Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Cytek Biosciences Q1 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during this session, you will need to press star one on your telephone. As a reminder, today's program may be recorded. Now I'd like to introduce your host for today's program, Paul Goodson, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, operator. Earlier today, Cytek Biosciences released financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2022. If you haven't received this news release or if you'd like to be added to the company's distribution list, please send an email to investors@cytekbio.com. Joining me today from Cytek are Wenbin Jiang, CEO, and Patrik Jeanmonod, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that management will make statements during this call that are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including statements regarding Cytek's business plans, strategies, opportunities, and financial projections. These statements involve material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to materially differ from those anticipated. Additional information regarding these risks and uncertainties appears in the section entitled Forward-Looking Statements in the press release Cytek issued today and in Cytek's filings with the SEC.
This call will also include a discussion of certain financial measures that are not calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. Reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure may be found in today's earnings release submitted to the SEC. Except as required by law, Cytek disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether because of new information, future events, or otherwise. This conference call contains time-sensitive information and is accurate only as of the live broadcast, May eleventh, two thousand and twenty-two. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Wenbin.
Thanks, Paul, and welcome everyone joining the call today. I want to start by thanking the incredible Cytek team for their dedication and execution as we close out the Q1 of 2022. On today's call, I will begin with a brief overview of our company. Next, I will discuss our recent progress since the end of 2021. Finally, I will turn the call over to Patrik for a more detailed look at our financials. For those of you new to the Cytek story, we are a leading cell analysis solutions company advancing the next generation of cell analysis tools by leveraging novel technical approach to create our full spectrum profiling or FSP platform. Our FSP platform includes instruments, reagents, software, and application services, and utilizes the full spectrum of fluorescent signatures to deliver high resolution, high content, and high sensitivity cell analysis.
Our technology and solutions address some of the key limitations of conventional methods. While flow cytometry is a widely used tool for single cell analysis, conventional flow cytometry and the early approach to spectral flow cytometry have been challenged as they are able to detect only a few markers in a single tube. Their limited dimensionality, sub-optimal resolution, low throughput, high cost for performance, and the significant technical expertise required to operate their systems has limited scientific progress in the advanced cell analysis field. By contrast, Cytek is transforming the flow cytometry industry through technology disruption. Our patented FSP technology expands the number of colors that can be analyzed and optimizes sensitivity and accuracy through our novel optical and electronic designs that utilizes an innovative method of light detection and distribution.
This novel technological application allows us to address the inherent limitations of other technologies by providing a higher density of information with greater sensitivity, more flexibility, and increased efficiency, all at a lower cost for performance. Part of our performance and cost advantage, which helps our manufacturing consistency and operating gross margin, is due to the application of light detection technology adopted from the silicon industry, which benefits from decades of development in manufacturing supremacy and cost reduction. Meanwhile, this is not the case with conventional flow cytometry, which continues to use expensive vacuum tube detection technology. Our innovative technology has been validated by the 463 peer-reviewed publications, as well as over 1,200 instrument placements as of the end of the quarter, and a growing number of applications.
At Cytek, we provide our customers with an end-to-end solution consisting of instruments, reagents, software, and application services. In addition to our robust suite of comprehensive solutions, last year, we began shipping our cell sorters, which enable additional downstream genomic and proteomic analysis. Importantly, our sorters allow researchers to isolate living cell populations from higher complexity panels beyond the 40 biomarkers. While our cell analyzers have been strong drivers of our revenue growth to date, we expect that reagents and the cell sorters will play an important role in driving our revenue growth over the next 3-5 years. I'm proud to say that our installed base of instruments continue to achieve robust growth. In the Q1 , we placed 116 instruments, bringing our total installed base to 1,226 instruments as of the end of Q1.
We continue to execute on our core strategy and have achieved a solid adoption with high dimensional cell analysis users, while also bringing Full Spectrum Profiling to entry-level users as well. As Patrik will discuss later, we once again achieved a strong revenue growth this quarter, with revenue increasing 44% over the prior year. These results reflect strong demand, driven by the recognition from customers of the advantages of our technology in addressing their needs. Even in the face of macro pressure, including global supply chain disruptions, our team continued to execute well and achieve operational excellence. While the industry as a whole is experiencing a difficult operating environment, and Cytek has not been immune to inflationary pressures, our dedicated team is managing through, in part, by leveraging our global workforce.
Additionally, our global presence has also helped us to mitigate supply chain problems, and we are further insulated from supply issues by our parts inventory buffer. In all, we continue to show strong execution, and I'm confident in our team's proven ability to manage through this environment and continue to succeed. We began the year by announcing the opening of our new facility in Fremont, California, which tripled our previous manufacturing capacity to meet growing global demand for cell analysis solutions. In addition to the new Fremont location, we also opened new offices in Seattle, Washington, which are dedicated to key R&D initiatives and the customer application support. At the end of April, we announced the appointment of Todd Garland as our Chief Commercial Officer. We are excited to have Todd join Cytek, and are pleased to welcome him to our team.
Todd's expansive experience, including previous role at Cardinal Health, CareFusion, and most recently at BD Biosciences, will bring tremendous value to our organization. Since first being introduced in 2017, our cell analysis systems have gained widespread adoption across the globe, with use in more than 40 countries. Now we have seen great traction in diversifying our revenue base through the launch of new products, including recurring sources from reagent sales. While still a small part of our overall revenue, demand for our reagents is growing rapidly, and we are excited for the potential of this contribution to our enterprise. As I mentioned earlier, our technology has been validated by 463 peer-reviewed publications as of the end of the quarter. This quarter, there were 95 peer-reviewed publications mentioning Cytek, the highest figure in any quarter so far since Cytek was founded.
I'm proud of this accomplishment, which speaks to the momentum of our platform and validates the use of our offerings in the scientific community. The work we do at Cytek and the technology we bring to the field continue to demonstrate proven real-world results that touch on highly relevant issues that impact the life of the general public. During the Q1 of this year, for example, there were two particular papers in Nature and in Nature Communications examining issues related to COVID-19. The first paper, Germinal Center Driven Maturation of B Cell Response to mRNA Vaccination, published in Nature, illustrates how the reaction of our immune system to mRNA vaccination leads to long-term protection from the virus.
The second paper in Nature Communications, titled Stratification of Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients into Clinical Severity Progression Groups by Immunophenotyping and Machine Learning, discovered that COVID-19 patients cluster into three distinct groups. These groups predict clinical course. As these two papers and the countless others exemplify, our technology is being used today in real world applications that address critical pertinent issues. I'm grateful for Cytek's role in these consequential scientific findings, and I look forward to sharing further stories of our platform's use in future periods. In all, I'm excited by the progress our team has made this quarter and expect to make throughout the course of the year as we continue to establish ourselves as a leading cell analysis solutions company. As we push forward a cadence of new products and applications, we are deeply focused on providing a complete cell analysis solution to our customers.
We look forward to continuing to provide our novel FSP platform to these customers as they push the bounds of scientific discovery and the clinical progress. With that, I will now turn the call over to Patrik for more details around our financials.
Thanks, Wenbin. Total revenue for the Q1 of 2022 was $35.1 million, a 44% increase over the Q1 of 2021. We continued to see demand across the entire portfolio of Cytek offerings, including service revenue that has more than doubled from one year ago as instruments come off their warranty. Gross profit was $20.2 million for the Q1 of 2022, an increase of 39% compared to a gross profit of $14.5 million in the Q1 of 2021. Gross profit margin was 58% in the Q1 of 2022, compared to 60% in the Q1 of 2021. Adjusted gross profit margin in the Q1 of 2022 was 61%, compared to 60% in the Q1 of 2021.
After adjusting for stock-based compensation, expense, and amortization of acquisition-related intangibles, operating expenses were $22.5 million for the Q1 of 2022, a 69% increase from $13.4 million in the Q1 of 2021. The increase was primarily due to expenses to support continued growth of the business, including further investment in sales and marketing, R&D, and costs related to operating as a public company. Research and development expenses were $8 million for the Q1 of 2022, compared to $5.1 million for the Q1 of 2021. Sales and marketing expenses were $7 million for the Q1 of 2022, compared to $4.3 million for the Q1 of 2021.
General and administrative expenses were $7.5 million for the Q1 of 2022, an increase from $4 million for the Q1 of 2021. Loss from operations in the Q1 of 2022 was $2.4 million, compared to income of $1.1 million in the Q1 of 2021. Net loss in the Q1 of 2022 was $2.2 million, compared to income of $0.1 million in the Q1 of 2021. Adjusted EBITDA in the Q1 of 2022 was $1.9 million, compared to $1.1 million in the Q1 of 2021. After adjusting for stock-based compensation expense and foreign currency exchange impact. Turning to our guidance.
With our strong performance in Q1, we now expect full year 2022 revenue to be closer to the high end of the range of $160 million-$168 million. Before I conclude, I would also like to touch on some assumptions embedded in our 2022 guidance. We remain in a strong position financially, continue to see strong demand for our instruments, and remain focused on maintaining our profitability as well as achieving our long-term growth targets and objectives. Because Cytek's goal is to be profitable on a net income and EBITDA basis annually, we do not anticipate the need for future capital raises to meet operating needs. We are also pleased with our strong balance sheet, including a solid cash position and no debt, underpinning our healthy organization.
We will continue to invest in our core business as it relates to new projects and innovation, while remaining opportunistic in the M&A environment and focusing on growth in all key areas. With that, I will turn it back over to Wenbin.
Thanks, Patrik. Cytek has continually demonstrated our commitment to developing tools to advance the next generation of cell analysis. I would like to express my deep gratitude for the team we have here at Cytek. Their excellence and the shared belief in this important mission drives our progress. I'm excited to announce that Cytek will be participating in the CYTO 2022 conference in early June in Philadelphia after the event was held virtually for the past two years. Later that month, we will be hosting our first Analyst Day in New York City. Stay tuned for further details as we are excited to host this event and share further updates on our strategic objectives and the progress toward our goals. With that, we'll now open the call up for questions. Operator.
Certainly. Ladies and gentlemen, if you have a question at this time, please press star then one. Our first question comes from the line of Max Masucci from Cowen and Company. Your question please.
Hi, thanks for taking the questions. Just a quick one on guidance. It would just be great to hear what to achieve the high end of that range, you know, what you'd need to see in terms of regional demand trends, you know, any expectations for how some of the COVID lockdowns end up progressing. If you could just make any mention of expectations for, you know, specific instrument placements, you know, whether you expect strength in a certain instrument or another, that would be great.
Yeah. I can take that first question, Max. Thank you. Well, we expect to carry the momentum forward based on what we've seen in Q1. We've continued to see very strong demand for the key instruments, the Aurora, top of the line, Northern Lights, and as we roll out the reagent business as well. Overall, I think our guidance for the year remains in that range with aiming for the $168.
Great. A second question. It would be great to hear any metrics that you can share, you know, to describe the adoption, you know, you've seen from the 25-Color Immunoprofiling Kit and whether the adoption has, you know, trended, you know, how that adoption's trended compared to your internal expectations.
We don't have metrics about adoption handy with us at this point. We'll think about providing that at the upcoming analyst meeting.
Okay, great. A final one, open-ended question. You know, can you just give us a progress update, you know, around some of your efforts in MRD monitoring, you know, and whether, you know, it's logical for us to expect, you know, a dedicated MRD monitoring, you know, reagent kit application, you know, sometime here in 2022, or is that, you know, more of a, you know, 2023 and beyond type situation?
Okay, I'm gonna take that question. Actually, this is one of the R&D project currently being studied by our scientists and together with our partners. We expect we'll have more data to be shared towards the end of the year.
Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Congrats on the continued momentum.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Matt Sykes from Goldman Sachs. Your question please.
Oh, thanks for taking my questions. Hey, Wenbin and Patrik. Maybe Patrik, just first one for you on gross margins. Could you talk about the progression over the course of the year? I think Q1 was a little lower than we were expecting, but it was still high on a relative basis. Can you just talk about what you're thinking in terms of gross margin progression, particularly as maybe reagents or sort of Auroras or other higher margin revenue starts coming through over the course of the year?
Yeah, thanks for the question. As we continue to scale as an organization, capture some economies of scale, overall, margins should continue to increase. We're also launching, as you know, the reagent business that's typically of a higher gross profit margin. Our expectation is that the gross profit margin will continue to build over time, despite some pressure that we're seeing in the supply chain environment. We place the focus trying to keep that gross profit margin moving up.
Got it. In terms of instrument mix, I know in previous quarters you've talked about maybe Aurora outselling Northern Lights. Can you give us any sense for, at least for this quarter, what the kind of mix of instruments looks like, from a high level, just so we can look at some of the trajectories of each of the instruments?
The Aurora top of the line remains the large majority of our instruments. Second, obviously, becoming the Northern Lights family. Behind that, we have the Aurora CS coming in as well.
Got it. Just last question on the cell sorter. It sounds like it's making good progress. I think in previous quarters you talked about kind of the flow cytometry instruments providing a good groundwork for selling that cell sorter. Could you talk maybe a little bit more about customer feedback? I know there was competitor launch in the last quarter or maybe a little bit before. Just kind of feedback to your cell sorter product offering and any other color you can provide on that?
Yeah, I will take that question. You know, typically it takes quite a few months, right, first to have the instrument set up then and work with the customers to help them to start the experiment. Normally, for the publications, it takes probably about 12-18 months to see something really start to show up. At this time, we don't have anything we can share publicly, but you should expect to see something eventually, yeah. Very soon. Yeah.
Great. Thanks, Wenbin. Appreciate the color.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of David Westenberg from Piper Sandler. Your question please.
Hi. Thanks for taking the question, and congrats on a really good quarter. I'm gonna continue a little bit with Max Masucci's question. I'm gonna ask it differently and hopefully maybe you can answer it this way. You know, when you're talking about the adopters or your early adopters in your reagent business, would you care to maybe give a profile of what they look like? You know, are they pharma, academic, maybe the types of projects they're working on, disease indication? Anything to help us kind of, you know, understand who might this like low-hanging fruit customer might look like and if we can apply it to maybe some of the customers that you might get in the future?
You know, I think both type of customers exist actually. As you can see from our customer portfolios, more than 50% of our customers, instrument customers are pharma, biotech, right, and the rest are academia. We actually work with both set of customers, trying to get our reagents into their hands. I think currently it's going very well, as I mentioned. Even though it's still a small portion of our overall revenue, but the growth rate is quite high, and so we are very pleased about the progress so far.
Got it. Appreciate that. In terms of, sorry, I lost the place where I was at. Yeah, I asked this last quarter, and I guess you know you did see some of the, some new competitive launches earlier in the year. At this point, are you seeing any impacts on the business? Are you seeing the customers at least maybe freeze or take a look at other products?
As you can see, based on the momentum, we have seen clearly, we haven't seen any real impact to our business.
Very fair. Right. I see. Sure. All right. Thank you very much. I'll just, I got it from here.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Tejas Savant from Morgan Stanley. Your question please.
Hey, guys. Good evening. Maybe just to start with sort of operational and supply chain, you know, challenges in China. This has been something that's come up on a bunch of other tools companies' earnings, given the COVID lockdown situation there. I know you don't have much of a revenue sort of exposure there to the region, but it's an important sort of clinical, you know, priority for you, and you've got, you know, supply and manufacturing exposure there. Just curious as to why it is that you feel you're relatively well insulated there, and could that sort of prolong lockdowns here, for example, change that, you know, situation?
Actually, this is very difficult to project. However, we have planned very well and this is already taken into account in our financial model. Also, because of the structure we have built into our process, with, as indicated, with the inventory, with the manufacturing planning, I think all of those have been taken into account. At least, if the market stay as is or situation stay as is, we don't foresee any real impact to our business for the year.
Got it. That's helpful. Wenbin, this is more of a broader you know industry question really. What is your exposure to small cap pharma, if any? If I remember right, I think academic versus pharma exposure for you is roughly 50/50. Specifically, you know, early-stage companies or perhaps even pre-revenue companies, what do they constitute in terms of your funnel? Are you seeing any signs of weakness there?
Not today. I think still quite healthy, in our funnel. Yeah.
Got it. Okay. In terms of just, you know, where exactly do things stand on sales reps for the reagent business, and how are you thinking about the ramp there? A related question, not just for sales reps, but broadly speaking, how are you factoring in, you know, wage inflation here into your forecast?
Yeah, definitely, there's a impact with regard to the inflation, but this has already been built into our financial model. So we have taken measures to deal with this. As indicated, we have leveraged our global resources, and with regard to various logistics and as well as cost down to mitigate whatever the inflation or the pressure we have encountered. So far this has been managed. We don't really foresee any real impact to what we have presented.
Got it. In terms of the sales ramp for the reagent side of the business, Wenbin?
I think, yeah, this is actually, reagent is a faster growing sector of our business right now, and it's still going, it's doing very well.
Got it. One final one for me here. You know, in the past, you've mentioned, you know, the replacement cycle nature of the industry and you sort of punching above your weight in terms of gaining share every time, you know, a flow cytometer comes up for replacement. Are you seeing the number of units coming up for replacement as a whole go down this year? Perhaps, I mean, just tighter scrutiny from customers as they think about CapEx purchases?
Well, that's a great question. I think based on our funnel, definitely it's still within what we think we can do, and there's no real impact to our current forecast right now.
Got it. Okay. Very helpful. Thanks, guys.
Thank you. This does conclude the question.