We're actually about 35 people now, I think that's probably a good time to get going. Good afternoon and welcome to everyone that's joining us today, and a big thank you from the Shield Therapeutics team. We will be going through the Q1 2026 training presentation today. Throughout the presentation, attendees will be on listening mode, however questions are encouraged throughout today's webinar. These can be submitted via the chat function in the bottom right corner of your screen. Simply type in your question and press send. The company might not be in a position to answer all questions today, however, we will review all questions and where appropriate, share responses following today's presentation. The webinar today is being recorded and will be published on the Shield Therapeutics investor website.
I'd like to now hand over to the Shield Therapeutics CEO, Anders, CFO, Santosh, and CCO, Andy.
Thank you. Thank you, Polly. We'll go to the slides. Good afternoon, good morning, everybody. We're here to review our first quarter trading update. We can go to the next slide immediately, Polly, actually. You introduced us all, so you know who's on the call. This one before that, which is our disclaimer. You can go back one, please.
Yeah.
If the disclaimer still is there. Thank you very much. This is our, is our disclaimer and also in addition, this presentation will be posted on our website later this week. As you heard initially, we have received a number of questions, thank you so much for that, and those questions we will not have time to answer today, we will post in writing. We'll answer in writing and post that as well. We'll answer as many questions as we can during this broadcast. We can take the next slide, please. This is our executive team, and across us we have very extensive commercialization and expertise not only in the U.S. but actually globally as well.
The gentleman with the three red circles are with us on the call today. Together with Lucy, we're all based in our Boston office, and David Childs is based in our headquarters in Newcastle, U.K. We can take the next slide, please. Before we jump into that quarter result, we, a few weeks ago actually on April 19, we made public our annual report and our audited 2025 financials. Just a couple of highlights there. We reached, as you probably have seen, $50 million of revenue last year, which was a very nice growth over 2024, about 54% growth. We also reached our cash flow break even in the fourth quarter of last year.
Also importantly, on the last bullet there in the middle, we now have, since we renegotiated our debt, we have about $15 million allocated for a business development opportunity. If we were because we're actively looking to find a second product, and now we have some money to execute that, which is a very important step for the company. Then to the right, we continue to grow our global footprint. Canada launched, and they continue to perform well also in the beginning of this year. We got the FDA approval for the pediatrics or rather the adolescence part of this indication, where the U.S. have approved everybody over 10. We got an approval in Korea, where they're now looking at the actual commercialization, hopefully sometime this year.
It all depends on how quickly we can get price and reimbursement in Korea. As we very recently also made public is that we have the first patient in our PAH trial in Japan. We can take the next slide, please. Just a few words about us at Shield. As you know, we work in iron deficiency with or without anemia. We continue to grow a lot, as you have seen, but there's so much more growth to be had and Andy will break that down on a later slide in the presentation today. We're also very proud, we are the number one prescribed oral iron in the U.S., in the U.S. market today.
The last point is, what I would like to mention is also we have very strong IP through 2035. We have quite a few years ahead of us to reach what we believe is our peak revenue is around $450 million last year. We can take the next slide, please. What is it with iron deficiency and what is it that our product, Accrufer or Feraccru can contribute with there? Most every product that you treat iron deficiency with is a ferrous salt. We are not the ferrous salt, but I'll come back to that. What happen with this product is when they dissociate in the stomach, they cause irritation.
Actually, as a matter of fact, it's not only in the stomach, they actually cause irritation and inflammation through the, also all through the, your guts. If you have an inflammatory disease, for instance, it's not, it's not a good thing that you continue to increase that inflammation. As a result of this, up to 70% of patients, they experience some type of GI related side effects. Many times these side effects are so bad, so they cannot continue to take their treatment, so they discontinue. Of course that is where we come in. We can take the next slide, please.
What Accrufer does, next slide please, is that we're not salt, first of all, and we have a maltol shield that covers the iron, and it actually covers the iron through the stomach until it's absorbed in the upper intestine. If it's not absorbed, it still covers the iron. We cause much fewer of these gastrointestinal side effects, and that is really our claim to fame here. That is also resulting in that the patient can stay on therapy much easier compared to all the other ferrous salts. We can look at the next slide, please. That gives us a very interesting position in the marketplace. Most every patient starts on a ferrous salt, so over 90%. Before Accrufer, the only other alternative was to get an IV.
We are very nicely positioned before you would get to an very expensive IV iron infusion. We are a second-line treatment in every aspect. Which is no disadvantage because there's so many patients that start on an oral iron, which is a ferrous salt, cannot tolerate it, and then the only alternative before was to get an IV, is where we come in here as perfectly placed in the middle. That is also why you see continued growth with Accrufer in the U.S., especially because there's so many patients that needs a different oral product than a ferrous salt. We can look at the next slide, please. I just gonna update you what happened then this year when it comes to our global footprint. In the U.S., we still a co-promote with Viatris.
In Canada, KYE continue to have success in with reimbursement and have today about 80% of the commercial lives covered. That they continue to do very, very well there. Norgine is the same as it was before. I said I mentioned Korea already. In China, we filed the submission, and we're looking forward to an approval sometime next year, which is a very interesting, exciting market to be able to launch in. In the U.S., we have the indication for children or adolescents over 10. In Europe, we have the positive opinion. In Europe and in the U.K., we'll have an approval now in June that is for children 12 and above, slight difference towards the U.S.
We, as I said, in Japan, we now have the first patient in our PAH study, completely different indications. Being orphan, it's a phase II study, but very, very exciting development for Accrufer there. Next slide, please. That's my last slide. I will now leave the floor to Andy. Please, Andy.
All right. Thank you, Anders. Thank you all for joining. I'm gonna walk through a commercial update speaking to some of the highlights of last year and in Q1 of this year. We had a few milestones that we achieved for the brand, one of them came last year, right on this slide, you can see what that is Accrufer, for being on the market for only about two years, became the number one branded prescription oral iron in the U.S. That was nice to see with the efforts behind sales and marketing being able to achieve that accolade. Next slide. This slide breaks down our target market for Accrufer. When you look at prevalence, there's about 25 million people with iron deficiency with or without anemia each year.
That breaks down to about 14 million diagnosed patients with iron deficiency with or without anemia. We break it down from there to a target market of about 6.7 million patients, ages 10- 64, that are taking either the over-the-counter or prescription products. Within our digital marketing efforts alone, we've been able to reach over 4 million patients who are looking for a new treatment. As Anders mentioned before, they have distress and tolerability issues with the other agents, they're actively online looking for a new treatment. We combine our digital marketing efforts with a sales team that targets about 25,000 physicians and roughly 1.5 million patients. That's really how we're looking at things from both the sales and marketing perspective. Next slide.
Accrufer's payer coverage remained high throughout all of 2025 and into 2026, with about 70% of our lives covered by insurance in the United States. What we've done is we've optimized our sales force to overlap the large volume states that have significant open access for Accrufer across both the commercial and the Medicaid channels. When we break this down even further, we have six big states that account for two-thirds of Accrufer's overall commercial volume and about 80% of the Medicaid volume. When we look at the commercial channel specifically, we see that about two-thirds of our total volume comes from the commercial channel. In 2026, we expect that number to grow. Next slide. For three straight years, we've seen a similar trend in our Accrufer business.
We see strong prescription growth in all quarters, but we have seen a seasonality that negatively impacts Q1 of each year. This largely happens because of high deductible resets and prior authorization prescriptions that need reapprovals in Q1 for existing prescriptions. That's not a phenomenon for Shield only. That's industry-wide. Q1, you're having those high deductible resets, and typically that's what we've seen in our Q1. If we look at Q1 of this year versus Q1 of last year, we drove 53,000 prescriptions in Q1 of this year from that perspective. We were doing quite well. Overall, we had 46% increase versus last year. Overall, this has been a really good quarter, and we continue to see momentum that's going in very much the positive direction. Next slide.
When we talk about our covered prescriptions, that's in the orange line, and we look at the covered prescriptions and consignment prescriptions over the last 18 months so that we see that we grew our covered prescriptions from last year through the rest of 2025. We had our normal dip in Q1 of this year, but we had our covered prescriptions grow over last year by tune of 49%. We're really going in very much the right direction. When we look at consignment reduced significantly from the overall 2025, and we had roughly about 21% of our overall business was related to consignment, and that's down from where we were in the past. We consistently see our efforts to try to get more covered prescriptions versus consignment.
We expect that consignment business to be flat throughout 2026. Consignment went up slightly, you can see in Q1, due to a decision we made to consign the high deductible prescriptions that were in Q1 that were covered by insurance in Q4. If we didn't do that, we would have lost those prescriptions due to the high deductible resets that I mentioned. This allowed us to keep those prescriptions and gain revenues in the year from a percentage of those patients that would have reached and did reach their deductible in Q1. This was a conscious effort where we got a little bit more consignment in Q1, but it's going to produce more revenue for us longer term by keeping those patients in the funnel and being able to get them to be covered over time. Next slide, please.
I want to talk about the situation that we saw happen in New York on April 23rd. We learned that New York Medicaid changed Accrufer from requiring no prior authorization for a prescription approval to now requiring a prior authorization. This was not something that came by surprise. We always knew that the Medicaid states that are losing a lot of the federal subsidies are having to go into cost optimization programs. In New York, that's no different. We saw three full years with no prior authorization needed in New York Medicaid. PAs for branded products are very common. In fact, across our top six states, we have PAs in place for the vast majority of them. This is something that we're well aware of and we've encountered in our past. What did we do?
In hearing the decision from New York Medicaid to make this change, we immediately pivoted the sales team to focusing on our large base of business that we already have in New York for commercial. In fact, we have, as I mentioned, two-thirds of our overall business already comes from commercial. We're very adept at driving this channel. In New York specifically, New York represents our number two state overall for commercial business. This is something that we were planning for at some point. We've been obviously leveraging the status that we had in Medicaid and did so for over those three years.
Like we've seen in other states in the past, we pivoted very successfully to driving the commercial business, and we anticipate that that's gonna have the same success in New York. with the efforts that we're already applying right on that very day of April 23rd. Next slide, please. This slide speaks to our digital marketing initiatives. We know that patients with iron deficiency are very active online searching for therapeutic options to address the tolerability issues that they see with generic and OTC iron products. We've leveraged and tailored our advertising efforts, and we've leveraged social media influencers to reach these consumers, and this has generated a lot of awareness for Accrufer.
In fact, with our latest data that we had for March, we saw over 90,000 Accrufer website visits from consumers that were fueled by our digital initiatives. This is working. We are learning with every month that goes by on how to tailor our messaging and our targeting in a more specific way. That will be a very big part of our strategy throughout 2026 and beyond to both consumers and to our providers. Next slide, please. This slide breaks out how we're doing across our specialists that prescribe Accrufer. Sales team continues to grow Accrufer by predominantly focusing on primary care and women's health targets. You can see that there is an other bucket in green, and that's the other specialists that these sales efforts have been focused on.
Actually, the sales team's seen an increase in prescriptions from other specialists, largely because of the impact that digital marketing has had on key specialists like hematologists, oncologists, nephrologists, and our newest specialty, pediatrics, which came from our label expansion that occurred in December of last year. Marketing, we know, has a real ability to reach far more providers than sales. Through our focus strategy that we're implementing, we've expanded our reach to these specialists who have higher volumes of patients with iron deficiency with or without anemia. This will be a continued expansion, and I expect that we're gonna see more and more coming from our specialists, as we continue to go and put the marketing efforts towards them as well as sales. Last slide. In summary, we have a focus on three major drivers for Accrufer.
One, we're going to continue to leverage digital marketing and with a primary focus on awareness across patients looking for a better iron option. We're going to continue to optimize the impact of our sales team as our second priority focus. That's going to be through a focus on high-prescribing providers and hyper-focusing on our top six states. Lastly, we're going to make sure and continue to make sure that patients have access to Accrufer by educating our offices on approval requirements and broadening our pharmacy network across all of our key states. That wraps up my section, and I will hand over to Santosh.
Thank you, Andy. Hello, everyone. Jumping into 2025 before I hit Q1 financials. As Anders said, we had a really strong 2025, approximately $50 million in total revenues. That's a significant growth over 2024, where we reported $ 22.2 million. Of the $50 million, $46 million came in from Accrufer in the United States, which is a 56% growth over the prior year. We had a pretty strong net price in 2025 as well of an average net selling price of $223. We are very pleased with the performance of Accrufer in 2025, and we'll talk a little bit more about how that has helped us in 2026.
We reported a loss for the year of $ 17.7 million. That is lower than what we had in 2024 of $ 27.2 million, primarily driven by the growth of Accrufer in the United States. Last but not least, cash and cash equivalents was $11.6 million. As we reported earlier, we did achieve our ability to turn positive cash flow in Q4 2025, which was a significant milestone for the company. Overall, a really strong financial year from a 2025 perspective. Next slide, please.
Q1 and full year 2026, as we have said before, are based on three key priorities: growing Accrufer net revenues in the U.S., driving profitability for the full year 2026, as well as diversifying our revenue stream beyond the adult IDA in the U.S. Let me hit each of these priorities one after the other. On total revenues, we reported $18.4 million in Q1 of this year. $7.9 million of the $18.4 came in from a milestone payment by our Chinese partner, ASK. Accrufer represented $9.9 million of the $18.4. This represents a 54% growth over Q1 2025.
The revenues were generated through 53,000 total prescriptions, of which 26% were consignment, slightly higher than what we saw in Q4 of last year. This had an impact on the net selling price of $190. The consignment, as Andy mentioned, was driven primarily by the fact that we had a few high-deductible patients who were pre-commercially covered patients in Q4 that we grandfathered in into Q1. Those patients were considered consignment patients while their insurance was being looked at in Q1 2026. Driving to achieve profitability, we reported EBIT profitability in Q1 2026. Again, this was primarily driven by the fact that we had $7.9 million in a milestone payment by ASK in China.
Cash and cash equivalents was $ 12.4 million compared to $ 11.6 at the end of the year. Positive cash flow was again primarily driven by the fact that we had managed our AP balances and working capital in Q1. On the final priority, diversifying our revenue stream beyond adult IDA in the U.S., we did receive a Chinese NMPA accepting the MAA submission for Accrufer in China. We are very excited about that and our partner, ASK, is continuing to push to receive approval and launch in China. Finally, EMA also approved Feraccru indication for kids greater than 12 years in Q1 of this year. A strong quarter across the board in Q1. Let me jump a little bit deeper into the financials for Q1.
Next slide please. These are the three key metrics that we have shared with you on a consistent basis. Total prescriptions, net selling price per script, and Accrufer net revenues. As you can see on the left side, total prescriptions grew 44% compared to Q1 2025 on the retail prescription side, from 27,000 prescriptions to 39,000 prescriptions. In Q1, like I mentioned on the prior slide, 14,000 prescriptions came in from consignment. That represented 26% of our total prescriptions in Q1 2026. Slightly higher than what we had seen in the prior quarters, and had an impact on our net selling price in Q1 2026. You can see in Q1 2026, our net selling price was $190 compared to $187 in Q1 2025.
On the right chart you can see we reported $9.9 million in total Accrufer revenues in Q1 2026, again, representing a 54% growth compared to $6.4 million in Q1 2025. Overall, we are pleased with the performance of Accrufer in Q1. We did see the typical seasonal insurance dynamics playing its role in Q1, especially in commercial and Medicaid, through the commercial and Medicaid plans. March was a reasonable rebound for us in Q1, very similar to what we saw last year same time, That has allowed us to progress into Q2 with good momentum for Accrufer. Next slide please. That was the last slide I had.
I'll hand it back to Anders to wrap it up and then we can go to Q&A.
If I unmute you will be able to hear me. Thank you Santosh. Thank you Andy. What we've shown here is, as Andy showed, the market is very, very big still, and there's a lot of room for us to grow. What really is driving the growth is the combined effort by sales and marketing. Marketing is really what drives the awareness, which is the key point to continue to grow to reach what we estimate be our peak revenues around $450 million. We see consistent growth in Accrufer prescription, net revenue and net selling price.
I mean, as we explained, what happened to those high deductibles, because of the high number of consignment in relation to previous quarter, it's actually about 2,000 prescriptions that we grandfathered in, and that drives down the net selling price. What it really does is actually increase revenues as we go on. That was a conscious decision to do that. We keep expanding our global footprint and we're very excited about that because that is potentially future revenues from more markets than we have today.
We're still driving to achieve profitability by the end of this year, and we are actively looking to find a second product to be able to expand our portfolio and make full use of, you know, of our sales force where we can easily absorb another product into the same bag as with the sales structure we have today. I'd like to say thank you to Santosh. This is Santosh's last quarterly presentation, and he will leave us. I saw there were some questions about that. He will move on to another exciting opportunity. Luckily, I mean, over the almost three years Santosh's been with us and over the last 18 months, he's leaving a company that is in so much better financial shape and in general shape as well.
We have actually reached, you know, we are at a whole different level as a company than what we were when he joined us. We are, you know, we are very thankful for all the contributions of Santosh had. Thank you so much, Santosh.
Thank you. Thank you, Anders. Thank you for your kind words. As Anders indicated, I have decided to step down as the CFO of Shield effective June 1. This is to pursue a leadership role at a pharmaceutical company that is focused on oncology. Helping bring cancer drugs to patients is something I feel very passionate about. I want to take the opportunity to thank the Shield Board of Directors and the senior exec team, which is one of the strongest teams that I have worked with. Their vision and passion to support patients and to make Shield successful is unparalleled and can never be doubted. We, like Anders said, I think we've built something very special here.
Turning the business around over the last few years, growing Accrufer year after year, turning cash flow positive and potentially becoming a profitable business does not happen by chance. To be honest, as a shareholder in the company, I will be eagerly looking forward to these quarterly updates, sitting on the other side of the table. Again, thank you for trusting me with my role over the last two years. It's been an honor. With that, I think we'll open it up for questions.
For questions. Thank you, Santosh.
Amazing. Thank you so much for your presentation, all. Yeah, as we said, we'll now open the floor up to some of the questions from the investors today. One second. There's my screen. First question. I would appreciate some context around the recently disclosed requirement for prior authorization of Accrufer for Medicaid in New York. Is the company talking to the New York State authorities to enable Accrufer to become an authorized treatment for Medicaid? What other mitigations is the company following? What is the estimate of the impact on revenues?
Yeah, let me take that one, Polly. Ultimately, as I mentioned up front, this was something that was anticipated at some point. We've always been in preparation mode for when that situation and Medicaid would be different. The mitigation plans that we put in place across both our team and the Viatris team is to pivot to the large prescribing commercial providers that we've already been calling on, we've added in a number of also as some additional providers that can give us a greater band to drive that commercial business. As I mentioned before, New York is our number two highest volume state for commercial business. We've already been doing that. We're just gonna intensify the effort in doing so. Are we talking to New York Medicaid? Yes, we are.
We've been in constant contact with them and trying to get greater context to understand how we can share the, to the providers on the clinical criteria to get Accrufer approved because there is still that availability to them. They just need to understand what the process is in order for an Accrufer prescription to be approved. This is not new to us. We've seen this happen in past states. Texas at one point was our largest Medicaid state, and that has quickly become our largest commercial state for the efforts that we put behind it when this type of a situation happened. We're confident in our sales and marketing teams to be able to lead through this and be able to leverage all that is in front of us on the commercial side of the business.
Thank you, Andy. How are you going to really ramp up sales exponentially over the next quarters, and what do you see as being peak revenue?
Yeah, I mean, Andy just gave an explanation what the pivot that happened in New York. In all other states, we continue on the path we've already started. I mean, there is nothing really new happening there. We see continued growth. I mean, we are driving, as I said, towards, you know, the peak revenue we see, you know, quite a few years out, but we still continue to grow. I know, I mean, we, there is a public number out there what the growth has been, for instance, in total number of prescriptions in April. We see a growth about 22% so far the first four-ish weeks of April over the same period of January. We continue to see growth. That is basically how we reach all our goals.
Great. On a national basis, what percentage of sales are Medicaid and what percentage are commercial? What's the difference in prices obtained between the two? You mentioned New York, but other states also created PA requirements.
I mean, Andy, you can answer that part.
Yeah. We've never really broken down what the difference in price is between different channels. First of all, it's rather complicated because we have so many different, what we would say, channels. We never shown that. We show you the net selling price, which actually is the net selling price anyway. That doesn't really matter what the price difference is between the channels. You can go in a little bit deeper maybe on the percent.
Yeah. We did show you on the percentage. You know, that's why we show you, and that's why we made this public as well. New York was and is still our biggest Medicaid state. Andy, you can continue on that one.
I mentioned on one of the slides that 2/3 of our total volume comes from commercial channel. That is still a large driver of our business. The Medicaid channel represents anywhere between, say, 25% when you factor in other channels such as cash. You know, 25%-30% would be on average. We do see that that is going to be impacted to some degree. We don't know to what degree yet. It's way too early for us to understand the impacts. We're not going to just sit back, of course, and wait for that to occur. We're gonna proactively drive to the channels that we've done incredibly well with, which is commercial.
If any business is to come from the Medicaid side by working with the state and just understanding the clinical criteria better and better as time goes on, then we expect to get sales from Medicaid. That's something that's still going to happen. It's just our primary focus in the state of New York is to continue to drive the commercial business that's already represented it being our second-biggest state for commercial.
Thank you. Are you still actively seeking acquisitions?
Santosh?
I can take that, Anders. Absolutely. I think we have stated that as an objective for the company, as a goal for the organization, we have stated it publicly as well. We do have an infrastructure that can easily accommodate more than one product. It's an efficient use of our infrastructure if we add a second product. We are on a hot pursuit for a product. Our sweet spot is most likely going to be a late stage phase III or a product that is looking for an FDA approval. We have evaluated products that have been FDA approved, we have not really liked many of those. We have pursued products that have been in phase III, anxiously awaiting data.
Our strategy is to wait till we see the data, which helped us recently where we were waiting for the data on a product and the product paid. We'll be very selective in how we go after these products, but it is absolutely a key priority for us to bring in other product to the company into the sales side.
Next question. What is the board's expectation of the effect on growth of the PA authorization change? Have you made any progress on the second product in the bag?
I mean, we've never. Again, we don't give out a revenue forecast or anything like that. It comes back to what we said, we're pivoting to the commercial side of the business opportunity we have here as well. On the second product, yeah, we just set out what we're doing as well. It's this stuff, yeah.
Great. Thank you. The treatment update states that New York Medicaid new prior authorization criteria mean that Medicaid prescriptions will fall. I've checked the NYRx website, they state that Accrufer can only be prescribed with a doctor form providing medical need. As far as I can see, this means nothing changes. Patients already need doctor sign-off for medical need with intolerance to two standards, iron versions and ferritin levels being low. What else is causing the worry?
I can answer that. That is exactly the new criteria. That wasn't the criteria prior to April 23rd. We've seen this change in other states as well. What we need to figure out now is what exactly do we need, what information is needed for the PA to go through? At sitting here today, we don't know that yet. It's gone basically a week. In other states, when we figure this out, yes, we see prescriptions go through. That's where we're at. That's why we believe, yes, we will keep a portion of the Medicaid sales in New York, but we're not waiting for that to happen.
We're not sort of banging the drum on the same physicians because those physicians who have prescribed for Medicaid will continue to prescribe for Medicaid. We shift our focus until we have full clarity of the situation, what is needed for the Medicaid to be approved, basically.
Great. Thanks, Anders. At current growth rates, the company will only hit $250 million of revenue by 2035 when we hit patent expiry. What is the strategy to accelerate growth to hit the stated ambition of $450 million and to also hit it well beyond, well before patent expiry to maximize returns? What are the limiting factors that prevent accelerating sales growth in the U.S.?
Yeah, I can take that, maybe Andy, Anders, if you guys wanna chime in. We have said this before, our largest and biggest challenge with growing Accrufer is awareness. It is awareness amongst patients. It's awareness amongst physicians. I think we're doing a really good job with our sales force in increasing the awareness amongst the top tier physicians. Our marketing programs are being tested on a daily basis, if not weekly, to ensure that we have the right programs to increase awareness amongst both patients as well as physicians. However, to be able to break through the $250 million and get to the $450 million, we need to increase our investments in marketing, we are being cautious about how we make that happen.
We are testing all the marketing programs while we are starting to be cash flow positive. There will be a point in the near future where we are generating enough cash that can be reinvested in our marketing programs to improve awareness. It is a matter of patience and getting there and being cautious about how we use our dollars towards investments in marketing.
Yeah, I'll add to that, Santosh. I agree wholeheartedly. Awareness is our biggest challenge, right? This is a really broad market. We know that there are patients out there seeking answers and solutions to what they're dealing with, iron deficiency. Our challenge is based on our spend, how broadly can we actually reach them? We've done a very good job because ultimately I mentioned we've gotten to over 4 million patients, and the activity levels with each year are going up. I mentioned 90,000 web searches in March. That's a real example of how well we've been able to optimize marketing within our spend, we're gonna continue to do that to a large degree over the course of the year. We've done that already with sales.
We've optimized the sales team and put them into really the biggest high volume states as much as possible. Have we gotten to the point where we see opportunity for marketing? Absolutely. That's gonna be where we point continually in the future for not only how to optimize our current spend, but a additional investment will only enhance what we've already started here.
Great. Thank you. Does the business plan to introduce share incentive plans to allow employees invest in the company?
What we're doing today is that as part of the total remuneration for every employee, they are already receiving shares or share options, I should say. We're really happy about it because we want everybody to be an owner of this company and be able to sort of really be deeply invested in all the company's performance. That is what we do, that is what we continue to do, and we don't have any other plans to do anything else at this stage.
Great. Thank you. Is the war in Ukraine causing any delays or issues for the manufacturing of Accrufer, including any increases in costs?
No. There's nothing there. I mean, it's, of course, extremely sad with the war going on, but there's nothing in our supply chain from API or manufacturing. All of that happens in Europe today, that so there's no effect.
Are the recently adjusted broker revenue forecast still a realistic goal for this year?
We have never provided revenue guidance or prescription guidance for the year. The brokers build their forecast based on publicly available information, and they seem very reasonable to us at this point.
Thank you. How is Shield Therapeutics using AI to create brand awareness about Accrufer?
Yeah, you wanna answer that, Andy, from a marketing point of view?
Yeah.
Yeah. Go ahead.
Yeah. We're continuing to look at AI from a number of different vantage points. Just from a market research perspective, there's so much data that we can leverage and have, and we'll continue to do so just to understand our customer base better. I think that's been a really big driver. You combine what's available from our own prescription data with the broad understanding beyond that that's available now with AI. All pharmaceutical companies are just much more equipped to understand the customer better, and we're gonna continue to leverage that to align our digital strategies with that knowledge.
As a side note, being a small company, we are actively introducing AI in every function we have. For us, being on the smaller side, it will be a huge advantage. We will be I think every function can be so much more effective, and we are right now in the process of doing so. I mean, this is really it's revolutionary, and I think most people probably use it privately. I think, you know, for a company, especially our size, it's fantastic.
Thank you. From the graph, the drop in sales is actually in December, not the first quarter. Can you explain this, please?
Yeah. I think this is referencing the weekly data. Andy, do you want me to take that or you can take it.
Yeah. You know, ultimately, December's seen basically the same thing that's happened. It's a month that you see not the amount of selling days to the same degree as other months. I think that's the big thing. Why? Because of holidays, because of vacation time. You just see seasonality in December. You know, ultimately, that does also lend itself to why we see some softening in Q1 as well, because you're coming off the momentum, or lack thereof, that you sometimes see in December, and that's a lot of what has to do with that. We do realize, on the positive side, we do realize high deductibles being met more so in December, of course, and that helps us with some of the other side of December.
Ultimately, it's not a new phenomenon of what was seen in 2025, as seen in previous years as well.
Yeah. The drop is more prominent in January, right, Andy, given the insurance resetting on January 1st?
Absolutely
It is more prominent in January. Yeah.
That's correct. That's correct. You know, ultimately, when you look at Q4 as a whole, you see a very strong month in October, typically equally strong or even better sometimes in November. There is gonna be a softening off of those two months, so it looks worse, you know, when you look at it across the three. You know, Q4, we do well and have and expect to continue to do so for the reasons I mentioned on high deductibles being met. You're usually gonna see a softening in January, February. We've seen that this year, rebound in March and all the way through Q2 this year.
Yeah.
Great. Thank you. How does 90,000 Accrufer web searches compare to previous months?
Good question. This was our high. All the optimization that we've been doing, and as I mentioned, understanding our customers better, doing more targeting and trying to really figure out who our most valuable consumers are from that demographic understanding. We did roughly around 60,000 web visits in January, a bit more, 65,000-70,000 in February, and then 90,000 for the month of March. This is by far our best, you know, and really something that we want to continue to look at those levels to be able to understand how we can best fit the brand with marketing.
Thank you, Andy. What date did prior authorization come into effect for New York?
Yeah, April 23rd of this year, fairly recently. That's the reason for why I say we're still trying to understand a lot of what's happening from a clinical criteria perspective. We know it's published, we know what's been told to us on how to navigate this, you know, what happens at the physician level is really going to help enable us to understand that better and navigate through it fully in educating offices on exactly how they need to submit prior authorizations to the insurance.
Great. Any developments in finding partners in other markets such as LATAM and Middle East?
The short answer is y es. We currently always looking to see if we can expand geographically. The short answer is yes, and when it happens, you'll see it, but that's all we can say for now.
Perfect. Do you anticipate increasing the sales team numbers during 2026 and 2027, or is it currently 80 in total?
It is currently roughly 80 in total. We constantly, and I should have Andy also chime into this one, constantly are looking over where we should place the territories. 80 for the moment is a good number. With increased awareness, this is something that also can increase, of course, because then we would have more physicians. Did you wanna add something to the 80?
I think you said it. I think that's just the constant effort. You know, for instance, in states like North Carolina where we've seen some real opportunities, we've actually increased our footprint there because we saw that it was really warranting that. We're gonna continue to do that across all of our big states where we feel like we're maybe undersized, where we could actually go and see more lift with just more frequency on our customer base. That's gonna be a constant effort.
Great. Thank you. Why not simply deploy the $15 million raised for acquisitions on increased marketing to increase growth?
Yeah, that's a great question. I think it's beyond $15 million. We've got about $ 27 million of dry powder that sits within our debt structure. Keep in mind it is debt, every time we take the money, it's additional debt that we're adding on the books. It's really balancing out our needs and managing our debt in the company. The $ 15 million is earmarked specifically for acquisitions, we do have some additional monies that we can draw on to support our operational needs. We will take a look at it on a high frequency. Do we need the money? How can we not use the money? Do we have to use the money? Where are we gonna put the money behind?
What kind of return on investment do we get for spending the money? Great question. It is really a balance and a disciplined approach to spending the money at the end.
Thank you, Santosh. Despite the 2023, 2024 changes in New York, are you expecting the normal growth overall in Q2?
Yeah. Normal is a very positive term, I guess.
Yeah.
No, no, as I mean, what's publicly known is that we see 22% growth over the first four weeks in April versus the same period in January of this year, right? Those numbers will be continued to be published every week. Exactly how this will play out is, it's different, right? That's all, it's very much dependent on the PA criteria, how quickly can we solve for that. We are pivoting, and the good thing is with New York. is that it's not, we are already calling on the commercial part of that business as well, because many offices, of course, write prescriptions for commercial and Medicaid patients.
Whilst we are pivoting to focus more on the commercial patients, it's not a complete redo of their targets. It's an addition of targets to what they already have. That's where we are at. If something significant were to change during this quarter, we'll announce that because, you know, if you hear nothing, it's business as usual.
Great. When are you planning to formally launch pediatrics and start leveraging the value?
Yeah, I can take that. We ended up getting the label expansion, as everyone knows, in December of last year. What we did with that was we wanted to make sure that our sales force was properly trained, so understanding really all about the new expansion indication, how best to message this to physicians, and also try to understand the number of pediatricians and which ones we're gonna be actually adding to our target list, which we've since done. We launched our full launch for the pediatric expansion indication on April 1, and that was across our entire sales team. Keep in mind, all along that timeframe, marketing was still in play throughout all of Q1.
Pediatricians were able to see this from a marketing perspective, so there was some degree of awareness even before the sales team complemented that effort on April 1. Yeah, the official launch to speak to it that way, was on April 1 of this year. We're about a month into the pediatric expansion.
On the pediatrics, have you forecast a percentage increase in U.S. sales that pediatric approval will produce?
Again, we haven't provided any guidance on the revenues for 2026 or the future. Like Andy said, it is very early days in terms of the pediatric launch. Even if we were to provide it would be way too early to provide that kind of guidance. Internally, obviously we have expectations, and we think it is going to be a decent driver of revenue growth for us. Yeah.
Great. Thank you. Not a question, but a nice comment that was left was, "I'd like to offer my thanks to Santosh for a job well done. You will be missed.
Thank you. Thank you. Whoever that was, thank you.
Yeah, that kind of rounds up our today's session. Thank you all for your questions. We had many coming in there, and any that we potentially missed, we'll follow up after as well. Yeah, thank you on behalf of management at Shield Therapeutics and for everyone attending today's presentation. The recording will be available via the Shield website, and if you have any questions, do share those there. Do you have any kind of closing thoughts, Anders, Santosh or Andy?
No, no. Thank you all for taking time listening to our quarterly one update this afternoon. You know, as said, if there are additional questions that you come up with, please submit them through our website on the investor part there. Be happy to answer, you know, anything you might have, you know, thought about after this meeting as well. Thank you all.
Yeah. Thank you, and have a lovely afternoon.
Thank you.
Thank you. Bye.
Bye.