Image source: The Motley Fool.
DATE
Wednesday, April 29, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- President and Chief Executive Officer — Stephen Griffin
- Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer — Ian McLeod
TAKEAWAYS
- Total Revenue -- $29.6 million, up 13% year over year, with mixed contributions from commercial and OEM channels.
- Commercial Channel Revenue -- $12.6 million, increasing 12%, driven by international OA pain management portfolio and regenerative solutions like Integrity.
- Integrity (Regenerative Solution) -- U.S. procedures up 35% year over year; revenue from Integrity was nearly $2 million; cumulative cases surpassed 3,000 with rapid surgeon adoption and growing new surgeon users at a double-digit rate month over month.
- International OA Pain Management Revenue -- $8.9 million, up 9%, attributed to market share gains for MONOVISC and CINGAL.
- OEM Channel Revenue -- $17 million, rising 14% year over year; growth attributed to order timing for U.S. OA pain management products (J&J MedTech partnership) and non-orthopedic OEM lines.
- Gross Margin (GAAP) -- 64%, an increase from 56% in the prior year; improvement reflects increased productivity, manufacturing throughput, and lean operational initiatives.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- $4.3 million, representing growth of more than $4 million year over year, mainly from gross margin expansion and operational leverage.
- Operating Expenses -- $24.5 million, up from $19 million; SG&A was $17.8 million, with $4.9 million attributed to onetime severance charges, while R&D reached $6.6 million, up 11% on targeted pipeline investment.
- Cash Position -- $41 million at quarter end, with the company carrying no debt.
- Share Repurchase -- $15 million repurchased under a 10b5-1 plan at an average cost of $10.76 per share; the program was completed as of April 10, 2026.
- 2026 Revenue Guidance -- Maintained at $114 million to $122.5 million, representing projected year-over-year growth of 1%-9%.
- Commercial Channel 2026 Guidance -- Expected annual growth of 10%-20%, with projected revenue between $53 million and $58 million, led by U.S. Integrity expansion and stable Hyalofast performance outside the U.S.
- OEM Channel 2026 Guidance -- Revenue anticipated as flat to down 5%, in the $61 million to $64.5 million range, with growth in MONOVISC volumes partially offset by lower pricing.
- Profitability Outlook -- Adjusted EBITDA margin targeted at 5%-10% of revenue for the full year, supported by higher revenues, cost reductions, and manufacturing improvements.
- Innovation Pipeline Update -- Hyalofast PMA review continues with FDA engagement; CINGAL's bioequivalence study on track for NDA preparation; CINGAL obtained EU MDR certification with expanded joint indications.
Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email [email protected]
RISKS
- President and Chief Executive Officer Griffin said, "You are correct that we received some favorability in the first quarter as it relates to mix and some of the order timing on the OEM side that benefits the overall business. And so I do think that it will be likely lower over time, and it's going to vary quarter-to-quarter. I haven't given a specific guide, but it's implied through the EBITDA guidance that we don't expect it to maintain at the same level as it's at in the first quarter," signaling future gross margin volatility.
- Senior Vice President McLeod noted, "the OEM channel is subject to variability related to customer ordering patterns. As a result, some revenue shifted into the first quarter, which may affect reported OEM revenue in the second quarter."
- Hyalofast U.S. PMA approval timing remains uncertain; the company has received an FDA deficiency letter and is still preparing its response, impacting potential U.S. revenue ramp.
- Substantial SG&A increase this quarter was largely due to $4.9 million in onetime severance charges, indicating restructuring costs.
SUMMARY
Anika Therapeutics (ANIK 18.81%) delivered a 13% revenue increase, driven by double-digit growth in both commercial and OEM channels, while emphasizing operational progress in lean manufacturing and targeted R&D investment. Strategic focus centered on expansion of the Integrity platform, increasing international demand for OA pain management, and significant operational changes underpinning improved profitability and cash generation. The innovation pipeline advanced globally, with CINGAL achieving EU MDR certification and Hyalofast U.S. regulatory discussions ongoing, although timing for revenue impact remains indeterminate.
- Two directors were announced to be stepping down from the Board, marking further changes in corporate governance following 2025 divestitures.
- Management reaffirmed 2026 guidance for total company revenue, commercial, and OEM channels, emphasizing sustainable growth priorities despite channel-specific volatility.
- Development of a new regenerative suture and tape product is in early stages, with management highlighting its potential but not quantifying the addressable market.
- The $15 million share repurchase completed at an average price below the current market, reflecting capital allocated to enhance shareholder value while retaining $41 million in cash with no outstanding debt.
- Management stressed continuous improvement and lean business principles as central operating philosophies driving culture change and long-term scalability.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- PMA (Premarket Approval): The FDA's strict regulatory process for approving new Class III medical devices, requiring clinical data and multi-step review.
- MDR (Medical Device Regulation): European Union regulatory framework that certifies medical devices for safety and effectiveness across the EU market.
- HYAFF: Anika's proprietary hyaluronic acid-based fiber technology designed for regenerative medical applications, such as soft tissue and tendon repair.
- CINGAL: An Anika injectable product combining hyaluronic acid and a corticosteroid for OA pain management, with broad regulatory submissions in progress.
- ASC (Ambulatory Surgery Center): Outpatient medical care facilities specializing in same-day surgical procedures, targeted by Anika for Integrity product expansion.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Steve Griffin, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Ian McLeod, Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Treasurer. They will present our first quarter 2026 financial results and business highlights. Please take a moment and open the slide presentation and refer to Slide 2. Before we begin, please understand that certain statements made during the call today constitute forward-looking statements as defined in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These statements are based on our current beliefs and expectations and are subject to certain risks and uncertainties. The company's actual results could differ materially from any anticipated future results, performance or achievements.
We make no obligation to update these statements should future financial data or events occur that differ from the forward-looking statements presented today. Please also see our most recent SEC filings for more information about risk factors that could affect our performance. In addition, during the call, we may refer to several adjusted or non-GAAP financial measures, which may include adjusted gross margin, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net income from continuing operations and adjusted earnings per share from continuing operations, which are used in addition to results presented in accordance with GAAP financial measures. We believe that non-GAAP measures provide an additional way of viewing aspects of our operations and performance.
But when considered with GAAP financial measures and the reconciliation of GAAP measures, they provide an even more complete understanding of our business. A reconciliation of these adjusted non-GAAP financial results to the most comparable GAAP measures are available at the end of the presentation slide deck and our first quarter 2026 press release. With that context, I'll turn the call over to our President and CEO, Steve Griffin, to walk through our performance and discuss our priorities as we move forward. Steve?
Stephen Griffin: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. In the first quarter of 2026, we made meaningful progress across Anika's three strategic priorities: driving sustainable commercial channel growth, advancing our hyaluronic acid-based innovation pipeline and strengthening execution across our organization. Our first quarter performance reflects a more focused business with early benefits from the operational changes we put in place. I want to walk through our first quarter results through the lens of these three priorities and importantly, in the context of what we said we would do. First, our top priority remains accelerating sustainable revenue growth, and the first quarter results reflect continued progress in that direction.
In the first quarter, commercial channel revenue continued to grow at a double-digit rate, increasing 12%, reflecting strong performance across both regenerative solutions and our international OA pain management portfolio. Within Regenerative Solutions, Integrity continues to be a central driver of that momentum with U.S. procedures up 35% year-over-year, generating nearly $2 million in revenue. Growth was driven by U.S. surgeon adoption, the full launch of larger sizes and expanding international penetration. We continue to be pleased with Integrity's performance as it progresses through the commercialization curve, having now surpassed 3,000 cases with accelerating adoption. We are seeing surgeons progress to their fifth and tenth Integrity cases faster than initially expected, with acceleration evident across each stage of adoption.
This reinforces that once surgeons begin using Integrity, utilization ramps quickly as confidence builds. We are closely tracking new surgeon adoption with new surgeon users per month growing at a double-digit rate month-over-month. This reflects continued success both in expanding our surgeon base and in deepening engagement as surgeons increase their use of Integrity over time. We're pleased by early results following the launch of the larger Integrity sizes with demand tracking ahead of expectations. But the bigger opportunity is adoption. Today, augmentation is used in only about 8% of rotator cuffs in the U.S. In other words, more than 90% of patients do not receive a patch at all, even though we know augmentation can support better healing.
Our strategy is to change that. By expanding the Integrity platform with additional sizes, configurations and enabling instrumentation, we aim to make augmentation easier for surgeons to adopt. Over time, that can both improve patient outcomes and significantly expand the total addressable market for Integrity in the ASC. Hyalofast also continues to contribute to the strength of our regenerative solutions portfolio, delivering steady growth outside the United States, supporting overall commercial channel performance. International demand remains solid, driven by established clinical adoption and continued expansion across key markets, underscoring Hyalofast's role as a durable contributor to our regenerative platform and a complementary driver alongside newer products within the portfolio. Turning to our international OA Pain Management portfolio.
We delivered strong first quarter revenue of nearly $9 million, reflecting the continued strength of our commercial channel. Performance was driven by ongoing regional expansion and improved market share across multiple geographies for CINGAL, MONOVISC and ORTHOVISC. Lastly, the OEM channel grew 14% year-over-year, primarily due to favorable order timing for both our U.S. OA pain management products sold through our partnership with J&J MedTech and our non-orthopedic products. We continue to expect quarterly variability in this channel. Within the U.S. OA Pain Management portfolio, performance was driven by MONOVISC unit volumes that exceeded our internal projections for the quarter. With pricing tracking in line with expectations, MONOVISC delivered meaningful favorability and more than offset lower-than-expected demand for ORTHOVISC.
This product level mix shift highlights the inherent variability in our OEM channel, where timing and demand can differ by product and quarter without changing our full year expectations. Non-orthopedic revenue was up in the quarter, driven by order timing of our animal health products. As a reminder, we continue to assess optionality as legacy distribution agreements cycle through with a clear focus on maximizing shareholder value. Our second priority is advancing our HA-based innovation pipeline centered on Integrity, Hyalofast and CINGAL and doing so through a structured and predictable development approach. During the first quarter, we continue to make steady progress across each of these programs.
The Hyalofast PMA review is ongoing as we continue to engage with the FDA through their review process. CINGAL also advanced during the quarter. Enrollment in the bioequivalent study remains on track as we continue to prepare for an NDA submission, including the necessary CMC work to support hyaluronic acid as a drug. In addition, CINGAL has successfully achieved European Union MDR certification, becoming our third MDR certified product alongside MONOVISC and Hyalofast. Importantly, the certification includes expanded indications across multiple joints, including the knee, hip, shoulder and ankle, reinforcing CINGAL's clinical versatility and supporting continued international growth.
In parallel, the post-market clinical follow-up study supporting marketing and the Integrity EU MDR submission continues to enroll and remains on track to complete enrollment later this year. We began 2026 with a clear focus on execution and the progress delivered in the first quarter underscores that commitment. Within our regenerative pipeline, we are advancing an early-stage regenerative suture and tape program that underscores the meaningful potential still to be unlocked from our hyaluronic acid technology platform. Leveraging [ HYAFF ] fiber, we can tailor both mechanical strength and biological response to specific soft tissue and tendon repair needs across a broad range of clinical applications.
While development remains early, and we are not yet quantifying its financial impact, the preclinical data are very encouraging, and we look forward to sharing more as this and other programs progress. Our third priority, strengthening operational discipline and execution has been an increased area of focus, and it was a significant contributor to our first quarter financial performance. Gross margin improved meaningfully compared to the first quarter of 2025. That improvement reflects a combination of higher manufacturing productivity and throughput, the continued benefits of our margin improvement initiatives and greater discipline across our operations. As a result, adjusted EBITDA increased by more than $4 million compared to the first quarter of last year.
Importantly, these results are not the outcome of a single quarter or a onetime action. They are being delivered through deliberate operational transformation that embeds lean manufacturing principles across our operations with a strong focus on continuous improvement and empowering our teams. We have reduced nonstandard work, strengthened engineering solutions and improved productivity by enabling teams closer to the work to drive meaningful change. At the same time, targeted investments in equipment upgrades have supported these efforts, allowing us to execute more efficiently and with greater consistency. Collectively, these actions are changing how we run the business, tightening processes, increasing operational discipline and building a more scalable operating model as volumes grow.
While we don't expect margin performance to move in a straight line each quarter, the first quarter provides clear evidence that our operational transformation is underway and beginning to create meaningful operating leverage in the business. On the expense side, we continue to demonstrate strong cost control across the organization. Excluding onetime severance charges related to actions we took earlier in the year, SG&A remained well managed, reflecting the benefits of a more focused operating model and disciplined resource allocation. R&D expenses increased this quarter as expected, reflecting deliberate investment in our key pipeline programs. These investments are targeted and aligned with the advanced programs, we believe offer the greatest potential to drive future growth and value creation.
With that, I'll turn it over to Ian to walk through the financial details.
Ian McLeod: Thanks, Steve. Please refer to Slide 5 of the presentation as I provide updates on the first quarter of 2026. In the first quarter, Anika generated $29.6 million in total revenue, up 13% year-over-year. Commercial channel revenue grew 12%, reaching $12.6 million, driven by strong international execution and continued momentum in Integrity, which continues to exceed our commercial expectations. Our international OA pain management business remained a key contributor, delivering 9% growth in the quarter to $8.9 million of revenue, led by sustained market share gains for MONOVISC and CINGAL across several regions. OEM channel revenue was $17 million in the quarter, representing a 14% increase year-over-year. The increase was driven primarily by order timing, including shipments of U.S.
OA pain management products sold through J&J MedTech as well as certain non-orthopedic OEM products. As we have discussed, the OEM channel is subject to variability related to customer ordering patterns. As a result, some revenue shifted into the first quarter, which may affect reported OEM revenue in the second quarter. Importantly, this timing-related variability does not change our expectations for the full year. Our gross margin improved in the first quarter, driven by higher volumes and improved execution across our manufacturing operations. GAAP gross margin increased to 64%, up from 56% in the prior year, reflecting higher productivity, increased throughput and the early benefits of our lean manufacturing efforts. Turning to operating expenses.
First quarter operating expenses were $24.5 million compared to $19 million in the prior year period. Selling, general and administrative expenses increased to $17.8 million from $12.9 million a year ago, primarily reflecting $4.9 million of onetime severance-related costs associated with previous announced cost reduction actions. R&D expense was $6.6 million, up 11% from $6 million a year ago, driven by continued investment in key regulatory and clinical programs, including Hyalofast and CINGAL. We are continuing to closely monitor operating expenses, balancing disciplined spending with targeted investment in the programs most critical to long-term growth. Total adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $4.3 million, driven by strong gross margin expansion and improved operating leverage.
We ended the quarter with $41 million in cash with no debt, giving us a strong liquidity position and the flexibility to continue investing in our growth priorities. First quarter cash usage reflected typical seasonal expense dynamics, and we expect cash flow to improve as the year progresses. As previously communicated, we initiated a $15 million 10b5-1 stock repurchase plan in November 2025. And as of April 10, that program has been completed. As part of the second 10b5-1, we have purchased $15 million of stock at an average price of $10.76. Now please turn to Slide 6 as I review our financial outlook for 2026.
Based on our first quarter performance and current visibility across the business, we are maintaining our previously issued full year 2026 guidance. At the total company level, we continue to expect full year revenue of $114 million to $122.5 million, representing 1% to 9% year-over-year growth. This outlook reflects continued momentum in our commercial channel alongside the market dynamics we've discussed in our OEM business. Within the commercial channel, we are maintaining our expectation for 10% to 20% growth or $53 million to $58 million for the full year. Growth is expected to be driven by the ongoing expansion of Integrity in the U.S., sustained Hyalofast performance outside the U.S. and increasing adoption across our international OA pain management portfolio.
For the OEM channel, we continue to expect revenue to be flat to down approximately 5% year-over-year or $61 million to $64.5 million. This outlook reflects anticipated MONOVISC unit volume growth, partially offset by lower pricing. Turning to profitability. We are maintaining our expectation for adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of 5% to 10% of revenue. At the midpoint, this improvement is driven by higher expected revenue led by commercial channel momentum, along with the benefits of previously announced G&A cost reduction actions and continued productivity and manufacturing improvements as demonstrated in the first quarter. These gains are partially offset by modestly lower J&J MedTech pricing. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Steve.
Stephen Griffin: Thanks, Ian. As we continue the transformation of the company following our divestitures in 2025, the Board is also evolving to reflect this next phase and two directors will be stepping down as outlined in the proxy filed last night. We are grateful for Dr. Glenn Larsen and Bill Jellison's contributions and valuable service to the company. With that context, before we move to Q&A, I want to briefly reinforce what we're focused on and how we're operating. Our priorities are clear. First, we are continuing to drive revenue growth across our commercial channels. Second, we are advancing our HA-based innovation pipeline through key regulatory milestones in a disciplined and predictable way.
And third, we are building on the progress we've made operationally to support improved profitability and long-term scalability. Equally important is how we're going about this. We are running the company with a simple operating mindset built around two principles broadly shared by the best lean manufacturing systems. First, respect for people; and second, continuous improvement. Respect for people means recognizing that the most important work happens closest to our products and our customers. Leaders exist to support that work to simplify processes, remove obstacles and make it easier for teams to execute and improve every day. Continuous improvement is about being practical, disciplined and honest about where we can do better and then acting on it.
This approach is helping us operate more effectively, staying close to customers and surgeons and running the business with a leaner, more focused leadership structure while maintaining strong accountability and execution. I want to thank our employees across the company who are embracing this way of working and showing up every day focused on execution and improvement. I'd also like to thank the surgeons and patients who rely on our products and partner with us. We value that trust and it keeps us focused on delivering consistent quality and performance. And finally, I want to acknowledge our shareholders. We appreciate your support and engagement as we make these changes to work to build a stronger, more durable business.
Your interests are aligned with ours and those of our employees and customers as we focus on long-term value creation. With that, I'd like to now open it up for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] And your first question comes from Mike Petusky from Barrington Research.
Michael Petusky: So I guess the first question I have is sort of around gross margin. Obviously, a really good quarter in terms of gross margin with some favorable order timing or I should say, favorable mix, particularly, I think, and obviously getting some benefit from manufacturing efficiencies. I guess going forward, I'd assume probably mid -- I'm sorry, upper 50s for most of '26. I mean, is that the right way to model this as things sort of normalize in terms of mix? Or might 60% or very low 60% be more of the new normal going forward?
Stephen Griffin: Yes. Mike, thanks for the question. I think the first quarter is a demonstration of what we can do, and I think the lean manufacturing improvements that we've made are starting to show through. You are correct that we received some favorability in the first quarter as it relates to mix and some of the order timing on the OEM side that benefits the overall business. And so I do think that it will be likely lower over time, and it's going to vary quarter-to-quarter. I haven't given a specific guide, but it's implied through the EBITDA guidance that we don't expect it to maintain at the same level as it's at in the first quarter.
But I think it is a good demonstration of what we're shooting for. Longer term, beyond just the course of this year, we're focused on improving the manufacturing productivity so that we can reduce our cost per unit as we continue to scale and grow operations. And I think this is an important step in that right direction.
Michael Petusky: Okay. Great. And Steve, you sort of -- you gave a lot of detail, and I really appreciate, I'm sure other people really appreciate around integrity and sort of utilization and the footprint you're building out there with surgeons, et cetera. So given the opportunity that you sort of described, how do you guys sort of, I guess, approach that in terms of training surgeons? I mean, is there sort of a cadence, a rhythm that you all are going out and trying to achieve? Like what's the plan there to sort of get after that 92% of the market opportunity you don't think you're touching now?
Stephen Griffin: Yes. It's an excellent question. And I would say we've talked in the past about the investment that we've made in our commercial channel. It's primarily related to the need to train surgeons on the procedure. And that's really where we spend a lot of our time and focus is on that new surgeon adoption. We closely monitor and track how long it takes the surgeons to get to that fifth and tenth case because that's really an indication of how well they're getting through the learning curve of the product.
And that's been sort of our primary focus with the team that we have that are boots on the ground that have done a really great job of establishing a footprint here in the U.S. I think the broader question you're asking about in terms of how big the total addressable market is, just given sort of the current rotator cuff augmentation percentage rates is another clear indication of where we want to try and grow. And that's going to come not just from surgeon adoption, but also from the ease of use and the different sizes and shapes and instrumentation that we can deploy.
And I think that we've got a really interesting product here from its regenerative capability and where we're focused on for R&D in the [ HYAFF ] space in the U.S. is around trying to make that easier so that surgeons are able to deploy it more rapidly to more patients. So it's not just the adoption, but it's also the R&D efforts in that space. And that, plus the clinical data that we're working to gather are sort of all part of our plan as we launch this U.S. commercial channel.
Michael Petusky: Okay. Steve, I don't think I asked that question as well as I wanted to. I'm going to take a second shot at it. Is there targets internally, and I'd love if you'd be willing to share some of it in terms of how many trainings, how many new surgeons you want to train on Integrity over the course of '26? Like are there targets that you guys are trying to achieve there?
Stephen Griffin: Yes. I appreciate the question. I'll answer it super simply. Yes, we have targets. Yes, our team works against those to try and get new surgeons adopted to the technology. And no, we're not going to share those externally.
Michael Petusky: All right. Last question for me, at least for now. In terms of the share repurchase, obviously, completed it. Congratulations, particularly on the cost basis of those shares that you all repurchased. I guess my question is, given $40 million of cash on the balance sheet, as you look at sort of capital allocation priorities post the completed share repurchase, what would you call out there in terms of your priorities going forward?
Stephen Griffin: Yes, I appreciate that question. Certainly, the share repurchase is part of a broader capital allocation strategy at the company level. And when we think about capital allocation, there's a few different facets to it. First is the operational investments we've made. So we've made investments in the CapEx in our manufacturing facility, and those are important to allow us to drive growth and scalability. Second will be the investments we've made into our U.S. regenerative commercial channel. So that's been an investment that we've talked about historically as something that's a drag to the P&L. We think of that really as a capital allocation decision we're making.
And then as we think about capital allocation longer term, the share repurchase opportunity is certainly a piece of it. We think about that in the sense that it represents a long-term shareholder value, and we think that the shares today represent value, but we're also considering other elements of the business associated with the long-term potential and where we see our business headed. And at this point, we have nothing further to share.
Operator: And your next question comes from Anderson Schock from B. Riley Securities.
Anderson Schock: Congratulations on the strong quarter. So you mentioned that Hyalofast review time line remains intact. Could you remind us that time line and when you expect to submit the complete response and your working assumptions for an FDA decision window?
Stephen Griffin: Absolutely. Appreciate the question this morning. So we had previously communicated from an impact to Anika's revenue opportunity that it could impact the fourth quarter of next year. That's built into our guidance. And with that is an expectation of sort of an extended time frame of discussions with the FDA. As you noted, we did submit the third and final module in the fourth quarter of 2025, and we received the deficiency letter from the FDA in the first quarter of this year, and we're working on those responses.
We haven't given a specific timetable as to when we expect to have our full response back into them, but it's safe to say that it's in the coming months in terms of what we're planning on submitting back to them, and then we expect to have it back and forth with them associated with the previously announced clinical data.
Anderson Schock: Okay. Got it. And 2027 guidance remains unchanged. So I guess at what point in the year would you need a positive FDA decision to have enough lead time to ramp commercial infrastructure to support the expected $3 million of 2027 U.S. Hyalofast revenue?
Stephen Griffin: Yes. I think it's safe to say that we've built in a level of buffer in terms of what we think we would need for the commercialization ramp-up to support our business. Everything that we've kind of built into our assumption here of our back and forth with them is kind of built into that overall financial framework. Our teams are obviously working internally on the things that we can do now in support of a potential launch of Hyalofast and then a ramp further in next year would be decisions we would make depending upon FDA.
Anderson Schock: Okay. Got it. And then could you provide an update on CINGAL's bioequivalent study enrollment to date? Does the current enrollment pace allow you to provide more specific completion and NDA filing window?
Stephen Griffin: It doesn't, but I expect that as we continue to work our way through that, we will be in a position to share more associated with an NDA filing time frame. As you noted, we are working through sort of the two elements of it, which is the bioequivalence study, which I'm not going to share the specific numbers, but it remains on track versus our original expectations as we've started this year. I think we noted on our fourth quarter call that we had initiated the study in the December time frame of 2025. And so the pace of enrollment is on track.
And then we're working that in conjunction with preparation of the CMC work to be able to file for Hyalofast as a drug. So those two things are running concurrently.
Anderson Schock: Okay. Got it. And then finally, you mentioned a new regenerative sutures and tapes program in development. Could you provide some more color on the size of the market opportunity here?
Stephen Griffin: Yes. I'd say it's a little early. I noted in the prepared remarks that we're not going to necessarily share, I'll call it, financial projections of this because it's still early. Really, what we wanted to do is just highlight the opportunity that exists for HYAFF as a regenerative technology in spaces that are outside of the areas that we're currently covering. Certainly, suture and tape is the space that we think would be most opportunistic. It's a very large addressable market, but that doesn't mean that it would be entirely addressable for us. But it's an area for where we think about regenerative technology in the long term, it could have a bigger impact.
I don't think we're at the point yet to share more on that, but the early indication we have on some of the data we've seen has been encouraging.
Operator: And there are no further questions at this time. Mr. Steve Griffin, you may please proceed.
Stephen Griffin: Thank you. Thank you, everybody, for joining our call today, and we look forward to speaking with you on our second quarter earnings call.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you very much for your participation. You may now disconnect. Have a good day.
