activity, will be covered by the safe harbor provisions for forward-looking statements contained in Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 as amended and Section 21 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended.

Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual events or results may differ materially from those projected or discussed. All forward-looking statements are based upon currently available information, and GRAIL assumes no obligation to update these statements. To better understand the risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ, we refer you to the documents that GRAIL files with the SEC, including the risk factor section of GRAIL's most recent quarterly report on Form 10-Q. This call will also include a discussion of GAAP results and certain non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted gross profit or loss, which are adjusted to exclude certain specified items. Our non-GAAP financial measures are intended to supplement your understanding of GRAIL's financials.

Reconciliations of the non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are available in the press release issued today, which is posted to our website. And with that, we can turn to Robert Ragusa. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us.

Robert P. Ragusa: On today's call, we will review third-quarter results and discuss recent updates. These include PATHFINDER II results shared at ESMO, updated SIMPLIFY data shared at EDCC, and recent strategic and financing activities. We remain very pleased with our commercial progress. Growth in Gallery volumes and revenue in 2025 were 39% and 29%, respectively, as uptake continues to grow. From the launch of Gallery through September 30, approximately 420,000 Gallery commercial tests have been sold by more than 16,000 healthcare providers. We are continuing to progress our activities beyond the United States as well, recently announcing a strategic collaboration with Samsung to bring the Gallery test to key Asian markets.

Subject to execution of definitive agreements, we and Samsung will work as exclusive partners to commercialize Gallery in South Korea and potentially other Asian markets, including Japan and Singapore. In addition, we plan to explore other strategic and operational collaborations. Samsung has also agreed to make an equity investment of $110 million in GRAIL, subject to closing conditions. In October, we also introduced Gallery commercially in Canada, in partnership with MedCan, a global leader in proactive health and wellness services. Eligible adults in Canada may now access the Gallery test at MedCan. In addition to these operational updates, we recently completed a $325 million private placement. This transaction strengthens our balance sheet as we progress through additional milestones.

Gallery is the only MSAT available which has demonstrated performance in people being screened in the intended use population. This includes data from our registrational PATHFINDER II study, where a pre-specified analysis was presented at ESMO last month. I will ask Joshua J. Ofman, then Harpal S. Kumar, to discuss recent results from Gallery's clinical program.

Joshua J. Ofman: Thank you, Robert Ragusa, and hi, everybody. We were really pleased last month to share very positive performance and safety results from the pre-specified analysis of the first 25,000 participants in our registrational PATHFINDER II study. This study started in 2021, and PATHFINDER II is a large prospective trial in a very broad and diverse enrolled group representative of Gallery's screening-eligible intended use population. Releasing the first results of this study at ESMO was so exciting and a big milestone for our company, and all of our partners and investigators. It was a meaningful contribution to the evidence base for the effectiveness of multi-cancer early detection.

As you will recall, we found that adding Gallery to recommended screening for breast, cervical, colorectal, and lung cancer yielded a more than sevenfold increase in the overall cancer detection rate. Approximately three-quarters of the cancers detected by Gallery have no recommended screening options. More than half of the new cancers detected by Gallery were in stage one or two, and more than two-thirds detected at stages one, two, or three. One of the most important clinical metrics, the positive predictive value or PPV, which is the likelihood of receiving a cancer diagnosis following a positive test result, Gallery's PPV was 61.6%. Specificity was 99.6%, translating to a false positive rate of 0.4%, a critical safety metric.

Gallery's ability to accurately identify where in the body cancer is located also helped guide an efficient and effective diagnostic evaluation. Importantly, there were no serious study-related adverse events reported thus far. Diagnostic resolution, an important economic and patient-centered outcome measure, took a median of 46 days. Only 0.6% of all participants had an invasive procedure, and again, no serious study-related adverse events were reported. Invasive procedures were two times more common in participants ultimately diagnosed with cancer than in those who were ultimately not diagnosed with cancer. PATHFINDER II and NHS Gallery make up our registrational clinical program for Gallery.

Our PMA submission will include these data from the first 25,000 enrolled in PATHFINDER II, to complete twelve months of follow-up, plus findings from the prevalent round of screening from the NHS Gallery randomized clinical trial, as well as the results of a bridging study between the version of Gallery used in the two registrational trials to the updated version that we plan to submit to the FDA for premarket approval. As a reminder, we announced positive top-line results from the prevalent round of screening in the NHS Gallery trial in May. Namely, the data from the prevalent screening round showed a substantially higher positive predictive value than that was observed in the first PATHFINDER study.

Now to review important new findings from our SIMPLIFY study, I will hand it off to Harpal S. Kumar. Thanks, Joshua J. Ofman, and good afternoon, everyone.

Harpal S. Kumar: Working with the University of Oxford, we recently shared positive long-term results from an extended follow-up of the SIMPLIFY study at the Early Detection of Cancer Conference or EDCC in October. As a reminder, we conducted the observational SIMPLIFY study in symptomatic participants in the UK to understand whether our technology could play a role in helping clinicians guide investigation and accelerate time to diagnosis when patients present with concerning but nonspecific symptoms. Examples of these symptoms could include unexplained weight loss, fatigue, persistent abdominal pain, and others.

The previous primary analysis from SIMPLIFY published in The Lancet Oncology in 2023 followed participants until diagnostic resolution or up to nine months and demonstrated Gallery's PPV in this population was approximately 75%. Patients determined to have a false positive Gallery result were followed for an additional fifteen months in the National Cancer Registry England and Wales. The updated analysis presented at EDCC includes the subsequent registry follow-up period for all seventy-nine of the patients who were originally classified as false positives. The data contained a number of important learnings. First, approximately one-third of the participants initially believed to be false positives were diagnosed with cancer during the full follow-up period.

Second, of that group, a cancer signal of origin or CSO prediction from the Gallery test was correct in all but one patient. Finally, with a reduction in false positives in SIMPLIFY from 79 to 51, the updated PPV for Gallery in this symptomatic population increased to 84.2%. These findings reinforce the importance of proactive follow-up after a positive MSAT test result and the value of the Gallery test's accurate CSO capability. Now to Aaron Freidin for a review of our financials.

Aaron Freidin: Thanks, Harpal S. Kumar, and good afternoon, everyone. I am pleased to present our results for the third quarter. Revenue for the quarter was $36.2 million, up $7.5 million or 26% as compared to 2024. Total revenue for the quarter is composed of $32.8 million of screening revenue and $3.4 million of development service revenue. Development services revenue includes services we provide to biopharmaceutical and clinical customers, including support of our clinical studies, pilot testing, research, and therapy development. We continue to see demand for our Gallery test and sold more than 45,000 tests in the third quarter.

We have historically observed seasonal fluctuations over the course of the year, in particular, relatively high volume in the second and fourth quarters and lower in the first and third. We would expect these seasonal trends to continue. Screening revenue of $32.8 million in the third quarter was up 29% as compared with 2024. U.S. Gallery revenue was $32.6 million, up 28% compared to the third quarter last year. At the beginning of the year, we guided full-year 2025 U.S. Gallery revenue growth between 20% to 30%. We are refining this growth guidance today to the middle of that range.

Cost of screening revenue, exclusive of amortization of intangible assets, as a percent of screening revenue decreased mainly due to lower variable costs of Gallery testing performed on our automated platform, partially offset by a decrease in ASP and higher sample reprocessing costs. Net loss for the quarter was $89 million, an improvement of 29% as compared to 2024. Gross loss for the third quarter of 2025 and 2024 were $13.7 million and $22.2 million, respectively. Non-GAAP adjusted gross profit for 2025 was $20 million, an increase of $8.2 million or 60% as compared with 2024. In Q3, we achieved a non-GAAP adjusted gross margin of 55% compared to 41% in 2024.

This change was largely driven by improvements in variable cost on our updated Gallery platform that launched last year and by an increase in sample volume for the quarter. As we ran a one-time batch of research and development samples for clinical validation, resulting in reduced fixed cost per sample related to higher lab efficiency at higher volumes. We do not expect similar clinical validation sample volume in future quarters, but the higher number of samples processed demonstrates the benefits we expect to see in lab efficiency as the sample volume grows. We ended the quarter with a cash and investment position of $547.1 million.

Including net proceeds from the $325 million private placement in October, we have approximately $850 million of cash and investments. This does not include the recently agreed-upon investment in GRAIL by Samsung, which is subject to closing conditions. In August, we drew down our cash burn guidance for the full year 2025 to be no more than $310 million from no more than $320 million. Today, we are updating our cash burn guidance further to no more than $290 million for the full year of 2025, net of $13 million in placement fees from our recently completed financing. Expected full-year burn represents a significant decrease of approximately 50% compared to 2024 as we remain focused on cost management.

We believe our cash runway extends into 2030, enabling us to achieve major planned clinical and regulatory milestones. I will hand it back to Robert Ragusa for concluding remarks.

Robert P. Ragusa: Thanks, Aaron Freidin. Our strategic priorities are seeking FDA approval of Gallery and pursuing broad reimbursement. We are advancing Gallery in the near and midterm towards key clinical and regulatory catalysts to achieve broad access while maintaining our disciplined cost management. As we move into 2026, our key milestones are the completion of our modular PMA submission to the FDA and full clinical utility results from our 140,000 participant NHS Gallery study, which we expect to read out midyear. This longitudinal data set will be reviewed by the NHS to determine Gallery's potential deployment within the UK population. Lastly, we look forward to welcoming many of you on-site tomorrow at our centralized labs in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.

A live webcast of our analyst day will begin at 11 AM Eastern Time and will also be available at the Investor Relations section of our website. Let's now go to Q&A. Operator, please go ahead.

Operator: Thank you.

Operator: At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the raise hand button, which can be found in the black bar at the bottom of your screen. You may remove yourself from the queue at any time by lowering your hand. When it is your turn, you will hear your name called and receive a prompt to unmute. As a reminder, we are allowing analysts one question and one related follow-up today. We will wait one moment to allow the queue to form. Our first question will come from Subhalaxmi T. Nambi with Guggenheim. Please go ahead. Hey, guys. Thank you for taking my question.

Subhalaxmi T. Nambi: The FDA timeline is moved to Q1 instead of 2026. What changed?

Robert P. Ragusa: Yes. Subhalaxmi T. Nambi, thanks for the question. I think, you know, the main thing is just as we move forward in time, you know, we have gotten more certainty in the range of when we would be able to deliver that. You know, so we have been saying first half for a fair amount of time, and it looks like, you know, things are on track well enough where we are more confident to be able to put out for the first quarter. So it is really just kind of tightening the confidence intervals around the time frame.

Subhalaxmi T. Nambi: Perfect. And you are currently running a promotion on your website, offering $150 off of Gallery for getting tested from October to year-end. What incentivized you to offer this promotion? How has the demand elasticity in response to this promotion been? And are you piloting a reduction to $800 moving forward? Could this impact ASPs moving forward? Thank you for that.

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. Maybe a couple of comments, and I will turn it over to Andrew John Partridge, our CCO. Yes. We have done, you know, a fair amount of work, you know, looking at the price elasticity on the test. And, you know, this is kind of a reflection of some of that work. We do know that there is, you know, significant price elasticity and going into the end of the year is a good time to exercise some of that. But maybe to answer some of the other pieces, Andrew John Partridge, do you want to take that?

Andrew John Partridge: Yeah. Thanks, Robert Ragusa. As you saw, we have reduced the price on the website. The growth that we have seen in Q3 year over year has been predominantly driven by the provider channel. We have seen improvements in both breadth of prescribing, bringing new prescribers onto using Gallery, and also depth of prescribing. So, yeah, discounting has been a component of increasing that depth and breadth of prescribing. Also, the integrations we have done with companies like Quest and Athena have also driven a lot of that breadth and depth. And then finally, repeat testing, which price is also a component of that, has also driven that depth of prescribing as well.

So we are very pleased with what we have seen in the market.

Operator: Next question will come from Kyle Mikson with Canaccord.

Kyle Mikson: Hey guys, thanks for the congrats on the progress. So you have obviously bolstered the balance sheet nicely. You should have over an additional $400 million by early 2026 with the Samsung investment. I was just curious how you plan to use the additional capital, and specifically, how does the commercial strategy change, especially in light of recent or upcoming competition? And I appreciate to hear Andrew John Partridge's thoughts on that as well. Thanks.

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. So I think you hit some of it. You know, obviously, it gives us a lot more flexibility on the balance sheet. With competition emerging, it does give us more flexibility in how we think about flexing our commercial investments. So we are looking at those things as well as any of the other areas that we need to really fortify as we continue to scale and expand our test footprint on the marketplace. But, you know, I guess, Andrew John Partridge, do you want to also comment on that?

Andrew John Partridge: Yeah. I think Robert Ragusa really covered it. Yeah. I think that I would emphasize is we feel like we have got a lot of momentum right now with customers for all of the reasons that I described. And definitely coming now off the back of the PATHFINDER II data that we presented at ESMO, there is a palpable momentum that we have in our business.

Kyle Mikson: Got it. That is helpful, guys. Thanks. And also, Hims and Hers made an investment in the company recently. Consequently, there has been some speculation that means GRAIL is going to take a direct-to-consumer approach to Gallery at some point. So if you could just comment on those plans or the potential to take that route over time in light of the increasing focus on longevity among consumers.

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. No. It is a good question. You know, we are, as we just reiterated our timeline for our PMA, we are very committed to the PMA pathway. And so there is no change in that. In fact, you saw a slight acceleration in the actual time frame. But beyond that, you know, we do also recognize that the digital health channel is an important channel out there, more broadly. In this sector as well as many others.

And so we want to make sure that we are able to utilize all the channels that are available to bring, you know, we have talked from the very beginning about how do we get broad access for Gallery, and that would be one other element to enable broad access. But that also would not diminish our, again, our push towards a PMA and broad access through that.

Operator: Your next question will come from Doug Schenkel with Wolfe Research.

Doug Schenkel: Hi, good afternoon, and thank you for taking my questions. So I want to actually talk about NHS England a little bit more, and then I have a COGS-specific question. So starting on NHS England, you know, looking back to May 2024 when the statement was issued saying that early results were not compelling enough to justify a large-scale pilot. Were they referring to any clinical utility data from year one or to test level performance metrics such as PPV sensitivity and or specificity? Can you share a little bit more on what prompted that decision? And then on the same topic, has anyone besides GRAIL and the NHS evaluation team seen the year one NHS Gallery data?

I am just curious if anyone else has seen it, and then if not, at what menu do you anticipate releasing that data more broadly? You know, keeping in mind that you have said the FDA module submission is expected to be, I think, completed in Q1. So it would seem like that data would need to be released soon.

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. Harpal S. Kumar, do you want to take that one on?

Harpal S. Kumar: Sure. Thank you, Doug Schenkel. So on NHS England's decision last year, it is important to reiterate that what they would have wanted to see in order to initiate a pilot at that stage was very exceptional data. They looked at a few specific metrics of which PPV was definitely one. To remind everyone, it is not possible to look at the sort of broad utility measure of stage three and four reduction with only one year of data. That has to come with three years of data.

But PPV was certainly one, and you will have seen our announcement earlier this year that the PPV in that first round was substantially greater than we saw in our first PATHFINDER study. Which, to remind everyone, was 43%. So it gives you a sense of some of the information that was seen at the time. But, again, to reiterate, what the NHS would have wanted to see was truly exceptional data in order to accelerate. And the point is they were looking about an acceleration of an implementation rather than waiting until the final study results.

What they said at the time was, it was not exceptional enough to accelerate that implementation and so that they wanted to wait for the final study results. In answer to your second question, no. Only the NHS evaluation team has seen that data so far. To the third question, yes, the data from the prevalent round only from the intervention arm will be part of our FDA PMA submission package in Q1 next year. But that does not mean it will be in the public domain at that point. There will not be any data in the public domain from NHS Gallery until we have the final study results.

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. And we are expecting that full readout in 2026. Your next question is your final question and will come from Bradley Bowers with Mizuho.

Bradley Bowers: Hey, thanks for getting me in here. One on volumes and then maybe one a little high level. But just on volumes, you know, pretty, you know, acceleration here outgrew some seasonality. Just wanted to hear, you know, kind of driving volumes here, what cohorts, and then, you know, how that how we should think about that into next year and, you know, if international will have a tangible contribution next year?

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. Aaron Freidin, you maybe want to pick the volume question, and maybe dish off to Andrew John Partridge as well.

Aaron Freidin: Yeah. I mean, again, I can tag team that. So, yeah, you are right. Like, volumes are up 39% for the quarter year over year. Andrew John Partridge has kind of touched on already we are seeing, you know, more provider pull through and so on for the reasons that he has stated. As far as international goes, there are very minimal international volumes today. You know, it is an area that we are focusing on. And as you see through the Samsung engagement and so on, that we are being opportunistic there, and we are excited about what could be. Today, it is probably a little too early right now to say what volumes will be next year.

But, you know, we are getting, as Andrew John Partridge said earlier, momentum internationally and lost momentum domestically. So anything you want to add? Nothing else to add. I think we covered it.

Bradley Bowers: Thanks. And then if I could just double click on the SIMPLIFY study, you know, I think that is an interesting data point, you know, that going back and following up patients who were previously identified as false positives. I mean, does this were these patients, I guess, that went under, you know, typical protocols? You know, why were these, you know, cancers, I guess, kind of missed in follow-up? And then also, you know, there are, I guess, some serious implications about, you know, the possibility to detect, you know, cancers even earlier than, you know, the current paradigm or, you know, what follow-up testing would be. So just wondering to hear your thoughts on that.

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. Harpal S. Kumar, why do not you go through that?

Harpal S. Kumar: Yeah. I mean, look. First of all, it is, as you say, a really interesting set of data, and it is relatively recent. So we are still examining some of the detailed information. I think one of the most significant points is that many of these patients are presenting with very nonspecific symptoms, and these are the types of symptoms that could be indicative of cancer, and often they are. But they could also be indicative of many other conditions. And so primary care physicians, when they see patients like this, and they suspect cancer, will typically refer them to where they think that cancer is likely to be in the body.

But given these nonspecific symptoms, many of them could be several different sites. And so then what happens is a patient gets referred to a particular type of clinic, they get worked up in that clinic for that type of cancer. But if nothing is found at that point, they may not be worked up any further. And because this was an observational study, we did not provide the CSO prediction to the clinician at the time.

But what we have subsequently determined from this further follow-up is had we done so, it would have provided a directional investigation in all but one of the patients, which we think is a really encouraging development in terms of that CSO prediction capability.

Andrew John Partridge: Yeah. And I would just add to Harpal S. Kumar's point the value of the CSO. What we have also seen in centers that have adopted Gallery in the US is physician confidence growing in the value of that CSO. We have seen real-world publications from both Mayo and Dana Farber where their PPVs have been in excess of 70%. So that physician confidence in the value of the CSO really means they really work that diagnostic workup to a final resolution. And what we have seen there, therefore, there is more cancers being diagnosed due to that guided diagnostic follow-up from the CSO.

Operator: We have time for one more question, so we will return to Doug Schenkel with Wolfe Research. You may unmute.

Doug Schenkel: Okay. Thank you guys for taking me back in the queue. So I think it is an Aaron Freidin question. Cost of screening revenue, I think in dollar terms, it was down $3 million relative to Q2. That is kind of a mid-teens per decline. So sequentially on a per test basis. I think it was down 28% on a per test basis year over year. So just want to make sure at least I am in the right ballpark in doing the math. And, you know, if so, that is pretty impressive and remarkable. Can you just share how you are getting there and the durability and the trajectory from here? Thank you.

Aaron Freidin: Good, Doug Schenkel, happy to hear. Oh, sorry. Jump up.

Robert P. Ragusa: Yeah. And I was just saying, you know, Aaron Freidin talked a little bit about that in the prepared remarks. But, yeah, Aaron Freidin, why do not you go into a little more detail on that?

Aaron Freidin: Yeah. I could really an example of what we have been saying for a year now about the platform that we have built for high throughput, the capacity that we have to run a million samples a year. And just what higher volumes will show from a fixed cost leverage perspective. Comparing year over year, you have also got the variable cost impact that we have been talking about. We have kind of talked about that as a four to five times more samples per flow cell compared to the older version.

So it is really a demonstration of what more volume will do to our cost leverage and why we are really focused on driving more volume, getting more access out there because we have got the infrastructure to handle it, and the margins are there for the day.

Operator: And there are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back to GRAIL for closing remarks.

Robert P. Ragusa: Thank you, everyone, for joining today's call.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the call, and you may now disconnect.