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DATE

Wednesday, May 6, 2026 at 8 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Vladimir Makatsaria
  • Chief Innovation Officer — Ahmet Tezel
  • Chief Financial Officer — Alex Shvartsburg

TAKEAWAYS

  • Consolidated Revenue -- $362 million, representing 11% constant-currency growth; foreign exchange contributed a 3% positive impact, or $10 million, during the period.
  • Cardiopulmonary Segment Revenue -- $209 million, up 14%, with heart-lung machine revenue rising in the high teens and cardiopulmonary consumables revenue growing in the mid-teens.
  • Epilepsy Segment Revenue -- Increased 8%, with a combined 12% rise in Europe and Rest of World, and 7% growth in the U.S.
  • Updated Revenue Guidance -- Full-year revenue growth now expected between 7% and 8%, raised from 6%-7% previously.
  • Cardiopulmonary Revenue Guidance -- Now projected at 8.5%-9.5% growth, up from 7%-8%; planned Essenz heart-lung machine unit penetration at approximately 80% for the year, up from 55% last year.
  • Epilepsy Revenue Guidance -- Increased to 6%-7%, up from 5.5%-6.5%, driven by improved patient funnel and reduced volume discounting in the U.S.
  • Adjusted Gross Margin -- 68%, down from 69%, with volume and price gains offset by currency and product mix shifts.
  • Adjusted SG&A Expense -- $129 million, versus $116 million prior year; as a percent of revenue, 36% compared to 37% last year, with improvement due to fixed cost leverage.
  • Adjusted R&D Expense -- $47 million, up from $38 million, constituting 13% of revenue versus 12% a year prior; increase reflects planned OSA investments.
  • Adjusted Operating Income -- $71 million, up from $65 million; margin was 20%, consistent year over year amid R&D and currency headwinds.
  • Adjusted Diluted EPS -- $0.98 compared to $0.88; growth attributed to higher cardiopulmonary and epilepsy revenue.
  • Adjusted Effective Tax Rate -- 23%, versus 24% last year, reflecting a more favorable geographic mix of income.
  • Adjusted Free Cash Flow -- $4 million, down from $20 million, due to higher capital spending and increased working capital.
  • Cash and Debt Position -- Cash of $540 million and total debt of $288 million, with early repayment of $98 million in term facilities (including accrued interest), reducing both balances from year-end 2025.
  • 2026 Adjusted EPS Guidance -- Projected at $4.20-$4.30, implying approximately 9% growth at midpoint, with about 56 million diluted average shares outstanding.
  • 2026 Capital Spend Guidance -- $120 million, a $40 million increase, funding cardiopulmonary expansion, next-generation oxygenator development, and IT infrastructure.
  • OSA Regulatory Milestone -- U.S. FDA premarket approval granted in March for aura6000 for adult moderate-to-severe obstructive sleep apnea, the first and only device of its kind approved without CCC-related contraindications or warnings.
  • OSA Clinical Data -- Full 12-month OSPREY trial results published, demonstrating "clinically meaningful responses and sustained improvements," and achieving a cumulative responder rate above 80% after PolySync intervention.
  • VNS Therapy U.S. Medicare Reimbursement -- Effective January 1, 2026, hospital outpatient payments rose by approximately 48% for new patient implants and 47% for end-of-service procedures.
  • Middle East Conflict Impact -- Incorporated a full-year adverse operating income effect of roughly $5 million, primarily driven by increases in shipping, logistics, and fuel costs.

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RISKS

  • Alex Shvartsburg said, "Adjusted free cash flow for the quarter was $4 million, compared to $20 million in the prior year period. The year-over-year decrease was primarily driven by increased capital spend and higher working capital requirements aligned with revenue growth."
  • Makatsaria cautioned that while demand for oxygenators continues to outpace the market's ability to supply, improvements in third-party component availability have enabled increased manufacturing output, but supply constraints remain a risk.
  • Shvartsburg said, "we have incorporated an estimated full year impact of approximately $5 million on adjusted operating income, primarily related to higher shipping, logistics and fuel costs," due to conflict in the Middle East.

SUMMARY

LivaNova (LIVN +15.05%) reported double-digit constant-currency revenue growth, driven by gains in both cardiopulmonary and epilepsy segments. Management raised top-line and segment-level growth guidance, citing increased manufacturing capacity, improved U.S. reimbursement, and expanded product adoption. The company highlighted regulatory and clinical milestones for its obstructive sleep apnea portfolio, with FDA approval of the aura6000 system and 12-month OSPREY data supporting efficacy. Earnings metrics reflected increased revenue and consistent operating leverage, but free cash flow declined year over year due to higher capital outlays and working capital investments. The outlook incorporates external headwinds, including supply chain challenges and higher logistics costs from regional conflicts, yet maintains margin and EPS growth targets at the high end of prior multi-year frameworks.

  • Management emphasized that improvements in oxygenator component availability and additional production lines are expected to accelerate output growth in the second half, with further upside possible if supplier partnerships deliver additional capacity.
  • FDA premarket approval for aura6000 marks the first hypoglossal nerve stimulation device cleared without a complete concentric collapse contraindication, setting a unique market entry position for LivaNova in OSA.
  • Recent U.S. Medicare reimbursement increases for VNS therapy procedures are already reflected in realized price improvements and are viewed as reducing a key adoption barrier for advanced treatment in drug-resistant epilepsy.
  • The company confirmed that market adoption of Essenz will be broad-based, with China identified as a significant contributor to incremental unit placements and penetration targets this year.
  • Guidance accounts for external risks, specifically estimating less than $5 million in operating income impact from tariffs and regional geopolitical uncertainties, without yet including potential tariff refunds.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Essenz: LivaNova's advanced heart-lung machine platform designed for cardiopulmonary bypass procedures, featuring upgrade pathways and enhanced clinical functionality.
  • Hypoglossal Nerve Stimulation (HGNS): A device-based therapy for obstructive sleep apnea that activates the hypoglossal nerve to maintain airway patency during sleep.
  • PolySync: LivaNova's proprietary titration algorithm for hypoglossal nerve stimulators, enabling greater selectivity and individualized therapy optimization.
  • Core VNS Study: A pivotal clinical trial evaluating the efficacy and outcomes of LivaNova's vagus nerve stimulation therapy in epilepsy.
  • CPAP: Continuous positive airway pressure therapy, the standard first-line treatment for obstructive sleep apnea, often discontinued by patients.
  • OSPREY Trial: LivaNova's randomized controlled study measuring the efficacy and safety of hypoglossal nerve stimulation in moderate-to-severe OSA patients, providing patient-reported outcomes and objective data.
  • VNS (Vagus Nerve Stimulation): An implantable neuromodulation therapy to control seizures in epilepsy and studied for use in depression and heart failure.
  • DRE (Drug-Resistant Epilepsy): Patient population for whom standard anti-epileptic drugs fail to provide adequate seizure control, targeted for advanced therapies like VNS.
  • CCC (Complete Concentric Collapse): An airway collapse pattern during sleep that previously disqualified patients from certain OSA therapies.
  • PROs (Patient-Reported Outcomes): Direct reports from patients about their health status, used as endpoints in clinical trials to measure therapy benefit beyond clinical/laboratory metrics.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Vladimir Makatsaria: Thank you, Briana, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. Welcome to LivaNova's conference call for the first quarter of 2026. In the quarter, LivaNova delivered 11% revenue growth with strength across all regions, driven by durable performance in our cardiopulmonary and epilepsy businesses. Our core businesses continue to serve as both the drivers of current performance and enablers of disciplined investments in innovation. We expect these investments to fuel the long-term durability of our core performance as well as expansion into high-growth, high-margin markets to build a more sustainable financial profile for value creation over time. One such market is obstructive sleep apnea.

We continue to view the OSA market as attractive, up to 1 million patients drop out of CPAP treatment annually and the AG&S penetration into that population is less than 5%, which creates a significant opportunity. We recognize that there are current challenges in the HGNS market, but view the current dynamic and ambiguity and reimbursement as temporary and the long-term effect of GLP-1s on the market as net positive. With [ PHS ], we have a clear right to win supported by rigorous clinical evidence and differentiated technology designed for broader and more complex patient population and leading neuromodulation capabilities across LivaNova.

We recently achieved key regulatory and clinical milestones establishing a strong foundation for our planned entry into the OSA market next year. The first of these milestones occurred in March when LivaNova received U.S. FDA premarket approval for the aura6000 system for the treatment of adult patients with moderate to severe OSA. Notably, this is the first and only hypoglossal nerve stimulation device approved by the FDA without a complete consent to collapse, counterindication or warning. The second important OSA milestone is on the clinical evidence front, where the full 12 months results from our OSPREY randomized controlled trial were recently published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, demonstrating clinically meaningful responses and sustained improvements over time.

Ahmet will share additional details later in the call on how we're leveraging these milestones to advance our OSA program. For the remainder of the call, I will discuss our first quarter segment results and provide updated top line guidance for 2026. After my comments, Ahmet will discuss key innovation updates including recent regulatory and clinical progress. Alex will then provide additional details on our results and updated 2026 guidance. I will wrap up with closing remarks before moving on to Q&A. Now turning to segment results. For the cardiopulmonary segment, revenue was $209 million in the quarter. an increase of 14% versus the first quarter of 2025.

Heart-lung machine revenue grew in the high teens in the quarter, driven by an increase in essence placements on both a sequential and year-over-year basis and sustained favorable price premiums. The results for the quarter also included a modest benefit from the recapture of Essenz placements and tenders that were previously deferred from the fourth quarter of 2025. The performance was otherwise driven by underlying demand and the associated favorable price/mix effect. Cardiopulmonary consumables revenue grew in the mid-teens in the quarter, driven by the market share gains, procedure growth and price. While demand for oxygenators continues to outpace the market's ability to supply, improvements in the third-party component availability has enabled us to increase our manufacturing output.

For the full year 2026, we now expect cardiopulmonary revenue to grow 8.5% to 9.5%, up from 7% to 8% previously. Our forecast reflects continued HLM growth as we drive Essenz penetration globally. We still expect Essenz to represent approximately 80% of annual HLM unit placement in 2026, up from 55% in 2025. This forecast assumes continued market share gains in consumables as we execute on our manufacturing expansion plans. Within this guidance, we expect our full year manufacturing output to increase by low double digits, driven by new manufacturing line scheduled to go live in the second half of the year. This represents a significant acceleration versus 2025 levels.

Additionally, we continue to work with third-party suppliers to increase component availability, which could enable additional oxygenator output growth beyond current assumptions. Turning to epilepsy. Revenue increased 8% versus the first quarter of 2025 with growth across all regions. Epilepsy revenue in the Europe and Rest of World regions increased the combined 12% versus the prior year period. While U.S. epilepsy revenue increased 7% year-over-year. Performance was driven by total implant growth and favorable realized price, supported by impactful clinical evidence, improved reimbursement and sustained commercial excellence.

Consistent with what we have shared previously, the results from our core VNS study have been well received by key opinion leaders and have become an important component of our commercial engagement and education efforts. In recent conversations in our inaugural VNS Forum, which brought together approximately 150 clinicians. Participants shared that the data is reshaping their perception of the effectiveness of VNS Therapy for epilepsy. They also indicated that the findings support broader adoption as they reevaluate their therapy's role within their treatment algorithms. Notably, over 50 leading experts have requested permission to independently present the data. Effective January 1, 2026, U.S.

Medicare reimbursement for VNS therapy procedures in drug-resistant epilepsy increased meaningfully with hospital outpatient payments rising approximately 48% for new patient implants and 47% for end-of-service procedures compared to 2025 levels. These U.S. reimbursement changes improve hospital economics for VNS therapy, creating a more sustainable model for providers and supporting expanded patient access. In the U.S., there are approximately 1 million DRE patients, yet fewer than 10% receive advanced treatment. The updated reimbursement rate reduced a known barrier to procedure penetration as historic Medicare rates did not fully cover VNS therapy procedure costs. As a result, we saw improved realized pricing in the first quarter, driven by less volume discounting as well as our normal annual list price increase.

For the full year 2026, we now expect epilepsy revenue growth of 6% to 7% up from 5.5% to 6.5% previously. This forecast is driven by improved growth rates in the U.S., Europe and the rest of world. The improved outlook is supported by strong global acceptance of core VNS as well as both reduced volume discounting and the strengthening of the patient funnel in the U.S. driven by improved reimbursement. In summary, LivaNova's first quarter growth was driven by healthy markets, continued success of the Essenz upgrade cycle, share gains in cardiopulmonary consumables and strong epilepsy commercial execution.

We expect this driver to sustain through 2026, supported by continued execution in cardiopulmonary and the combination of compelling clinical evidence and improved reimbursement dynamics in epilepsy, which should expand patient access over time. As a result, we are now guiding full year 2026 revenue growth between 7% and 8%, up from 6% to 7% previously. This top line guidance implies performance at the high end of the 2025 to 2028 growth framework we outlined at Investor Day. Alex will provide additional details on our 2026 guidance later in the call. With that, I'll hand the call over to Ahmet to cover the strong momentum across our innovation agenda, including recent clinical, regulatory and digital advances across our portfolio.

Ahmet Tezel: Thank you, Vlad. Innovation is central to LivaNova's next chapter of growth both fueling the pipeline while strengthening our core businesses. Starting with OSA. As Vlad mentioned, LivaNova recently received FDA premarket approval for the aura6000 000 system for the treatment of adult patients with moderate to severe sleep apnea. This is a transformative milestone both for the company and for patients who continue to face significant unmet needs. Importantly, FDA approval enables broader compliant engagement with clinicians through promotion, training and education and essential step to building awareness and supporting appropriate utilization over time. In parallel, we're advancing the development of a next-generation system designed to further benefit patients and support commercialization.

We continue to expect to submit a PMA supplement for the commercial MRI compatible device in the second half of 2026. This would support a limited market release in the first half of '27, followed by a broader commercial launch in the second half of 2027, consistent with the time line outlined at Investor Day. Our pHGNS Therapy was rigorously evaluated for safety and effectiveness in the OSPREY randomized controlled trial with 12-month results recently published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. The study demonstrated clinically significant responses and sustained improvements over time. Notably, OSPREY is the first and only randomized controlled trial in the HGNS space, bringing gold standard scientific rigor to the field.

Moreover, it is the only HGNS study to evaluate several patient-reported outcomes or PROs making the findings more comprehensive than prior pivotal FDA trials. OSPREY patients in the treatment cohort showed significant improvements in PROs, including the Epworth Sleepiness Scale, which measures daytime sleepiness and functional outcomes of sleep questionnaire, which assess the impact of fatigue on daily activities. Collectively, OSPREY's data show that for patients with moderate to severe OSA, treatment led to meaningful improvements, not only in objective of disease severity, but also in daytime sleepiness and other PROs that matter most to patients and clinicians. As previously disclosed, OSPREY did not exclude patients with complete concentric collapse with approximately 45% of the participants considered high risk.

The study enrolled a challenging patient population with higher baseline AHI and BMI compared to other pivotal U.S. trials yet achieved comparable responder rates. We are proud to bring the option of pHGNS to more patients as the first and only FDA-approved HGNS therapy without CCC-related contraindication or warning and without a pre-implantation drug-induced sleep endoscopy requirements. In addition, our PolySync evaluation is progressing. PolySync is our advanced titration algorithm that fully utilizes the 6 electrode architecture of the PHS costs, enabling greater selectivity and patient-specific optimization of therapy. PolySync demonstrated ability to convert nonresponders into responders, both strengthens our competitive positioning versus existing HGNS therapy and has the potential to expand penetration in a broader range of patients.

We're excited to share the complete PolySync results at the upcoming [ SLEEP ] conference in June. To date, our findings indicate that PolySync will convert over 50% of OSPREY nonresponders into responders. For context, our study originally included roughly 100 patients who are randomized into treatment and control groups and monitored until the 7-month primary end point. At that point, patients in the control group also began receiving therapy. Following the 13-month endpoint, we extended the opportunity to all nonresponders regardless of their original assignment to participate with PolySync. This approach led to a cumulative responder rate suppressing 80% across the entire OSPREY trial population.

These results underscore the significant impact politic may have in improving outcomes within this patient group. As a reminder, PolySync will be available at launch enabling patients to benefit from the advanced algorithm starting with their initial titration. We continue to view OSA as a compelling derisked opportunity grounded in differentiated technology and clinical evidence as well as our established neuromodulation capabilities. Now turning to difficult-to-treat depression. We continue to believe VNS therapy is a differentiated option for this markedly ill patient population. While we remain in active engagement with CMS, we won't speculate on exact submission timing. We remain excited by the DTTD opportunity, and we'll continue to keep investors updated on material development as appropriate.

In epilepsy, during the first quarter, we initiated a limited market release of our cloud-based clinician portal and application. As a reminder, this rollout is intended to validate workflows and deepen clinician engagement. The financial impact is expected to be limited this year. A full market release is planned for 2027 alongside the launch of our next-generation Bluetooth-enabled generator. This multiyear innovation road map is expected to streamline care delivery through remote titration, real-time access to patient insights and more digitally connected care pathways that remove barriers to access. At LivaNova, we have developed a unified digital health platform for our entire portfolio, allowing for a consistent technology user experience and data strategy across our different business units.

For example, in epilepsy, the cloud-based clinician portal and app will enable capabilities such as remote titration. Lastly, innovation within our CP consumables portfolio continues to advance. For our next-generation oxygenator with the design finalized, we are now in the manufacturing scale-up phase of product development. In summary, we are encouraged by our recent progress across the portfolio, including regulatory and clinical evidence momentum in OSA and DTV. The rollout of our connected care platform in epilepsy and the advancement of the [indiscernible] program. Collectively, these milestones underscore the depth of our innovation pipeline and the opportunity to continue raising the standard of care. With that, I will turn the call over to Alex.

Alex Shvartsburg: Thanks, Ahmet. During my portion of the call, I'll share a brief recap of the first quarter results and provide commentary on our updated full year 2026 guidance, which reflects strong performance year-to-date and improved business outlook. Turning to results. Revenue in the quarter was $362 million, an increase of 11% on a constant currency basis versus the prior year. Foreign exchange in the quarter had a favorable year-over-year impact on revenue of approximately $10 million or 3%. Adjusted gross margin as a percent of net revenue was 68% and compared to 69% in the first quarter of 2025. Higher volumes and improved pricing were offset by unfavorable currency and product mix.

Adjusted SG&A expense for the first quarter was $129 million compared to $116 million in the first quarter of 2025. SG&A as a percent of net revenue was 36% as compared to 37% in the first quarter of 2025. On a year-over-year basis, the reduction as a percent of net revenue was driven by fixed cost leverage. Adjusted R&D expense in the first quarter was $47 million compared to $38 million in the first quarter of 2025. R&D as a percentage of net revenue was 13% compared to 12% in the first quarter of 2025 with the year-over-year increase primarily reflecting planned investments in OSA.

Adjusted operating income was $71 million compared to $65 million in the first quarter of 2025. Adjusted operating income margin of 20% was generally in line with the prior year period, reflecting higher revenue and operating leverage, partially offset by increased OSA R&D investments and unfavorable foreign currency impacts. Adjusted effective tax rate for the quarter was 23% compared to 24% in the prior year period, reflecting a modestly more favorable geographic mix of income. Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.98 compared to $0.88 in the first quarter of 2025. The increase was primarily driven by higher revenue, reflecting strong growth across both the cardiopulmonary and epilepsy businesses. Moving to our cash balance at March 31.

Cash was $540 million compared to $636 million at year-end 2025. Total debt at March 31 was $288 million compared to $377 million at year-end 2025. The reduction in both cash and total debt was a result of the early repayment of the outstanding term facilities of $98 million, inclusive of accrued interest. Adjusted free cash flow for the quarter was $4 million, compared to $20 million in the prior year period. The year-over-year decrease was primarily driven by increased capital spend and higher working capital requirements aligned with revenue growth. As a reminder, the first quarter results are disproportionately low, relative to our guidance due to the payout of the 2025 accrued short-term incentive bonuses.

Capital spend was $14 million in the first quarter compared to $11 million in the prior year period. The year-over-year increase was driven by cardiopulmonary capacity expansion initiatives, the next-generation oxygenator manufacturing scale-up as well as investments in IT infrastructure. Now turning to our updated 2026 guidance. As Vlad mentioned, based on performance to date, we're increasing full year 2026 revenue and adjusted earnings per share while maintaining adjusted free cash flow guidance. We now forecast 2026 revenue growth between 7% and 8% on a constant currency basis, up from 6% to 7% previously. We continue to expect the impact of foreign currency to be a tailwind of approximately 1% based on current exchange rates.

Consistent with our prior guidance, we estimate a tariff net impact of less than $5 million on adjusted operating income for the full year. At this point, we are not assuming a tariff refund benefit. However, we are working through the government's refund process. We believe LivaNova remains well positioned to manage the impact of tariffs. With respect to the conflict in the Middle East, we have incorporated an estimated full year impact of approximately $5 million on adjusted operating income, primarily related to higher shipping, logistics and fuel costs. As with tariffs, the situation remains dynamic, and we continue to monitor developments closely.

Despite this impact, we continue to expect full year adjusted operating income margin to be in the range of 20% to 21%. Adjusted effective tax rate is still forecasted at approximately 23%. To reflect stronger operational performance, we now project adjusted diluted earnings per share in the range of $4.20 to $4.30, with adjusted diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be approximately 56 million for the full year. This EPS range represents approximately 9% growth at midpoint. Adjusted free cash flow is still expected to be in the range of $160 million to $180 million. This range includes $120 million in capital spending, a $40 million increase versus the prior year.

This level of investment is consistent with our Q1 initiatives supporting cardiopulmonary capacity expansion and the next-generation oxygenator manufacturing scale-up as well as investments in IT infrastructure. In summary, we delivered strong first quarter with double-digit revenue growth, positioning us well for the balance of 2026. Our updated 2026 guidance aligns with the 2025 to 2028 framework presented at our Investor Day and reflects top line performance at the high end of our targeted mid- to high single digit revenue CAGR. We continue to target annual adjusted operating margins above 20% with EPS growth roughly in line with revenue. Our adjusted free cash flow trajectory supports achieving 80% conversion by 2028.

This outlook reflects healthy core business execution and continued disciplined investment, consistent with our capital allocation framework. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Vlad.

Vladimir Makatsaria: Thank you, Alex. In closing, LivaNova's strong operating model continues to generate durable growth, fueling both our performance today and our ability to invest for tomorrow. We also made important progress in OSA this quarter, achieving key regulatory and clinical milestones that position us well for entry into this high-growth, high-margin market. I want to thank our colleagues around the world for their focus and dedication to improving outcomes for patients and serving our customers. With a strong team and clear strategic priorities, LivaNova is well positioned for continued momentum in 2026 and beyond. With that, we are ready to open this call for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions]. First question comes from Rick Wise with Stifel.

Frederick Wise: It really is great to see such an excellent quarter across the board, very impressive, well done. And just to start off, maybe you could apply or wherever you want to expand on your very encouraging comments on what seems like a change a new world for -- or the beginning of a new world for the epilepsy business post the reimbursement change? I mean you know it was going to be important. It seems like it really is important, but talk to us about your commercial competitive life post this and this evident pickup in terms of selling operating, contracting and how we think about the business going forward?

I mean it's hard not to believe you're being -- I mean, I know it's early, but that you're not being very conservative and talk about the guidance and the outlook there.

Unknown Executive: Yes. Rick, great to hear your voice, and thank you for the question. So I'll maybe start a little bit broader to say what I'm really pleased about in terms of our performance is with the quality of our growth. If I look at it geographically, we have healthy growth across all regions across the world. If I look at it from the business growth drivers, kind of all the cylinders were firing. We continue to see really strong momentum in the upgrade of Essenz. We are accelerating in terms of share gain on oxygenators, and we see strong growth in our epilepsy business driven by 2 factors.

One is improved reimbursement as of January 1 and 2, the dissemination of the clinical data that was an outcome of the Core VNS study. And now if I focus on the epilepsy front, what we expect from those 2 factors is #1 is improvement in price, and that is a short-term improvement. It's driven by the fact that we are reducing some of the volume discounts that we've given in the past. And so you kind of see that uplift in price right away.

Secondly, we see an opportunity for improved penetration of VNS procedures in epilepsy, basically, the volume increase of procedures, and that is going to be driven by this changing algorithm within practice of current epileptologists that are doing already VNS procedures and potentially opening new centers that will do BNS procedures because now the economic barrier has been removed. So it's too early to kind of tell you what the long-term trends are. And as we continue to build our experience in this new world, we will update the investors on the progress.

Alex Shvartsburg: Rick, I'll just add more -- a little bit more color. With the majority of the pricing changes took effect in -- on January 1. So due to the timing of the reimbursement update in '25, pricing for many of the accounts was already established for 2026. So our team will identify kind of a new tranche of customers for '27. So that will -- that element will continue. We've seen traction in new and expanded and reopened accounts to date. So in the first half, the teams are focused on reengaging with our [ HCP ] customers and really demand generation. So the volume-driven assumptions, including new expanded and reopen accounts are expected to materialize in the second half.

Frederick Wise: Got you. And just as a second question, trying to cardiopulmonary. I mean strong consumable quarter up mid-teens. You've bumped up the '26 guidance continued [ HLM ] growth and as always, over the last several years, you're indicating you're continuing to work with third-party suppliers to expand oxygenator capacity. I don't know. It just sounds to me like again here just the short-term and longer-term implications of improving third-party component supply and manufacturing ramp. I don't know it just sounds better than you -- it seems better than I expected and your tone sounds more confident. Just where are we? And I mean, is there a sudden inflection or more dramatic expansion in supply ahead in the not-too-distant future?

Just where are we in this whole process now? Thanks so much.

Unknown Executive: Thank you, Rick. Yes, this is a critical priority for us to continue to drive our growth. We're very pleased with our recent progress in manufacturing output. And it comes from both improvements within LivaNova and improvements with third-party suppliers. One, as we said in the opening remarks, we're guiding to a low double-digit increase in output of oxygenated production this year. We have very important milestones coming in the second half of the year where we are opening additional manufacturing line within LivaNova to expand our manufacturing capacity and output even further. So it's been a positive experience for us. This is probably a source of -- like we said during the Investor Day of additional growth for LivaNova.

But I think also, if I step back and talk about the market share dynamics. Over the last couple of years, we were able to improve market share from approximately 30% to approximately 40%. You don't see that very often in such a mature market. But we continue to build our strategy to use market share is a key growth lever. And so what we've guided during the Investor Day is that we will increase oxygenator capacity by 60% by 2030 and improve market share further by 800 basis points. So our work on manufacturing of for this kind of focus to execute versus the share gain.

Operator: We now turn to David Rescott with Baird.

David Rescott: Congrats on the strong start to the year here. Maybe from us starting on the VNS bucket, I appreciate the comments you provided on that already, and it certainly sounds like the commentary specifically around, I guess, the core data and market interest or health was more constructive maybe than we've heard in prior quarters. I know you've talked in the past about some of this limited impact maybe from [ Wiser ]. I know there's others that have seen that impact out there. So just curious, if at all, in the quarter, you saw anything there?

And if so, would it be fair to assume that maybe the delta versus the reported results at all could be entirely driven by price? Or you're starting to maybe see some of these benefit from utilization as early as Q1 so far?

Alex Shvartsburg: David, so let me address the [ Wiser ] question. So in the subset that we track, [ were ] any patients that have been denied access to VNS therapy. Early indications suggest that the program has had no material impact on us so far. And as we continue -- we'll continue to monitor the pilots that are ongoing across the 6 states. I'll just say one other thing kind of an anecdote. We successfully managed several wiser submissions to date and all of which have secured approval within a 48-hour window. So just kind of at the highest level, we're not seeing much impact.

And then finally, as a reminder, the majority of our Medicare patients who undergo VNS therapy are enrolled in Medicare Advantage Plan. So as such, we're very familiar and already subject to the prior process. So again, we don't see much of an made.

David Rescott: Okay. Perfect. Maybe on hypoglossal nerve OSA that the longer-term strategy there? I mean it sounds like maybe at this point, 2028 is period of time at which reimbursement maybe is fully ironed out. I know the prior goals have been for a launch at some point maybe back half of 2027. So curious around how you're thinking about not only the evidence generation and development of that strategy in 2026. But as you get into 2027, if at all, some of those reimbursement headwinds or overhangs will say that maybe don't get fixed until 2028, influence at all how you're thinking about more of this intermediate-term rollout.

Unknown Executive: David, thank you for the question. I think maybe I'll start by saying that, I mean, we will follow and recognize that there are currently some challenges in the HGNS market. However, we view that current dynamic is temporary. And we still believe that the market is very attractive, and this is driven by large patient population, high unmet clinical need. And at the same time, we believe that we have the right to win with both our clinical and technological differentiation that we've discussed during the Investor Day and other engagement.

So our view on the market has not changed, and we're learning as we are preparing for launch on how to deal with some of the challenges that we believe are mainly driven by the coding and reimbursement. And then maybe I'll turn it over to Ahmet to talk a little bit broader on our market access.

Ahmet Tezel: Yes. I mean, we continue our efforts that we will use the prevailing codes at the time of the launch. And with the incumbent removal of the sensor, the 2 technologies in terms of reimbursement are very similar. So we are confident that by the time we're in the market the reimbursement issue will be settled a little bit more, and we will continue to work with AMA and other societies to ensure that we are doing this in a collaborative way. And one last thing I would say is that I do believe it is a strength of LivaNova, the reimbursement piece. I think we've demonstrated that with VNS. We have a very strong team that really understands this.

So we will continue to work with that team and ensure that we pursue the appropriate codes at the time of launch.

Operator: We now turn to Adam Maeder with Piper Sandler.

Adam Maeder: Congrats on a nice start to the year. Two for me. I wanted to start on [ HLM ] and a really good quarter for that product line, broad-based performance by geography. Maybe you can just expand on what went well in the quarter, and then also double-click on China specifically. Curious to kind of understand how the Essenz launch is going in that geography. And as we think about China and FY '26, maybe contextualize that against the revised CP guidance? And then I had a follow-up on the Middle East.

Unknown Executive: Okay. Adam, great to hear your voice. Actually, I was in China with a team earlier this year. We have a very good organization there, a great leader, and the business is doing very well. So the launch of HLM is progressing well in the first quarter. It's progressing as planned. we're the market leader there, and we continue to be very optimistic about that market for us.

And in terms of [ HMM ] performance, while we don't disclose exact units sold in various countries, I'd tell you that we plan to grow Essenz penetration to 80% in 2025 as a percent of all units placed -- in 2026, sorry, up from 55% last year and China is going to play a significant role in that increase. So that's on China. And then broader on [ HLM ], we're pleased with the high teens growth in the quarter. We continue to see the success in the upgrade cycle. And what's great to see is it's -- this growth is actually driven by healthy volumes, both sequential and year-on-year basis.

And secondly, I would say that -- it's good to see that customers are recognizing the clinical benefit of operating a machine that is fully loaded with optionality -- and as a consequence of that, we are able to maintain significant price upside versus the previous version. So this kind of -- this clinical value proposition gives me good confidence into the future that we will be able to maintain that price upside.

Adam Maeder: Yes. Okay. That's very helpful, Vlad. I appreciate the color. And for the follow-up, Alex, I heard the commentary in the prepared remarks on Middle East. I think you said $5 million adverse impact on adjusted operating income from shipping and fuel costs. Hopefully, I heard that correct. Any color from a revenue standpoint in terms of how you're thinking about the conflict? Which of the businesses are impacted? And maybe just help us better understand kind of how you arrived at those assumptions?

Alex Shvartsburg: Yes. So from a revenue perspective, Adam, Middle East is -- represents approximately 4% of our total revenue base. So not a significant impact. Look, we operate in segments that are essential for patients around the globe. And so we're going to continue to supply the market as best we can. In terms of the impact on EPS, we dialed in approximately $5 million or $0.07 EPS impact. It's really related to the increases we anticipate in terms of freight, logistics and energy costs. So to no one's surprise, and that's -- those are the challenges that all companies are seeing at this point in time. So we thought it was prudent to include that in our guidance.

And I think, overall, I think we're really in a good position relatively speaking, in terms of managing through this Middle East conflict.

Operator: Our next question comes from Michael Polark with Wolfe Research.

Michael Polark: A follow-up question on oxygenators, I'm curious what you're seeing on the competitive landscape regarding capacity. I hear your comments loud and clear. It sounds like pedal to metal on increasing production volume. Do you think you're alone in making those investments? Or do you see evidence that competitors are trying to catch up to?

Unknown Executive: We see a couple of things from the competitive landscape, and this is obviously, this is our view on it. Number one, we observed [indiscernible] that's continuing to exit from this space. They recently commented that they expect sales to decline from $27 million in 2025 to approximately $5 million in 2026. And majority of that will come from consumables, but as well as heater coolers and HLM. So that's one side. The second one is we don't see any kind of capacity expansion or investment in innovation in the space from other competitors in the space.

And at this point, we are focused on not just on expanding output of current oxygenators, we're also focused on innovation, and we believe that the next-generation oxygenator will be clinically differentiated from anything on the market today.

Michael Polark: Helpful. For a follow-up, I'm interested in the comment on the [ New Tech APC ] assignment for VNS for [ epilepsy 1580], as we head into the summer rulemaking season, what's your base case that the code stays in that 50 assignment? Or do you think the chances of Level 6 creation are elevated this year?

Alex Shvartsburg: Mike, yes. So look, our market access team continues to work on getting to a Level 6 reimbursement code, we're going to continue into next year. We do -- as far as our assumptions go at this point, we anticipate that the 1580 will roll over into 2027.

Operator: We now turn to Anthony Petrone with Mizuho.

Anthony Petrone: Congrats on the quarter here. Maybe 2 parts on epilepsy. Last quarter, you kind of called out new accounts that were not performing VNS as a potential upside driver existing accounts that can -- where you can go deeper and then prior accounts that were using VNS that stepped away from it, potentially they can come back in. So -- maybe just an update on those 3 buckets, how you see that trending throughout the remainder of the year. And I'll throw the follow-up in here. Just on the generalized seizure front potentially you have some competition coming in later this year. Just how do you think about the general seizure landscape potentially with 2 neuromodulation players in it?

Unknown Executive: Yes. Anthony. And I'll start with your first part of the question and then turn to Ahmet to comment on the clinical side. On the first one, is you bucketed this kind of 3 type of customers. So the current users, and I think that's where we'll start seeing an impact right away. Both in terms of -- in some accounts, potentially on reduction of discounts and in some accounts, we're already starting to see an improved pipeline for [indiscernible].

And that is due to the fact that obviously, one is the discount side, but the other side is that clinicians are starting to see VNS as a more effective therapy and changing the kind of the place of the therapy in the algorithm of their treatment. So that is already -- we start seeing good leading indicators of this happening. For the accounts that were that stopped doing VNS historically and potential new accounts. This is going to take some time, obviously, because it will take the accounts to set up some time to reopen and restart the procedure.

So we are still confident that this is going to be a trend -- but that will be something that we will see in the future

Unknown Executive: Yes. In terms of the generalized indication, we are anticipating in the second half that FDA will make a decision. Just to remind the scale of it, only about 1/3 of epilepsy patients are generalized, 2/3 are focal and in there, less than 50% are GTC patients. So we anticipate that the impact would be very limited. And we do not anticipate any direct effect to reimbursement when we utilize patients with generalized indication as we can do today.

Operator: We now turn to Matt Taylor with Jefferies.

Michael Sarcone: This is Mike Sarcone on for Matt. Just wanted to start with a clarification on what's baked in to guide on the CP side. I think you talked about increasing your manufacturing capacity low double digits going live in second half '26. But then you also mentioned you're continuing to work with third-party suppliers to improve component availability. Do you think you could frame how those conversations are going? And to the extent they're successful, what does that mean in terms of upside to guide this year?

Alex Shvartsburg: So our updated guidance incorporates incremental improvements in the consumable component supply. So we've seen some of that read through in Q1, and we continue to work with our suppliers. In fact, we see that potentially could be -- could drive some incremental output as upside relative to our current assumptions. The market demand continues to outpace supply. And we're still operating in the back order situation. So as we improve component supply from third-party partners, we would like to see kind of a rebuild of some inventory levels because we're still kind of operating hand to mouth, and that's something that we're looking to improve. So we're going to continue to improve our own capacity throughout the year.

We have a second line coming online in the second half of this year. And we're going to continue to partner with third-party suppliers to improve component supply. So that's what's dialed into our guide.

Michael Sarcone: Got it. And then just on DTD, you mentioned you're in active engagement with CMS. Would love any more color there on how you feel about those conversations and just an update on your level of confidence that we could get this over the finish line?

Unknown Executive: Yes. I mean, as you recall, we chose a very collaborative approach in the submission with CMS rather than directly submitting, we wanted to engage with them through a dress application. We continue to collaborate very well with the agency. We're looking forward to our next meeting. In terms of our confidence, I think our confidence lays behind the quality of the data, particularly the durability of treatment. As you recall, at 2 years, it's over 80% of the patients maintain their treatment versus today, if there's any standard of care, it is [indiscernible] therapy where patients lose their efficacy about 50% at 1 year. So our confidence has not changed.

We are continuing to collaborate well with the agency, and we will definitely update once we have a formal application.

Operator: Our next question comes from Mike Matson with Needham & Company.

Michael Matson: Yes. So just with regard to the OSA launch and the investments in terms of sales force hiring and things like that, can you maybe give us an update on where things stand with that? It seems like you called out, if I remember correctly, called out an impact to R&D, but in the quarter, R&D expense, but I didn't hear anything in terms of like sales and marketing. When do you expect to hire -- start hiring salespeople and any other kind of investments you need to make there?

Alex Shvartsburg: Mike. So our focus this year is squarely on product development and getting the next-gen device ready for launch in 2027. We expect a limited commercial release in the first half of '27 and a full launch in the second half of '27. So as far as our investments this year still continue to focus largely on R&D with maybe some small portion on market developments as we move -- as we progress towards launch. We'll start hiring reps probably late this year, early next year as we get ready for a full market release in the second half?

Unknown Executive: Yes. Maybe just one comment. We're very pleased with the fact that [indiscernible] with our leader in OSA chose LivaNova, she joined the company and as a leader, she is now forming the leadership team, the go-to-market strategy and in the question that you asked on the commercial team that obviously will be started to get executed in 2027, but all the preparation work has been done now.

Michael Matson: Okay. Got it. And then I heard you also call out some impact from spending on the ramp-up on the next-generation oxygenators. So can you just remind us on the timing on that and kind of how it will compare to the current offering and how it will be sort of phased in? Will it be more of an immediate switch over or more of a gradual change like we've seen with Essenz?

Unknown Executive: Yes. In terms of the development, we're in the late-stage development. I think what we -- and what I mean by that is that we have a completed design we are now doing the manufacturing scale up. And we do anticipate that the product will launch in 2028 to oxygenator. That was the question, right?

Michael Matson: Yes.

Unknown Executive: So in terms of its capabilities, there's about 8 to 10 different parameters that perfusion is care about in the performance of an oxygenator, and we believe our next gen is superior equal to -- on all those parameters superior or equal to than the market leader product that we have with our Inspire oxygenators in the market. So we're very excited about it, and we continue to do the late-stage manufacturing scale-up.

Operator: That's all the time we have for questions. I'll hand back to Vladimir Makatsaria for any final remarks.

Vladimir Makatsaria: Well, thank you, everybody, for your engagement with LivaNova for joining us today and on behalf of the entire team, we really appreciate your support and interest in the company. Have a great day.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, today's call has now concluded. We'd like to thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.