Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Acutus Medical third quarter 2022 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear a message that your hand is raised. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker, Caroline Corner with Investor Relations.
Thank you, operator. Welcome to Acutus's third quarter 2022 earnings call. Joining me on today's call is David Roman, Chief Executive Officer, and Takeo Mukai, Interim Chief Financial Officer. This call will include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements made on this call that do not relate to matters of historical fact should be considered forward-looking statements. Factors that may cause results to differ from these forward-looking statements are discussed under the forward-looking statements section in the press release attached as an exhibit to Acutus's Form 8-K filed with the SEC today, and are also discussed in more detail under the Risk Factors section in Acutus's most recent filings with the SEC, including the risk factors described in Acutus's Form 10-K.
Any forward-looking statements provided during this call, including projections for future performance, are based on management's expectations as of today. Acutus undertakes no obligation to update these statements except as required by applicable law. Acutus's press release with third quarter 2022 results is also available on the Acutus website, www.acutusmedical.com, under the Investors section, and includes additional details about Acutus's financial results. The Acutus website also has Acutus's SEC filings, which you are encouraged to review. A recording of today's call will be available on the Acutus website by 5:00 P.M. Pacific Time. Now I'd like to turn the call over to David.
Thank you, Caroline, and good afternoon, everyone. During today's call, I will update you on the progress we are making on key strategic goals, as well as the status of our left-heart access portfolio sale to Medtronic. Takeo will provide an overview of our third quarter results as well as our outlook for the rest of the year. On our last call in August, when I moved into the CEO role, we presented two strategic imperatives that would guide our business and set the foundation for Acutus's future, driving utilization and operational excellence with people and culture at the foundation of everything we do. I'm happy with the steps we are taking to advance these objectives and want to take a moment to recognize the extraordinary commitment of my Acutus colleagues, as well as the support and engagement from our key physician partners.
Starting with our first priority to drive utilization and adoption for AcQMap globally, with a commercial strategy we introduced earlier this year is unfolding well. Our shift of focus on procedure volume growth and utilization over expanding the install base has enabled us to grow year-over-year procedure volumes, increase utilization per console, and drive higher revenue per case as we launch new products. Year to date, procedure volumes advanced 21% versus the prior year, with console utilization up 17% and revenue per procedure up 16% constant currency. This increased productivity has been accomplished with a near 40% reduction in our commercial organization as we have streamlined resources. Overall, these performance metrics reflect strength in our core business and give us confidence in our ability to drive future growth.
While we continue to proactively re-relocate underperforming consoles, we also expect our install base to return to growth in 2023. In addition, we are seeing good traction in adding multiple users within existing accounts, helping to strengthen utilization and increase disposable revenue per console. As we reinitiate our expansion efforts, we will remain disciplined in where we deploy our assets with a goal to exit 2023 with a higher install base, higher utilization per console, and higher revenue per procedure. Further to achieving our growth objectives is our new product pipeline, which includes software, disposables, and hardware platforms. Exiting Q4 and into early 2023, we will move into full market release of our AcQMap 8.5 software, which is designed to improve anatomy build and enable better visualization during AcQMap procedures. We have taken a deliberate and focused approach in launching AcQMap
8.5 to ensure a positive physician experience. This software release will be followed by AcQMap 9 in mid 2023. AcQMap 9 is expected to make significant improvements to catheter localization, procedural efficiency, and workflow flexibility. In addition to new software platforms, our AcQBlate FORCE sensing ablation catheter and system launch in the U.S. is an important addition to the portfolio expected next year. In early October, we submitted our PMA for AcQBlate FORCE, which initiated the standard 180-day review clock. During this time period, we expect to receive questions from the FDA as well as engage with the agency during site inspections and evaluation of our submission. From where we sit today, we continue to expect approval in the first half of 2023, consistent with our prior disclosures.
The data from our U.S. AcQBlate FORCE study will be submitted for presentation at the 2023 AF Symposium, and we are therefore unable to share specifics about the study results. That said, based on the efficacy and safety results in this study, as well as the strong commercial uptake outside the U.S., we are confident that AcQBlate will help support our growth objectives. Beyond 2023, our magnetic navigation system is moving through development. Magnetic-based navigation has become industry standard, and we will be integrating this important feature into our AcQMap console, mapping catheter, and ablation catheter. We will provide additional updates on the timeline for our magnetics program as it progresses. With respect to pulsed field ablation or PFA, we continue to evaluate the next steps in our program.
Recent data from other industry participants, such as those presented at the European Society of Cardiology in September, have provided insight into the performance of PFA in real-world settings. Consistent with our approach to make disciplined, strategic, and resource allocation decisions, we are carefully watching the evolution of this category and are assessing the best path forward for Acutus, whether with our internal program or via partnership. We will update you as we finalize our plans. Switching gears to our efforts to strengthen our operating and underlying financial performance. We undertook a major leadership restructuring and organizational realignment in July, and our teams are executing well in this new structure. We have reduced the layers of management in the organization and are driving efficient decision-making at the functional level.
We are seeing these efforts play through in our results as we recorded our lowest level of operating expenses and cash burn since IPO, with declines of 30% and 23% respectively on a year-over-year basis. We expect further moderation in cash burn during the fourth quarter. At this point, we see our operating expenses at a more sustainable level and will look to selectively open headcount in certain areas while keeping very tight parameters on non-headcount expense. We know that we need to maintain discipline in our operating expenses, but we will ultimately need to invest in the business long term. As a result, this will require intense focus on our gross margin improvement work streams that Takeo will discuss in his remarks.
While it is early in the process and will take time to see results, I am pleased that we saw an approximate $1.3 million improvement on a sequential basis despite the expected heavy seasonality in revenue. In addition to internal restructuring to strengthen our financial position, we are making good progress in the transition of our left-heart access portfolio to Medtronic. In early November, we achieved the first major milestone post-transaction closing, which came several months ahead of previously communicated expectations. Acutus is now approved as an original equipment manufacturer or OEM for Medtronic. Achieving this milestone also triggers a $20 million earnout payment that we expect to receive by year-end. Acutus will continue selling the left-heart access portfolio until commercial distribution is fully transitioned to Medtronic.
Accomplishing this earnout required tremendous cross-functional engagement from our operations, quality, clinical, regulatory, and R&D teams, in addition to strong partnership with Medtronic. As a reminder, in addition to OEM qualification, we are eligible to receive a milestone payment of up to $17 million once we file for EU MDR, as well as four years of revenue-based earnout payments. We expect to achieve the milestone for EU MDR during the first half of 2023, which is consistent with timelines we shared on our prior earnings call. Beyond the financial impact of these initiatives, we are reestablishing the company's culture and building a patient and physician-centric organization. Importantly, we are retaining our key talent with meaningful declines in voluntary attrition, and September and October recording the lowest levels of attrition in years.
I am very confident in our team and believe we have the right people in the right roles to execute our strategy. Putting this all together, we continue to see 2022 as a transition year where we reset our strategic priorities, focus our R&D programs on those products that enable higher utilization of AcQMap, and address some of the key adoption barriers and establish a strong operating foundation. Parsing through some of the external challenges, including FX headwinds, supply chain disruption, and a challenging capital equipment market, our business fundamentals are strong, setting us up well for the long term. Beyond 2022, we expect our business to see progressive improvements in 2023 and even stronger performance in 2024.
When combined with our operational improvement initiatives, this business trajectory will position us well for the future and allow us to maximize value for all stakeholders. I will be happy to cover any of these topics in more detail during our Q&A session, and I will now turn the call over to Takeo.
Thank you, David, and good afternoon, everyone. I am incredibly excited for this opportunity at Acutus, and I look forward to bringing my nearly 20 years of corporate finance experience to support our goals and drive operational excellence at the company. During my remarks today, I will review our third quarter results as well as our outlook for the rest of the year. For the third quarter, net revenue of $3.6 million compares to $4.6 million in the year-ago third quarter. Consistent with our expectations, the sales decline versus the prior year was entirely driven by a $1.1 million decline in capital equipment sales. Underlying performance in the business remained strong in the quarter, with 17% year-over-year growth in procedure volume and higher procedure penetration as revenue per case increased double digits globally on an FX neutral basis.
Sales in the U.S. of $1.9 million declined 12% year-over-year, driven by lower capital equipment sales. U.S. disposable revenue was flat compared to the prior year third quarter and was impacted by lower stocking revenue from new installs and supply chain disruptions. We estimate that the supply chain disruptions reduced U.S. sales by approximately $100,000 in the last couple weeks of the third quarter, and these supply chain disruptions are so far persisting through the fourth quarter as well. Up until now, we have been able to manage industry-wide supply challenges through long-dated purchase orders. However, demand for one of our key accessory products has exceeded our expectations, which has depleted some of our components of our excess inventory.
We are working diligently to remedy this matter and appreciate our suppliers' intense efforts to resolve shortages. U.S. procedure volumes showed continued improvement with the fourth consecutive quarter of a sequential increase. We are pleased to see improved performance in procedure volumes, AcQMap adoption and revenue per procedure despite a lower install base and a tightening of commercial resources. We are focused on the continued execution of our commercial strategy and remain confident that we are taking the right steps to grow our U.S. business long term. Sales outside the United States, which include revenue through our distribution partner, BIOTRONIK, were $1.7 million and decreased compared to $2.4 million in the year prior. The year-over-year decrease outside the United States was driven by a decrease in capital sales, where we sold or converted 8 consoles in the prior year.
While revenue was impacted by seasonality as expected, we are very pleased with the growth in procedure volumes outside the United States, up strong double digits as we drive adoption in our direct businesses and expansion with BIOTRONIK. By product segment, disposable product revenue of $2.9 million increased about 1% year-over-year. Procedure volumes of 441 increased 17% in the third quarter of 2022, reflecting continued growth in AcQMap adoption. The primary factor contributing to the difference between procedure volume and disposable revenue growth was lower stocking orders associated with new installs compared to the prior year third quarter. We ended the third quarter of 2022 with an install base of 74 systems globally, down sequentially from 75 last quarter and up from 71 in the year ago third quarter.
Continuing our strategy of moving consoles into higher value accounts, in the third quarter of 2022, we removed 6 systems from accounts in the U.S. and repositioned 1 of those into a new account during the quarter. Outside the United States, we added 2 new consoles in our Europe and U.K. direct businesses and 2 with BIOTRONIK. In the third quarter, capital revenue of $0.5 million decreased from $1.5 million in the year-ago third quarter, driven by the prior year bullet of capital sales previously discussed. Service and other revenue of $0.3 million was up slightly from $0.2 million in Q3 2021.
non-GAAP gross margin was - 109%, compared with - 77% in the third quarter of 2021, and - 129% in the prior quarter. The factors negatively impacting our Q3 gross margin were similar to what we have discussed in prior periods, including unabsorbed overhead and carry forward manufacturing variances, offsetting underlying direct product profitability. Improving operational performance is a critical part of our strategic roadmap, and the foundation of improved operating results is our gross margin. Critical work streams to drive this gross margin improvement include, one, reducing our operating overhead burden, which we have initiated through our cost improvement program, and we expect to have an approximate 20-point positive impact on our gross margin starting 2023. Two, streamlining our manufacturing process, including automation and improving yields.
Three, product design to include cost reduction as a critical input. Non-GAAP operating expenses were approximately $15.2 million in the third quarter of 2022, down 30% from the same period last year, and is the lowest level of quarterly non-GAAP operating expenses since IPO. On a sequential basis, non-GAAP operating expenses were down 23% as we realized the benefits of our restructuring program. We have made significant progress in reducing our operating expenses by improving our discipline around cost management, and we expect our non-GAAP operating expenses to continue to decline year-over-year through the rest of 2022. As a reference point, our September non-GAAP operating expenses were annualizing at $55 million, down 37% from 2021.
Excluding specified items, our non-GAAP net loss for the second quarter of 2022 was $20 million or $0.70 per share, compared to a non-GAAP net loss of $26.7 million for the third quarter of 2021 or $0.87 per share. Our total cash and cash equivalents balance, including restricted cash at the end of Q3 2022, was $70.5 million. Our cash burn in the third quarter was $22.7 million, down 23% versus the prior year and down 13% on a sequential basis. We are pleased with the improvements we have made in reducing our quarterly cash burn and will continue to drive intense focus on extending our cash runway while making the necessary investments to grow the business. Closing with our outlook for the rest of the year.
We are seeing good progress in our strategy to drive procedure volume, utilization, and case revenue share growth. At the same time, we have experienced headwinds related to foreign exchange, supply chain disruption, and lower capital equipment sales. There are also some unknown variables on the timing of the commercial transition of our left-heart access portfolio. Relative to our prior expectations, FX and supply chain headwinds have intensified, while the underlying trends in our business are largely tracking in line with expectations. Taking these factors into consideration with our year-to-date performance as well as timing of the commercial transfer of our left-heart access portfolio to Medtronic, we expect full year 2022 revenue to be in a range of $15.5 million-$16 million. This includes about a $2.5 million decline versus 2021 in capital equipment revenue.
FX headwinds of just over $500,000 on a year-over-year basis, which was slightly worse than where rates stood at our last earnings call. Over $300,000 from incremental supply chain headwinds that began late in Q3 and are continuing through Q4. Overall, the core fundamentals in our business are very consistent with what we have communicated in August, setting us up for a stabilization in the business exiting this year and improved performance in 2023 and thereafter. We appreciate your continued interest and support, and I will now turn the call back to the operator to facilitate our Q&A session. Operator?
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. One moment for our first question. This comes from Marie Thibault with BTIG. Please proceed.
Hi, good evening, David and Takeo, and thanks for taking the questions. My first here, I want to hear a little bit more about that supply chain constraint. I think it's a good problem to have when you have too much demand for one of your products. Maybe you could tell us a little bit more on details and where you are in terms of resolving some of that.
Sure, Marie. Thanks for the question and good evening. The product that is impacted by the supply chain disruption is our AcQGuide MAX Steerable Sheath. This is a product that is used not only in AcQMap procedures, but also in other EP procedures, as many of our customers have found the steerability and usability of the device significantly improved versus other products on the market. Through the first nine months of the year, actually through August, we were averaging about two AcQGuide MAX products per every mapping procedure. Actually 50% of our sales were coming outside of AcQMap procedures. That ratio plummeted to 1-to-1 in September because we had to restrict access to customers who weren't using it for Acutus mapping procedures.
The decision we've made is to focus on supporting mapping procedures and have put customers on backorder who are not mapping customers. Through the first nine months of the year, we had generated about $1.1 million in revenue in this product. But we do think that we'll probably see something in the range of about $100,000 that impacted us in Q3, keeping in mind that a lot of our orders come toward the end of a quarter, and probably something in the $300,000 plus range here in Q4. We do have a committed delivery date from the supplier. That committed delivery date, however, has shifted around a little bit.
We are working very aggressively to resolve this, and our supplier is also working as a fantastic partner to help us get through this. It'll probably be something that we can't resolve until early 2023.
Okay. Well understood. Thank you for all the detail there, David. Then maybe my follow-up here on sort of the stickiness of systems that you do have in the installed base now. It sounds like you continued to shift some systems. Do you think you're nearing the end of that process? In general, among your users, what is. You know, is there one factor that's sort of driving the utilization increases? Congrats on that metric as well, and thanks for taking the questions.
Sure. On the console relocation effort, I would say the bulk of it is behind us. I think we will probably continue to move consoles around both in the fourth quarter and in the future, but not nearly at the rate that we have to date. I mean, some of the things that I would say affected the removal strategy was really our targeting up front. We've talked about this, I think, a little bit on prior calls, but it really as we started to dig into the effort to identify which consoles were gaining utilization and which were likely to gain utilization, really segmenting and targeting the right physician at the right account has been really critical to driving utilization.
Some of it is a little bit hard to say, is it all academic centers or all community centers. It really is a doctor by doctor exercise. Where we found the most success is where we have a lead physician champion who then brings additional users into the fold. We right now, I think, probably it's somewhere close, I think, to in the U.S. of our 30-some-odd installed base, probably a third of those have multiple users now, and we're seeing increased adoption from secondary users as well. That is still continues to be more important to us than growing the install base, because effectively, in some ways, adding a second or third user is just the same as adding a second or third console at another site.
Long, long way to answer the question, but I think we're coming toward a stabilization in the install base. I, as I look at Q2 to Q3, 75 to 74 is effectively stable. But as we look to next year, we are planting the seeds now to drive growth in our installed base, both in our direct business as we rebuild our funnel across the U.S. as well as in the U.K. and Central Europe. Along with significant expansion plans from BIOTRONIK. We did ship three consoles to BIOTRONIK here in the fourth quarter to seed their expansion efforts in Japan.
I don't know if those will all be installed and utilized here in the fourth quarter, but they are entering a fairly significant geographic expansion phase in 2023 that will likely drive an increase in our install base next year, in addition to the U.S., where we do think our ablation catheter launch will be a catalyst to grow the install base as well.
Very interesting. I'll hop back in queue. Thank you.
One moment for our next question, please. It comes from the line of Bill Plovanic with Canaccord. Please proceed.
Hi, it's John on for Bill tonight. Thanks for taking our questions. David, I'm just wondering how should we think about the rollout of AcQBlate upon approval next year? What will the rollout look like to existing users in the U.S.?
Thanks, John. The rollout will mostly, we'll first focus on our existing users. The primary reason for that is, as we look at the utilization of AcQMap, one thing that we've observed is physicians who find value in AcQMap, one of the biggest pushbacks we get is around utilization and workflow efficiency. Adding an ablation catheter to the workflow will make a significant difference in their overall experience, as well as be economically more efficient for the hospitals, for the hospital system. We don't have any official demands. We don't have approval for the product, but we have a fair amount of incoming interest from all of our existing users around AcQBlate.
When we gain approval for the product, and are able to begin the contracting process, we will initially focus on those accounts where we have mapping systems installed and where we have active users so we can see significant uptake and increase in revenue per case at those sites. It will take some time to get on contract and go through those sort of normal administrative processes, which we can't begin until we gain approval. We would expect the AcQBlate impact to kind of ramp throughout the year with a more significant contribution, obviously in Q4 than at the time of launch.
Great, thanks. I'll for a follow-up, just related to that, where are you in the process today of expanding that TAM? I know in the last call you kind of talked about where today you're really used, mostly in the 2+ AF redo cases. Where does that stand today, and how do you think that progresses next year upon launch of AcQBlate too? Thanks for taking our questions again.
Great question. Right now, of our total procedures in the third quarter, about 80% of the procedures in Europe were some sort of redo procedures, so that was AF or atrial tachycardia or whatever. In the U.S., it was a little over 50% were redo cases. You can see the trend in Europe that that is where our physician partners are finding the most value in the system. Ultimately, we need to expand our addressable market from redo cases and very challenging cases to move into de novo persistent cases.
That is the entire logic underpinning our roadmap right now, which is launching AcQMap 8.5 and AcQMap 9 will continue to make the procedure experience better for the physician, allow for greater procedural efficiency. Introducing AcQBlate will take away a major adoption barrier where physicians can really use AcQMap on a standalone basis, and that is very important. To just tack onto your prior question about prioritizing existing users, we will also use AcQBlate as a vehicle to expand our install base because it allows us to tick off one of the key pieces of pushback to using Acutus right now, which is not being able to do it on a standalone basis.
As we move into 2024 with our magnetics program, that will really further open up the market and make using AcQMap even easier and allow us to get at sort of the total addressable market that I would describe as persistent for your de novo persistent AF, first time redos, atrial tachycardia and atrial flutters and second and beyond redos. That market probably totals up to something in like the $2.5 billion-$3 billion range of addressable opportunity that we think we'll have access to within the next, call it 16-18 months.
Great. Thanks.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. It comes from the line of Margaret Kaczor with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. I was hoping to start with 2023 and just some of the commentary around the install base increase. Is there a number that I guess you guys would feel comfortable with versus not comfortable with, you know, given the team in place today and maybe some aspects of the macro environment, meaning, you know, can you add 10 systems? Can you add 15 systems, or is that just not the way you guys are thinking about it? Thanks.
Yeah, it's a great question, Margaret. We have been, as we kinda go through our 2023 planning, we're asking ourselves a similar set of questions about growing the install base. You're right that there are obviously some lingering and potential macro considerations that we have to include in our thought process. Let me. I can't. I'm not ready to give a number on kind of install base growth for next year. I will say that we are building a funnel today that we already have visibility into certain of those prospects converting to new installs in early 2023 related to their own hospital budget cycles.
Even if they're placing the system under evaluation, many hospitals allocate budgets for new product evaluation, capital purchasing. We're starting to build a funnel of, call it, a handful of sites here in the U.S. that we already have good line of sight to for early 2023. Then there's the expansion initiated in our ex-U.S. business, particularly through BIOTRONIK. The debate that we have to go through on this though is if we could add a second, third or fourth user at an existing account and drive incremental same store procedure volume growth, that is much more economically attractive to us as a company and allows us to achieve a good chunk of our overall financial objectives.
I think 2023 will be a balance of increasing the installed base and increasing the number of users within existing accounts, which is something we haven't really talked about before. We've really talked before about increased usage with current users in existing accounts. If you add that additional layer to it, you're gonna have to balance those two. I kind of view adding users as very similar to adding consoles, and that should be paired with higher revenue per case, and overall higher revenue.
That then brings me to my second question, which is, you know, these systems I guess that have two or three or four positions maybe using the one system. Should we think about it as a linear change, you know, with relatively, you know, minimal additional costs that you guys have to put in? You know, if we look at that one-third of the install base that does have more than one user, you know, what was it, I guess, a year ago, and what could it be in a year? Thanks.
Yeah. The incremental cost of adding that new user is very low. The reason for that is many of the hospitals we serve have multiple EPs as it is. They also, many of them, have teaching or fellowship programs or observational programs. I'll give you an example that just occurred yesterday where we've been working with a user in San Antonio for the past year or so who's been gradually increasing his utilization of AcQMap in a specific subset of his patients. There was one of his physician colleagues observing a case yesterday in this particular category, and was so impressed with the use of AcQMap in the case that he added a new case as a first time user today.
That is the experience that we're seeing is sort of the grassroots type adoption. When you get a physician on board with using AcQMap for a specific subset of his or her cases, it ends up then becoming sort of a mushrooming effect to others in the practice. The incremental cost to that for us is fairly limited. There obviously is some training and marketing expense associated with driving those cases, but otherwise that's a very efficient way for us to grow the business. In terms of how many sites have multiple users a year ago, I'm not sure of the answer to that except that it was certainly lower because some of those sites that I identified as having multiple users are very recent phenomena.
A go forward rate?
I'm sorry, can you repeat that?
Like, where would you like to see it? Just where would you like to see that percentage? If it's a third today, you know, can it get to 50%, you know, a year from now or, you know, are you working on it, I guess, with the sales reps compliantly?
It's hard to put an exact number on it. We're not specifically incentivizing reps to go after that. Our therapy managers or our mappers are evaluated on procedure volumes. That is a primary input into their quarterly incentive and compensation structure. I don't know if I would put a target metric on it today, except that what we're ultimately solving for is going to be growth in procedure volumes globally and within each region next year. Then how we get there, we're gonna have to obviously bear down on whether that's gonna be users per account or new consoles, and that'll probably differ by geographic region.
Great. Thank you very much.
Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. It comes from the line of Robbie Marcus with J.P. Morgan. Please proceed.
Hi. Thanks for taking the question. This is Rohan on for Robbie Marcus. I just had a quick one on operating spend. You talked about how OpEx is at a more sustainable level now. Is this across both SG&A and R&D? How are you thinking about this trending into next year, especially given you mentioned you were looking to add some additional headcount? Then I have one clarification follow-up.
Sure. Thanks for the question, Rohan. On the operating expense side, I kinda look at it in totality because one of the things that we've become much more agile at over the past several months is reallocating resources across different parts of the company. When I talked about adding headcount, that was at the end of an exhaustive process we went through as a senior leadership team to look at all the headcount requests across the organization and then prioritize what we thought we could fund within the existing confines of our budget. You're probably. The additional headcount will be sort of incremental in either area, but there are other savings that we expect to incur that will effectively make a lot of this headcount self-funding.
As we look at the $15.2 million of operating expense that we registered in Q3 of this year, we talked about September annualizing at $55 million. Call that $13.8 million on a quarterly basis. I think this sort of mid-teens type number is reasonable, kind of call it $15-$17 million in Q4, and then something similar to that throughout 2023.
Great. That's super helpful. I just had one point of clarification on the headwind from supply chain or supply chain headwind next quarter.
Yeah.
Was it a $100,000 impact in third quarter and then an additional $300,000 in fourth quarter or $300,000 for the whole year?
It'll be in a range for the full year. We said over $300,000 for the full year. You know, it's probably gonna be the $300,000, so $100,000 and then $100,000 in Q3 and then over $300,000 for the full year. I can't really put a ceiling on it, though. I would say the number could be closer to actually $400,000 for the full year, so $100,000 in Q3 and $300,000 in Q4.
Is that?
What we said. Go ahead, sorry.
Sorry. Was that expected to continue into next year, in the first quarter of next year or throughout the balance of the year to some extent?
That is a very tough question for us to answer right now. The supply component in question, we are expected to get delivery of that by the end of this year. However, as you've heard probably from others, supply chain commitments on deliveries have not all been met as expected. If everything unfolds as we see it today, then we would be able to get these supply chain dynamics resolved exiting this year. You might see some lingering impact in January, just depending on how long it takes us to manufacture product, go through sterilization, and then ship out to fill existing orders. Based on what we know today, we would expect this to resolve heading into next year.
I would also just caution that by saying the supply chain environment has been relatively unpredictable. We're watching it closely, and that's the latest information that we have.
Perfect. Thanks so much.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. It comes from the line of Phil Coover with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed.
Thanks. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. I think just one compound question from us. The sequential step up in 4Q that's implied in the updated guidance today, just hoping you can kind of give us the components of what gets you there. I heard an element of understocking or lack of stocking that occurred in 3Q on the utilization side. I didn't hear a specific comment about the capital environment which you guys called out last quarter. Just wondering if you can comment on the funnel and sort of qualitatively on what's going on from a capital standpoint, please. Thanks.
Thanks, Phil. Couple things on the sequential step-up. Firstly, there probably was around $200,000-$300,000 of revenue that we shipped very late in the quarter that did not get delivered until the fourth quarter. The way we recognize revenue, we don't recognize revenue until products are delivered to a customer. That was, I would say, timing of orders, and given the size of our revenue base, that is a significant impact on a quarter-to-quarter basis. That revenue we have recognized here in Q4. We also have executed three new installs here in the U.S. with associated stocking orders, and on all three of those we are pretty high volume users and we would expect to see reorders exiting the year.
We are counting on some capital here in Q4, a small number of capital conversions here in the U.S., one of which we executed, one of which we got approval on today. We are also expecting incremental orders out of our business in Europe on a quarter-to-quarter basis as some of the typical Q3 seasonality work through the system here. Does that help on the Q3 to 4Q ramp?
Yeah, that's great. Thanks. Thanks for taking the question. Appreciate it.
On the capital environment, it's still very challenging. I would say it is no more challenging than we had articulated on our last call. The time and administrative burden and back and forth around capital contracts is very, very lengthy right now. That could be a reflection of the fact that we are an early-stage company selling a product for a very specific category. At least if I compare the capital environment that we face today versus a year ago, it is definitely more challenging.
Okay. All right. That's helpful. Thanks.
Thank you. As a reminder to ask a question, simply press star one one on your telephone. One moment for our next question. It comes from the line of Javier Fonseca with Spartan Capital. Please go ahead.
Good evening. Hello, David and Takeo. Thanks for taking the call. Quick question on the gross margin. On top of the, you know, the unfavorable manufacturing variances mentioned in the press release, what expectations can you share for gross margin going into 2023 in the midst of, again, these variances and the continued restructuring and streamlining of the business?
Thank you, Javier. I can take this one. In regards to the gross margin initiatives, we're really focused on three critical work streams, as we discussed: reducing our overhead, improving our yields, streamlining our manufacturing processes, and also designing for manufacturability. In 2022, this year, we've reduced our manufacturing overhead by over 35%, which we expect to roll into our standards next year. We are incurring a significantly less amount of manufacturing unfavorable variances this year than what we carried into this year as well. We're really making strong progress in improving our yields and reducing our manufacturing process fees. With those going into 2023, we previously stated around $3 million steady revenue on a monthly basis to get to positive gross margin.
With the improvements that we've been making, we're projecting a steady $2 million of revenue a month to get to a positive gross margin.
Thanks. Great insight. Thanks for taking my call. My questions.
Thank you.
Thanks, Javier.
With that, ladies and gentlemen, we conclude our Q&A and program for today. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.