Okay, great. All right, good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us. My name's Danielle Antalffy. I'm the UBS MedTech analyst here, and very excited to have with us to close out day one of the UBS Healthcare Conference, AtriCure. We have CFO Angie Wirick, and Angie, thanks for coming. I've covered AtriCure for a long time, and it's been really exciting to see how the company has evolved over the last, I think I started covering it in 2012 maybe, or something like that, so maybe let's start level set, everyone. You just reported Q3 earnings. You had a strong quarter. You updated guide, narrowed towards the high end of the range. Maybe talk about some of the different key pieces of Q3 performance.
Yeah, I'd say across the board you saw a really strong third quarter. We saw accelerated growth in many of our franchises. I think the standout might have been our cryo-nerve blocker, our pain management franchise. We had a new product launch in the second quarter. You saw a nice benefit in the third quarter, an acceleration of growth again within our open AtriClip franchise, so open appendage management. That's been a franchise under high scrutiny, I'd say, all year long, but nice to see that that's another one. And that's really without a big contribution of another new product launch with our FLEX-Mini. Launched that towards the end of the quarter there, just building excitement and penetration for treating patients in that market. And then also really strong, robust growth in the U.S. within our open ablation business.
This is one where the EnCompass Clamp is really driving the growth and continues to be a nice contributor throughout the year.
Yeah, okay, got it. And so as we think about that, heading into the end of the year, obviously people are already starting to think about 2025.
Are they? Yes.
Yeah, yeah, and I appreciate you're not going to give guidance here, but you know consensus is modeling low teens growth. This will be a year of mid-teens growth in 2024, presumably when all's said and done. You know I don't know what you can say to that as to whether that's reasonable or even just at a very high level. You can talk about maybe some of the key tailwinds, headwinds that we should be considering when thinking about 2025.
Yeah, maybe to start off, I would say very focused on continuing to drive strong growth at AtriCure. That is our number one focus as a company, and while I'm not ready to give guidance for 2025, I would say comfortable where the models are at today. When you think about some of the key tailwinds for our business, I just rattled off a couple different product launches. You'll see full year effect in 2025 for those. Two new devices within our pain management space, both of those coming with a time reduction benefit. One of the devices, the cryoSPHERE MAX, which just launched this quarter, comes with an ASP uplift. So even if it's the same procedures, but selecting a different device, there's a growth path with a higher ASP there.
Within our AtriClip or appendage management business, we've got the full year effect from our FLEX-Mini, new low, super low profile device. This also comes with an ASP uplift. I think this one, surgeons will start to be a little selective to start off, okay, which patients will we use this in? But again, if you're talking about same number of procedures with a higher ASP, that gives us a nice runway within that franchise. So those are two areas. We also have talked at different points in time, EnCompass Clamp being cleared in Europe. I think that'll be a nice contributor over time. Our AtriClip was cleared and approved in China, so we've got a nice ablation business in that market. Would expect for the Clip to start to contribute in the latter half of 2025.
We work through a distributor there, and that could be a nice contributor there. Now, all that being said, that's almost every franchise. You've got a lot of great shots on goal, a lot of nice tailwinds there. I would expect the pressure within our MIS business, both the ablation and then our MIS Clip, to continue into 2025. I think as new PFA technology continues to hit the market, EPs are going to want to try every new device that's out there. And even if they've had bad experience or failure from previous devices, I think they're going to see some benefit from the newer technology, maybe with mapping incorporated, to say, look, there's a reason for me to continue to try. So I think that's going to be one of our strongest headwinds in 2025.
Okay, that's fair. And I think that headwind eases a little bit in the second half, but first half you still have a pretty tough comp.
Yes.
Okay, okay. Just to follow up on that, and maybe I'm confused about how CONVERGE works, but can't they do PFA and still do a CONVERGE procedure? Or is it more like you just wouldn't do that because it's a de novo patient and they're just prioritizing those patients?
No, it's a great question. You could absolutely use PFA as a catheter technology and then do the converged portion of the procedure, which is the device that we sell. That could be the absolute treatment path. I think what we're finding is EPs want to own the patient. They want to control the patient. So with PFA, the idea that it's a faster approach and the belief that it's safer with comparable efficacy to both RF and cryo, I think they're saying, I'd like to at least try. Let me try once again. And I think, again, with every new PFA catheter technology on the market, they're going to continue to try and treat those patients on their own.
I mean, hopefully, in one of the bright spots, I would say in terms of, even though the growth rates weren't good, we do still see new accounts being added to CONVERGE. So there is new interest in building programs. We've also seen a really nice, steady continuation of accounts. I think if we started to see a number of accounts start to drop off, that may tell us something about the future of this business. I think it's saying that today priority is on EPs trying to treat patients themselves, and then selectively saying, okay, I'll refer to a CONVERGE when I've tried a couple times and it's not working. As the funnel expands with PFA treatment, I think we're hopeful that longer term this could be a pathway for growth.
Yeah, yeah, that makes sense, and I probably want to follow up on that in a little bit here, but before we go there, I do want to ask about profitability, so you guys have been increasingly committed to improving profitability. What are the different levers? So, sort of same question, but on the P&L side of things in 2025.
Yeah, so as we think about growth as our number one priority, it would say continue a high level of investment within R&D. With the LeAAPS trial coming to finalizing enrollment, we expect to complete enrollment in 2025, and you're just doing patient follow-up. You're not starting up new sites. I think you're going to start to see the spend level off there. Reinvestment in PD from, you know, we've talked about a couple different product launches that's been in the P&L. We talked about a PFA platform evaluating PFA within our RF devices. That'll be an area of increased spend that offsets the previous projects that we were doing, so our intention is to continue to fund R&D. You probably won't see as significant of an increase as growth as you've seen over the past couple of years.
And then starting to leverage through SG&A, really focused on our commercial teams, on training programs being really, really efficient. And then the investments that we've made to help us scale in administrative areas, starting to see some benefit of that in the bottom line. And above and beyond that, I should also touch on gross margin. I think this is an area with super high gross margins, really good quality. Probably the stiffest headwind we face is an increasing international business. The margins just look different in that business. That being said, happy with the performance and always looking to improve partially through new product development. We want to look for ASP increases as well as improving margin, but then also how can we lean out manufacturing and just help ourselves scale and do better from that perspective too.
I want to follow up on something you just brought up, and that is the price uplift that it seems like you get with every new product launch. How have you guys been so successful in executing on that?
Yeah, I think bringing differentiated technology when you innovate makes a difference. Showing that there's a benefit and then asking to be paid for it, I think has been a really successful strategy at AtriCure. If it's modest improvements to a product, I think that's where hospital systems tend to push back and say, look, not really sure that the benefit is there. But I think with each one of our levels of innovation, it brings something differentiated, new, and distinguished compared to the original technology, which also helps to get a price uplift. I think it helps on the other side to not aggressively pursuing pricing increases on existing devices.
I think if you had both of those dynamics in the market at the same time, it may not be as successful, but I think when we set a price, hospital systems know this is what it will be, and we're probably not likely to go aggressively off of price increases after that.
Okay, got it. Yeah, is it when you're talking about new products, so maybe we can talk about the FLEX-Mini, and are we talking like 5% price increases, double digit price increases, or uplift?
Double digit. So we're talking about around $500 above the FLEX-V, which is our higher-priced open AtriClip. That's around a 30% price increase there. This is one, we're not talking engineering speak, visibly very, very small profile. You look at it compared, and we already had the smallest profile clips on the market, but incredibly small profile compared to the FLEX-V and even more so compared to our legacy clips. And it also comes with the benefit of ease of deployment, which was a nice change we made when we introduced the FLEX-V to the market.
Just on, you mentioned too that the FLEX-Mini is probably going to be used more selectively at first. Why is that? If it is smaller, easier to deploy.
I think pricing. I think initially surgeons will say, "Hey, there are some use cases where this makes sense. I'm willing to pay a higher price, so I'm going to selectively think about the patients." And then over time, I think what you've seen with FLEX-V is beyond our expectations in terms of the conversion and use case there. I think in the end, when a surgeon, FLEX-V is an incredible product. FLEX-Mini is also a really incredible product. A key differentiator, if you take price aside, is how you would actually clip the patient. With the FLEX-V, you've got the ability to slide the clip onto the appendage. The FLEX-Mini is the annular design, so you have to loop over the top of the appendage.
Now, with the smaller profile, that looks a little different than our legacy clips, but I think some of it will come down to technique and approach and a surgeon preference.
Okay, got it. So it's not necessarily like there are actual patients that should be getting the Mini versus the FLEX-V.
Yeah, I think that's a good question. I think when we've heard from some surgeons, look, when you've got an appendage where there's anatomy that's adjacent to it and they're nervous about kind of the size of the clip and rubbing up against, that could be a good use case for FLEX-Mini.
Gotcha. Okay, that makes sense. Let's stick with AtriClip. So that has been a business line that has been highly scrutinized this year.
We've talked about it quite a bit, yes, yes.
So you know it seems like the last two quarters you've seen U.S. and worldwide growth reaccelerate. Would you say we're now past the competitive trialing period? And you know if so, can we see a return to high teens, even 20% plus sales growth in that business? Not asking for guidance, just conceptually.
Yeah, maybe I'll start with the latter question. I think with new technology on the market, we just talked about FLEX-Mini. I think there is a possibility for you to see continued high growth coming out of that franchise. Relative to the competitive aspect, it does feel like the trialing has started to die down, started to wane quite a bit. I think what we saw kind of exiting the second quarter and into the third quarter was in a lot of accounts where surgeons agreed to a certain quantity of trialing. They've been through that. They've kind of concluded that, and they've come to the decision in most cases, look, AtriClip is our preference. So still haven't, to our knowledge, haven't lost any accounts. We still maintain volume.
There are accounts that will use both products, but really happy with the way that our team performed in terms of kind of defending our turf and selling to the benefits of the AtriClip.
Okay, and maybe talk a little bit about, we did some work on this, like what portion of the AtriClip business is most vulnerable to the competitive product? Because my understanding is it's actually like only a portion of the business and not truly all of it.
Yeah, if you talked about design, the competitor's product mimics the FLEX-V, so open-ended clip design. So that is, let me take a step back. In the U.S., appendage management, about 75% of the appendage management revenue is in open. So this is an open, the competitor's product is in the open chest area. Of that 75% of our appendage management revenue, 75%-80% of the revenue today is FLEX-V. So until the FLEX-Mini, it was our most current innovation in the open AtriClip space. So similar design. So when you look at the overall appendage management product line, it's not all at risk. It is a portion of that. Now, competitor's product is at a higher price, higher ASP. So that is one differentiator to our particular product.
When you said the qualification of an account, I'd say where reps, the competitor's reps have a really good relationship with a surgeon, that's where we tend to see more anticipation of trialing. We tend to see a little bit more receptivity to trialing.
Okay, got it. What about the fact that you do have so many of your clips being done in your open procedures? So presumably they're using AtriCure products to ablate. I mean, I can't imagine a lot of those surgeons are like, yes, but let me get a competitor clip.
Yeah, generally no, but that doesn't mean that there aren't surgeons who won't try. I think that's another good, we do effectively own most of the open ablation market today, 85%-90% market share in that space. So the other component is with the competitor's ablation devices. That is an area of vulnerability, but we have seen people who use our ablation products. Surgeons will try the competitor's product.
Yeah, okay. What about in Europe? So I think they're launching in Europe as well. Tell me if I'm wrong on that. But that's a different market where they do have a presence in open ablation much more than they do here in the U.S. So how has that dynamic been playing out in Europe?
Yeah, I haven't seen them launching yet in Europe. I'm not aware of that.
Okay, I could be wrong.
Yeah, I think that they've gotten clearance in markets in Asia. We haven't seen a whole lot of activity there, but to our knowledge, not yet in Europe. But it's a good point. In Europe, the competitor has a higher base ablation business. I think we still own the majority of the market. Just, I can't talk about 85%-90% market capture. And I think the playbook will be very similar. Look, compete on the qualities of the difference in clip. We think we've got superior technology, and that's where our team really should be focused.
And another thing we did hear from doctors when we were doing checks, and this was back in March, so it was still pretty early in the competitive launch, but was the fact that, you know, they're launching this with no data. Not that it's not like there's a ton of data on AtriClip. There's a ton of real-world experience with AtriClip. I mean, how much do you think that matters and protects your competitive moat a little bit?
I think it matters some. I think if you're a new surgeon user, you'd like to see a product that's got some data behind it. I mean, we've sold hundreds of thousands of AtriClips. The product has actually been studied. Even though it's a 510(k) clear product, it's been studied in over 10,000 patients. We recently got a labeling claim uplift in Europe to talk about, you know, the effects of stroke prevention in pre-op AFib patients. A nice label expansion there, and that was because of all of the AtriClip patients that had been studied, the use of it that has been studied. So I think it makes a difference, and eventually the competitor will have data, and this will be another shot on goal. This is why, even though it feels like some of the competitive trialing and everything, it's waning.
Our instruction to the team is this is a forever competitor. They got into the market because it's an excellent market, very low penetration. This is something that they're going to want to be in. So you have to be prepared to compete long-term.
Okay, got it. And speaking of, you know, the competitive entrant, it seems like we don't get numbers from them. So we don't necessarily know this for sure, but it seems like perhaps the market's accelerated with the competitive entrant. Is that what you, I mean, I know you don't necessarily see their numbers either, but what's your sense on what's happening with AtriClip?
We are both growing. I think we can conclude this. We are both growing. I think both companies are getting nice improvement in volume. I'd say this is one where I think our growth in the third quarter probably has more to do with the activities of our team. But I can think of an example having another big name in the space validating why you would treat an appendage has helped us. There's an account, and this is an N of one, but there's an account we tried many times to get them to try the FLEX-V. It's a great product. They're just like, look, we don't think we need a device to close an appendage. We can do this cut and sew on our own. And ultimately had a great relationship with the competitor's rep, so agreed to trialing their product.
Our rep circles back and says, hey, I think this might be something you would be interested in. You should do both. Try them both. Ultimately, we're successful in getting that specific account to use our AtriClip device, and now they order the product. So they're an existing customer.
Oh, that's amazing. Okay. All right, let's shift gears to the MIS business. That is probably the one low light, I guess I would say. You know, you touched on this a little bit, but it decelerated again in Q3. I mean, how do we think about the growth in the near to midterm in that business? What's reasonable?
Yeah, I think this is an area we're going to be under pressure in the near term, particularly when you start to lap what are more difficult comps for us. If you think about 2023 as the year progressed, we started to see some nice activity coming out of the work to really stabilize programs, work on the patient and physician workflow, and really start to build programs at accounts. So you saw nice acceleration and growth to end 2023 and start 2024 before PFA really, truly hit the U.S. market. So with the tougher comps, I think it says, look, in the near term, you're probably talking very low if any growth in the near term. And again, I think EPs are going to want to try every PFA product that hits the market.
So I think that tells you the pressure in 2025 is going to be very real.
Yeah, okay. That's fair. I mean, it is encouraging though to hear you talk about adding new accounts. So I'm curious about when you add a new account, what is the conversation that has to happen to be successful in adding that account? Because it seems like it's hard to tell. Is it just like EPs and cardiac surgeons don't want to work together? Or like what is, you know?
You have to have the buy-in from both. I think you hit on a key thing. Both sides have to buy in that they're willing to build programs, which means EPs have to be willing to refer, and surgeons have to be willing to treat, even if at the beginning it's a low volume. I think one of the pressure points we hear from surgeons is, "I'm happy to do the procedure, but when I'm being referred five in a year, like that's not a program for me." Like I want a bigger volume. So I think both sides being bought in. In our most successful accounts, they have very much a, you know, a heart team approach where it's agnostic to is it the EP who owns the patient or the surgeon. So having buy-in from both disciplines, I think matters.
Having a hospital system where ease of scheduling and connecting the two disciplines, I think, is another one where we found is a pinch point. So our team has worked with many accounts where that's not the case to say, "Hey, best practice might be this." But those are two areas I'd say just to touch on to really build and scale a program you really need.
Okay. What confuses me about, I hear everything you're saying, but what confuses me is like the EP's not losing that patient.
Correct.
So I don't, I guess just owning the patient though is like just being the one that makes the decision. It just seems kind of silly to me.
Yeah, I think they want to, if you could, to be able to treat the patient on your own. I think ideally any physician would say, would want to try and do that.
Yeah, okay.
So, I mean, the other component is EP inherently thinks on a very minimally invasive level. Surgery is, even though it's minimally invasive surgery, you're not opening a patient's chest for a CONVERGE procedure. I think just the idea that it's surgery is something where an EP just believes, "look, I can do most of this on my own," doesn't require a night stay. You're in and out of a cath lab. I think that that's another thing to consider.
Okay, that makes sense. What about the data? How much does this data come into conversation, whether it's to the positive or the negative? Because I hear both sides.
Yeah, for some EPs it's compelling, for others it's not. They think even though that data tells me this in my own hands, I could be successful, and you can't fault them for wanting to try.
Yeah, yeah, I get it. I guess the way I had always thought about it, and now with PFA on the market, I appreciate more the capacity constraints that EPs had. But I was looking at it as like this can drive a whole new type of patient to the EP. But I guess the point is they don't have time to do the paroxysmal patient.
Correct, correct.
Okay, all right. You know, the question I was going to ask, and I think we kind of touched on it, but I don't know if there's anything you would add. You know, the CONVERGE did, I think I'd say saying this, underperform expectations. What do you think went wrong here, if that's the way to characterize it?
Yeah, I think it was unfortunate the timing of getting the approval. You know, I think we knew going into the launch, going into the PMA, that getting the two disciplines to work together would probably be the long pole in the tent, so to speak. That that would be the area where we'd really have to focus. I think it's unfortunate that coming out of COVID, we had great interest initially when we got the PMA and accounts starting up. But then you think about healthcare systems at that point in time, so strapped for resources. This is a program where you need to have resources dedicated to making this work and not just on a one-off basis. You can muscle anything through one-off, but to really build and scale a program, I think the timing was a bit unfortunate.
So, I think we learned a lot in how we trained accounts. Great that you could talk about the trial data, but real-world experience, that was one of the really good pivots that our training team did, you know, a year or two after the launch, which is look, instead of having boutique-type trainings where you're talking about the data and the trial and kind of the outcomes there, it'd be better if they heard, if new accounts heard from others who had started accounts and what their pitfalls were. Okay, when I encountered this, this is how I reacted and this is what helped me kind of manage through. So, I think reacting, one thing we've done well, I think is reacting to, okay, how can we do better in terms of homogenizing the approach for new accounts?
But I'd say the backdrop of when we launched probably was the thing that went wrong and completely out of our control.
Okay. And you guys did, correct me if I'm wrong, you did hire a CONVERGE-dedicated sales force?
Yes.
Yes, so is that sales force still in place? Have you had any turnover, meaningful turnover?
I mean, there's turnover within our sales team, typically at the clinical level. Very natural. Nothing that's abnormal. Typically what we see is clinicals who want to become reps and we just don't have a rep position open for them. But very focused. And the strategy behind that was, look, ultimately the EP owns the patient. We've already got a sales team who has great relationships with cardiac surgeons, but that's not going to help EPs want to refer. So you needed a sales force that was completely dedicated to that EP.
Sure. Okay. And I don't know if you're going to like this question, but how important is CONVERGE even to the long-term growth outlook here? You know, you have both the open surgical business and the clip business growing, what I think is going to be fairly strong double digits. How committed are you guys to CONVERGE?
Yep. To be an AFib company, you absolutely have to be committed to standalone treatment of AFib. Not every patient's going to present for cardiac surgery. There was a reason that we started the legacy TT program many, many years ago. There's a reason why we invested in CONVERGE and there's a reason why we'll continue to invest in this area of the business. You've obviously seen the company overall drive really, really strong growth even when CONVERGE has been under pressure, and I mean, this last quarter is a great example. You saw 2% growth in our U.S. hybrid business, yet 18% growth for the company overall. So I think for us to be dedicated to wanting to treat people's AFib, you have to have a standalone treatment. So we're not giving up on this area of the business.
I think we're trying to pivot and make sure that we understand what kind of adjustments are necessary given the market conditions.
Okay, that's fair. Okay. And let's talk about now open surgical ablation.
Okay.
The part of the business that I get most excited about because I think it's the most underappreciated, least paid attention to, but one of the most solid growers for AtriCure for the last, like, for a very long time. So let me take a high-level approach here. The total addressable market for this business, can you talk about how you think about the TAM? I think about it in mitral, aortic, CABG, and where the growth runway is still.
Yeah, so total addressable market. So you're looking at an open heart surgery today. Patients who are undergoing open heart surgery who have a pre-op AFib diagnosis. We estimate globally that's three to four hundred thousand patients. Very steady market. This isn't a market that's necessarily growing, but we're also not seeing a decline in the number of patients. Of the three to four hundred thousand, about ninety thousand or so are in the U.S. So that's by far one of our biggest markets, and a $1 billion TAM worldwide. So this is a great, great market and low, low penetration at this point in time. When you think about the different subsets of surgery, very high penetration with mitral procedures. Over two thirds of those patients are getting their AFib treated. I'd say we're kind of middle ground, 40%-50% on aortic.
CABG was really our opportunity. We saw a field where the majority of patients with a pre-op AFib diagnosis are having a CABG procedure, yet they weren't getting their AFib treated. That's ultimately why we innovated and created the EnCompass Clamp to make it a lot easier for the cardiac tissue ablation to happen because you're just, you don't have to do all the dissection work. Very natural if you're doing a mitral valve surgery, less so if you're doing a CABG.
Right. And it kind of, correct me if I'm wrong in saying this, but I think it kind of democratizes.
That's a great word.
Yeah. I stole that from, actually, Boston Scientific. So you have a lot more surgeons now using the product than you did pre-op.
Yes, correct.
Okay. Okay, got it. So CABG is the key area of growth, maybe some growth in aortic still, but CABG is really the one.
Yeah.
And that's where the EnCompass Clamp did come into play. That launch has been extraordinarily successful. I think probably a major source of the upside that we've seen. If you think I'm wrong? Where does innovation in this business go from here to drive even further adoption and broader utilization?
Yeah, I think you'll see how could you make the procedure even more streamlined. I think that the Encompass was a major leap, but then from a technique, now that you've done thousands of patients with the Encompass device, what could we do to streamline this procedure even more? I think we talked about on our most recent call, putting PFA technology into a broad variety of our RF devices, starting with the EnCompass Clamp, you know, speeding up the procedure. Is that something that could potentially help? I mean, I think Encompass itself took the legacy procedure down from 45-50 minutes to 10 minutes. So when you talk about speeding up, you're maybe some benefit, but not the same as what Encompass did compared to the legacy clamps.
I think there's also something to be said for innovating in terms of how we help our cardiac surgery partners diagnose every patient with AFib and then treat every patient with AFib. So I think surrounding ourselves and saying, look, for the past twenty years we've really been saying you should really treat all these patients, guidelines have been lifted. There's an incredible amount of data and support for treating patients with AFib. I think making sure that you've got, you've kind of tackled this from every lens, which is every surgeon should treat, you should identify every patient, and nobody should leave without that, without having their AFib addressed.
Yeah. And you're launching, as you mentioned, you've got CE mark for Encompass.
Yes.
You'll be launching that in 2025. How is the, I mean, I know the European market's just very different than the U.S., but as far as, you know, thinking about the runway here for Encompass?
Yeah. Even less penetrated than the U.S. market. So very high room to grow there. I'd say you're right in identifying that the European market will look a little different from the U.S. The pricing uplift, you know, initially in the U.S. we thought, is this going to be a barrier? It has proven not to be. I think in Europe it probably says it means a slower pace of uptick compared to the U.S. launch.
Yeah. Okay. Got it. And then last question on this piece of the business, and we'll talk cryo briefly, but another thing that I think might be misunderstood is PFA and the competitive threat there to the open ablation business. Can you talk about whether that's a real concern or is that something that is just very much overdone?
Is the idea that PFA in cath labs treats all AFib patients?
Like, yeah, I think people think, you know, for whatever reason a patient's going to get PFA before they end up on an operating table.
I think that's an amazing vision beyond our lifetime. I mean, there's so many patients that are out there. I also think you'd have to improve diagnosis of patients with AFib. I think that's an area, you know, in this particular disease state, even though the number of diagnosed patients is very, very high. I'm sure that there are more out there and I think everyone would agree this is a market where diagnosis really matters. So I think beyond our lifetime, that's an issue for future.
Yeah, you're like five CFOs from now.
Who cares?
All right. Let's talk about cryo then briefly here. So how does, you mentioned cryoSPHERE MAX, how does that change the pain management TAM? I believe you're talking adding sternotomy.
Yeah, so sternotomy we could do today with existing devices. I think in our trialing what we found was, you know, open chest case, there's not a lot of dead space in the procedure for you to do the cryo nerve block. We find that sometimes with thoracic procedures, there's just a point in that procedure where you could do the cryo nerve block. You're then asking a surgeon to keep a patient's chest open for an extra thirty minutes. And there are some surgeons who say it is absolutely worth it. I'd say broadly the consensus was that's a long time to keep a chest open. And I'm not sure that I believe that there's pain in a sternotomy to begin with.
So I think cryoSPHERE MAX says if there were surgeons who were kind of on the fence and said, you know, I maybe do it, but 30 minutes is a lot. I think that that gives you an opportunity. It's a 50% reduction in freeze time. So we're hoping whether it's in sternotomy, in thoracic procedures, that this is just a nice catalyst for our business.
Okay. Got it. And longer term in this business, I mean, you guys have been growing this business very, very healthily. And you keep warning about a slowdown, but it doesn't seem to be happening yet. What is the sustainable growth rate for this business? You know, I'll tell you, we're modeling 20% growth. Is that too aggressive?
I mean, you think about new product launches, we're still underpenetrated in the thoracic market. There are other potential markets that we get in sternotomy. We've talked about, you know, the potential in extremities. I think continuing to innovate, finding new market expansion would say you've got the right components to be able to drive nice growth long term.
Okay. And I'm going to ask, we have about a minute left. You guys are now generating positive cash flow. How should we think about capital deployment priorities over the midterm? Whether it's organic, inorganic investment, something else?
Yeah, investing for growth and focused on organic opportunities. So R&D, you think about that's a combination of both new products as well as clinical trials. That's been the catalyst and recipe for our success at AtriCure. The combination of those two. We'll continue to do that. I think we like to look for ways in markets in which we're participating in, which we could expand and do more in those markets. LeAAPS is a great example of that. Not just focused on patients who have pre-op AFib. What could you do for patients who don't? So I'd say think about that as kind of the area and main focus for us from a capital deployment.
Okay. Any update on, I mean, you mentioned LeAAPS is almost completed enrollment and then follow-up is?
It's a five-year required follow-up, but it is an event-driven trial. So ultimately you're looking to accumulate a certain number of strokes, in which case you would then look at the data. We do expect within that five-year follow-up timeframe for that to happen.
Okay. And that could be pretty massive. I mean, what's the downside risk if it doesn't work, the trial?
Oh, I'm not even of that mindset. I think the data is there. I think there's a belief in managing the appendage. It's something very easy to do. I think ultimately it will show that there is a benefit to these patients.
Okay. And I guess it's the question of like how much and, you know, the market development.
Yeah.
All right. Well, listen, we're at time. Thank you so much, Angie.
Thank you.
This was great. Thank you for those who stuck it out late with us. Go get drinks.
We appreciate the invitation to the conference, and great to be back in the saddle with you, Danielle.
Yeah, thank you.
Thank you.