Hello and welcome to today's Guardant Health Q4 2021 earnings call. My name is Elliot, and I'll be coordinating your call today. If you would like to register a question during the presentation, you may do so by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. I would now like to hand over to our host, Carrie Mendivil, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Earlier today, Guardant Health released financial results for the quarter and full year ended December 31, 2021. If you have not received this news release or if you'd like to be added to the company's distribution list, please send an email to investors@guardanthealth.com. Joining me today from Guardant are Helmy Eltoukhy, Co-CEO, AmirAli Talasaz, Co-CEO, and Mike Bell, 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 federal securities laws. 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 Guardant issued today.
For a more complete list and description, please see the Risk Factors section of the company's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, and in its other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. 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, Guardant disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any financial projections or 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, February 23, 2022. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Helmy.
Thanks, Carrie. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter and full year 2021 earnings call. I'll start off today's call by highlighting our progress across oncology as we continue to build on our strong position as the liquid biopsy leader. I will then turn the call over to Amir Ali for an update on our screening program. Finally, Mike will provide a more detailed look at our financials and our outlook for 2022. Starting on slide 3, 2021 was a significant year for Guardant. We launched a number of new products, surpassed 100 biopharma partners, reached target enrollment for our ECLIPSE study, started enrolling a second registrational grade study in lung cancer screening, continued to advance our technology platform, and significantly scaled the organization as we prepare for future growth. Our mission at Guardant is to conquer cancer with data and ultimately transform cancer care.
The driving force of our work is our commitment to putting patients first. We are dedicated to bringing the absolute best products to market that will continue providing clinically actionable information to inform patient care. Before I provide an update on our progress, I would like to start off with a patient story. In 2017, a 60-year-old man was diagnosed with stage II rectal cancer. He quickly underwent surgery, but soon after surgery, his oncologist discovered the cancer had already spread to a lymph node. The patient immediately began chemotherapy. Fortunately, he responded well to treatment, was considered to be cancer-free, and transitioned to long-term follow-up care. This past summer, he was still feeling great and was due for a periodic checkup. His CT scan was normal.
His CEA was within normal limits, so his oncologist scheduled follow-up tests, including colonoscopy, CEA, and a CT scan to be performed 6 months later. His oncologist also ordered a Guardant Reveal test, which came back positive for residual disease. With these results, his oncologist immediately ordered a PET scan that detected a small lung nodule, which had not been visible on the CT scan. After a biopsy, the nodule was confirmed as an isolated metastatic rectal cancer. The patient had a second surgery to remove the tumor and is recovering well. This story highlights how Guardant Reveal can bring critical information to oncologists and patients, catching cancer recurrence early in order to treat cancer before it continues to spread.
Now, turning to our performance on slide 4. We ended Q4 with another quarter of record revenue of $108 million, up 38% over the prior year quarter. This brought total revenue for 2021 to $374 million, up 30% over 2020. Moving on to slide 5. During the year, we continued to build our commercial organization focused on oncology, now a team of more than 250 individuals that we believe is second to none. They delivered strong clinical test volume for the fourth quarter, reaching 25,600 tests, an increase of 48% from the prior year quarter. Over the course of the year, despite continuing impacts from COVID, clinical volumes reached 87,600 tests, up 39% year-over-year.
The products we have in the market today are in a league of their own in terms of performance, product market fit, and customer experience. Penetrating the large market for oncology tests takes more than just amazing technology. It takes clinical evidence, regulatory approvals, reimbursement, and above all, a very robust commercial channel. I continue to be proud of how well our commercial team is executing in this environment and achieving strong growth. Notably, we are continuing to make inroads in community accounts where we are growing twice as fast as in the academic centers. While we are continuing to grow in academic centers, our volume mix is becoming increasingly weighted towards the community setting where the majority of cancer patients reside. Approximately 70% of our volume in the quarter came from the community setting, compared to 63% in the same period last year.
Today, roughly 50% of our team's interactions with oncologists are face-to-face, while the remaining half were virtual. We have equipped our team with the tools needed to continue to drive adoption of our products through both virtual and in-person interactions. Across the board, we are seeing excellent traction with existing oncologists ordering more tests and new physician additions. More and more oncologists are seeing Guardant as a whole precision oncology platform. We have the largest share of voice in the market, nearly double the number of interactions with oncologists compared to our closest CGP competitor. Looking more closely at recurrence monitoring on slide 6, we are encouraged by the growing interest and early success of Guardant Reveal and are continuing to invest heavily in the vast opportunity ahead while leveraging our existing channel of oncologists.
At the end of January, we presented new data on Guardant Reveal at the ASCO Gastrointestinal Cancers Symposium that demonstrated high performance for recurrence detection in early-stage colorectal cancer. An interim analysis from COSMOS, a large prospective observational study, shows that Guardant Reveal, when used after curative-intent surgery for stage II-III colorectal cancer, can detect MRD prior to disease recurrence with a longitudinal sensitivity of 91% and an average lead time of greater than 6 months. The test integrates genomic and epigenomic signatures to detect disease without the need for tumor tissue. Tissue biopsies can be difficult to obtain, time-consuming, and lead to complications, all of which can delay a patient's treatment. Our blood-based tests can overcome these barriers and provide fast and actionable information to help guide treatment decisions across the continuum of care.
Turning to slide 7, the opportunity for recurrence monitoring has grown from $15 billion to over $20 billion today due to increasing frequency of utilization of such tests in the surveillance setting, as well as a more favorable reimbursement landscape. It should be noted that this $20 billion TAM is for blood-only approaches. Tissue-dependent or informed approaches would potentially only access less than half of this opportunity, given some of the logistical challenges of accessing tissue, especially in the surveillance setting many years out from the date of curative resection. Turning to slide 8, outside of the United States, we are making great progress, particularly in Japan. Our lab there is up and running, and we expect to receive regulatory approval for Guardant360 CDx in the near future. Following approval, we will turn our focus to securing public reimbursement by the end of 2022.
Japan represents a very large market opportunity with about 400,000 late-stage patients, compared to 700,000 in the U.S., and similar reimbursement rates for CGP. We are also investing in Europe, and our partners are currently building two labs, one in Spain with Vall d'Hebron and another at the Royal Marsden in the U.K. We expect their services to become operational over the next 12 months. These labs will be available for clinical research and clinical care, providing industry-leading next-generation sequencing to private and self-paying patients, with a plan for future expansion for National Health Service patients in the U.K. We believe this strategy of building a global network of laboratories by partnering with key academic centers is the most effective way to unlock the international opportunity.
Moving on to biopharma on slide 9, we saw a healthy rebound in our biopharma business with volume of 6,600 samples, up 36% from the third quarter and up 36% year-over-year. We're also seeing growing interest with our biopharma partners for using Reveal in the adjuvant setting beyond just CRC indications, including lung, bladder, and breast. Our partners see significant benefit with our blood-only tissue-agnostic approach, and we look forward to growing usage of Reveal in the biopharma setting. In addition to increasing sample volumes, the number of customers we serve continues to grow. We reached our 2021 target and ended the year with more than 100 active biopharma partnerships. We have a healthy pipeline of discussions, and the breadth of our product offering, strong customer service, and our clinical market leadership makes us an attractive partner.
We expect the number of customers to continue to grow. We recently signed two new CDx contracts with a number of others in discussion. While we continue to see strong overall demand for development services, several projects have recently been completed or are soon to be completed, and we expect some near-term lumpiness in this revenue line given the timing of project milestones. We are continuing to demonstrate the clinical utility and real-world evidence of our products, recently presenting real-world clinical outcomes data from the GuardantINFORM platform in both breast and colorectal cancers. In December, at the 2021 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium, we presented new data from the PADA-1 study demonstrating the benefits of using Guardant360 Response for patients with advanced breast cancer to help switch therapy to a more effective option as soon as resistance to treatment emerged.
Excitingly, this approach doubled progression-free survival, demonstrating the clinical utility of therapeutic monitoring via liquid biopsy. Importantly, there was no need for a tissue biopsy, which can be difficult and time-consuming, potentially delaying time to treatment. Additionally, at ASCO GI, we presented new clinical utility data that demonstrated that the Guardant360 test detects microsatellite instability-high status in patients with advanced gastrointestinal cancers at a similar frequency to tissue-based testing. MSI-High is an important biomarker used to predict a response to immunotherapy. Moving on to slide 10. At Guardant, we have always moved at a rapid velocity, motivated by the North Star of patient care. At the JP Morgan conference in early January, I shared our vision for a smart liquid biopsy platform, which we believe will be a quantum leap forward for liquid biopsies.
Our first product from this new platform will have capabilities that are profoundly more rich than our current oncology products. Drawing on close to 10 years of research and experience from hundreds of thousands of liquid biopsies, our smart liquid biopsy will offer a genomic footprint nearly 100x larger than Guardant360 CDx, provide even greater sensitivity, and include comprehensive analysis of genomic, epigenomic, and immune signatures, among many other capabilities. We believe this new platform will advance liquid biopsies in the same way that smartphones upended first-generation cell phones by enabling a rich ecosystem of countless applications, ranging from deep analysis of tumor genomics, interrogation of the tumor microenvironment, diverse immuno-oncology applications, much more sensitive therapeutic monitoring, identification of complex prognostic signatures, and many others.
We look forward to sharing more about this next chapter of our smart liquid biopsy platform at an investor day planned for the fall of this year. I will now turn the call over to AmirAli to provide an update in screening.
Thanks, Helmy. Turning to slide 11, we are continuing to make great progress across our screening program. At Guardant, we've always believed that a blood-based screening test during wellness checkups has the potential to guard us against cancer. Blood-based screening is simple, reduces the need for patient follow-through, is much easier to integrate into health system workflows, expands accessibility to underserved communities, and would likely improve the compliance to screening tests. For blood-based screening to save lives, we must offer a test with high sensitivity in detecting cancers at early stages. In order to save lives at scale, patients need broad access to such tests, ensuring that access requires a reimbursement pathway and a strategy for inclusion into the screening testing guidelines, alignment with value-based care and the objective of health systems, and finally, FDA approval. For colorectal cancer, blood-based screening has established Medicare NCD and FDA approval pathway.
The utility of CRC screening is well established, and guidelines recommend screening in the vast majority of individuals over the age of 45. The benefit of screening has been limited due to the lack of compliance despite many efforts. The ease of use of blood tests holds great potential for increasing compliance. Turning to slide 12. Almost 2 years ago, we started our pivotal registrational ECLIPSE study that we expect to read out in the middle of this year. Given that this is a registrational grade study, all data will be unblinded at the same time. Although we have experienced some slowdown in our internal productivity as well as clinical site activities during the last few weeks due to a resurgence of COVID, at this time, we do not expect a material impact to our study timeline.
We also expect to submit our PMA package to FDA in the latter part of this year and expect to receive approval in 2023, pending successful review by the agency. We are on track to launch the LDT version of this assay called Guardant Shield in the first half of this year and have already onboarded an approximately 100-member PCP commercial team. We are planning to gradually expand our commercial team to over 700 members by the time our test is included in USPSTF guidelines, which we expect in 2026. Our strategy this year is to engage in commercial development activities that will accelerate adoption of Guardant Shield post FDA approval. We have started to engage key stakeholders and target primary care physicians to increase awareness of blood-based CRC screening. We are pleased with the early feedback we are hearing and the high interest in a blood-based CRC screening.
It is increasingly clear that there is a significant unmet need for a high compliance modality for CRC screening with high sensitivity. We believe that a successful early clinical experience with Guardant Shield and confirmation of its potential impact in improving compliance rates will be instrumental to drive long-term adoption of the test. Looking beyond CRC to our opportunity with multi-cancer screening on slide 13, our focus is to develop a blood-based test to screen for multiple cancers where lives can be saved. Similar to CRC, lung cancer screening is known to save lives. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. Symptoms of lung cancer typically do not appear until the disease is already at an advanced stage. The evidence-based screening guidelines recommend annual lung cancer screening for high-risk individuals.
However, the screening compliance studies demonstrate gross underutilization, as only around 14% of people eligible for screening are up to date with screening recommendations. We believe a simple blood test has the ability to detect the majority of lung cancer cases in early stages, when it can most easily be treated and can also improve compliance to screening. Moving on to slide 14. As we shared last year, to validate the performance of our assay in a lung cancer screening cohort, we have designed a new prospective registrational study called Shield Lung. Shield Lung is designed to provide regulatory-grade evidence for the accuracy of our next-generation multi-cancer screening Guardant Shield assay in individuals between the ages of 50- 80 who undergo standard of care screening for lung cancer using low-dose CT scanning. All subjects enrolled in Shield Lung will be high risk for lung cancer.
We are targeting enrollment of nearly 10,000 individuals. We announced at the beginning of this year that we had already enrolled our first patient and expect to complete enrollment within 36 months. Through ECLIPSE, our team has developed core competencies running a large registrational screening study, and I believe this expertise will prove invaluable for us. We are expecting to present the performance of this multi-cancer screening test in several cancer types throughout 2022. Turning to slide 15. We believe the promise of blood-based cancer screening is quickly becoming a reality, and we see a brighter future for humanity by improving population health. A successful readout of our ECLIPSE trial will open up a $20 billion screening opportunity in colorectal cancer by bringing high performance, life-saving blood-based cancer screening tests to millions of people.
Shield Lung, along with other future studies, will open up opportunities in lung and additional cancer types, paving the path toward the total addressable screening market of more than $50 billion. I'm confident about our strategy in developing blood-based tests for the screening market. I believe we can be the first to have a blood-based cancer screening test with Medicare coverage and FDA approval. With that, I will now turn the call over to Mike for more detail of our financials and outlook for 2022.
Thanks, AmirAli. Turning to slide 16. Starting with the fourth quarter of 2021, total revenue was $108.1 million, up 38% from $78.3 million in the prior year quarter. Total precision oncology testing revenue for the fourth quarter was $88.7 million, with growth of 37% compared to $64.7 million in the prior year quarter. This increase was driven by strong growth in both clinical and biopharma sample volumes. Precision oncology revenue from clinical tests was $64.2 million, up 40% from $45.9 million for the prior year quarter. Fourth quarter clinical test volume was 25,600, which is an increase of 48% from the same period of the prior year.
The blended clinical ASP for the fourth quarter of 2021 was approximately $2,500 in line with our expectations. Guardant360 ASP was between $2,600 and $2,700, consistent with the last couple of quarters. Importantly, the Medicare ADLT reimbursement rate of $5,000 for Guardant360 CDx, which was initially set in April 2021, has been maintained at the same $5,000 rate for 2022 and 2023. As a result, we expect the ASP for Guardant360 to continue to be in the range of $2,600-$2,700 during the course of 2022. We are seeing solid traction for our new clinical products, Reveal, TissueNext, and Response, and we expect volume from these products to continue to increase throughout the year.
However, we don't expect these new products to start to significantly contribute to revenue until we receive Medicare and private payer reimbursement. Therefore, while we expect Guardant360 ASP to be stable in 2022, the blended clinical ASP will be impacted as reimbursement of new products will take time to ramp up. Precision oncology revenue from biopharma tests in the fourth quarter totaled $24.5 million, up 30% from $18.8 million for the prior year quarter. Biopharma volume was strong, with fourth quarter samples totaling 6,600, up 36% from the prior year quarter. Biopharma sample ASP in the fourth quarter was approximately $3,700. Down 4% from approximately $3,900 in the prior year period, but in line with the third quarter of 2021 due to a similar product mix.
Development services and other revenue in the fourth quarter totaled $90.4 million, up 42% from the prior year quarter. During the quarter, approximately half of the development services and other revenue came from royalties related to the settlement and licensing agreement with Foundation Medicine that was finalized at the end of 2021. Specifically, this revenue represented royalties starting in May when the legal settlement was reached through to the end of December and was anticipated in the full year guidance for 2021 that we shared last year. For 2022, we expect to start to recognize royalty revenue on a quarterly basis and anticipate full year royalty revenue to be similar to the total we recognized in 2021.
As we communicated last quarter, while we continue to see strong demand for our development services, several companion diagnostic projects have recently been successfully completed, and as such, we expect that our development services and other revenue will be lower throughout 2022 as new projects take time to ramp up. Gross profit for the fourth quarter of 2021 was $74.7 million compared to a gross profit of $49.9 million in the same period of the prior year. Gross margin in the fourth quarter was 69%, which was positively impacted by the royalty revenue we booked in Q4, compared to 67% in the third quarter of 2021 and 64% in the prior year quarter.
Operating expenses for the fourth quarter of 2021 were $172.9 million, an increase of 23% compared to $141.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2020. Non-GAAP operating expenses exclude stock-based compensation and related employee payroll tax payments, acquisition related expenses, amortization of intangible assets, and changes in fair value of contingent consideration. Non-GAAP operating expenses for the fourth quarter of 2021 were $146.2 million, a 73% increase from $84.7 million in the prior year quarter. Other net income and expense increased to $25.9 million for the fourth quarter of 2021, up from $1.2 million for the corresponding prior year period, primarily due to the $25 million settlement from Foundation Medicine.
Net loss attributable to Guardant Health common stockholders was $90.9 million or $0.89 per share for the fourth quarter of 2021, compared to $93.7 million or $0.94 per share in the fourth quarter of 2020. Non-GAAP net loss was $70.4 million or $0.69 per share for the fourth quarter of 2021, compared to $36.7 million or $0.37 per share for the fourth quarter of 2020. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $64.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2021, compared to a $29.7 million loss in the fourth quarter of 2020. We define adjusted EBITDA as non-GAAP net loss attributable to Guardant Health, adjusted for interest, income tax, depreciation, amortization, and other income and expense. Turning to the full year with Slide 17.
Total revenue was $373.7 million, up 30% from $286.7 million in the prior year. Precision Oncology revenue increased 29% to $304.3 million and was comprised of clinical testing revenue of $236.4 million, which grew 38% year-over-year, and biopharma testing revenue of $67.9 million, which increased 5% year-over-year. Clinical test volumes for the year grew to 87,600, up 39% year-over-year from 63,200 tests. Overall blended clinical ASP, including the impact of cash true-ups for tests performed in prior periods, was approximately $2,700 for 2021, which was consistent with the blended clinical ASP in 2020.
Biopharma testing volume increased 16% year over year to 18,600 tests. Biopharma sample ASP in the full year was approximately $3,650, down 9% from approximately $4,000 in the prior year due to changes in product mix. Development services and other revenue grew 38% to $69.3 million in 2021, reflecting the successful completion of two of our companion diagnostic partnership programs during the year, as well as royalty revenue earned from a licensing agreement we signed with Foundation Medicine. Gross margin for the full year 2021 was 67%, compared to 68% in 2020. Operating expenses for the full year 2021 was $661.7 million, an increase of 47% compared to $449.1 million in 2020.
Non-GAAP operating expenses for the full year 2021 were $506.8 million, a 72% increase from $295.2 million in the prior year. 2021 was a year of significant investment as we expanded our oncology commercial team and launched several new products during the year, and as we started to build out the infrastructure to support our future screening business. In 2022, we will continue to invest in progressing our strong pipeline of oncology products, as well as in generating clinical data to support their reimbursement. For screening, 2022 investment will be focused on the commercial launch of Guardant Shield LDT, completing the data readout from ECLIPSE, the PMA submission for our CRC device, and the continued development of our multi-cancer screening test.
Net loss attributable to Guardant Health common stockholders was $405.7 million in 2021, compared to $253.8 million in 2020. Net loss per share attributable to Guardant Health common stockholders was $4 in 2021, as compared to $2.60 in 2020. Non-GAAP net loss was $251.7 million for 2021, as compared to $91.0 million for the corresponding prior year period. Non-GAAP net loss per share was $2.48 for 2021, as compared to $0.93 for the corresponding prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of $231.5 million in 2021, compared to an $84.4 million loss in 2020.
As a reminder, we previously shared our decision to exercise our call right to purchase the 50% of the Guardant Health AMEA joint venture shares that we do not currently own. We still expect to complete this transaction before the end of the second quarter of 2022. We ended 2021 with $1.6 billion in cash equivalent, and marketable securities. We feel we have a strong cash balance that can support our ongoing operations for the foreseeable future and which gives us flexibility to continue to invest in our business to drive robust future growth. Now, turning to our revenue outlook for the full year 2022 on slide 18. We expect revenue to be between $460 million and $470 million, representing growth of approximately 24% over 2021 at the midpoint.
Included in this range are a few key assumptions. First, we expect clinical oncology sample volume for 2022 to grow by more than 50% compared to 2021, and biopharma volume to grow by at least 30%. As a result, we expect precision oncology testing revenue to grow more than 35% over the prior year. Secondly, as mentioned earlier, although we have a strong development services pipeline, these partnership projects will take time to ramp up. As such, we expect development services and other revenue to be approximately $50 million for 2022. Finally, while we are excited about the upcoming launch of Guardant Shield LDT, we are not expecting significant revenue contributions from it this year. Moving on to slide 19.
We made great strides in 2021 as we continue to broaden our oncology product portfolio and expand our reach into the cancer screening market. We are aggressively pursuing the vast opportunities ahead, and we are confident that we will be a leader in cancer across the continuum of care. At this point, we will now open the call up to questions.
Thank you. For our Q&A, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up, and when preparing to ask a question, please ensure that your phone is unmuted locally. Our first question comes from Tycho Peterson from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Thanks, guys. Maybe just first to clarify on the numbers. The ASP decline in the quarter, was that just all a function of Reveal and Response kind of weighing down the average, or was there something else there that you would point to?
You want to take that, Mike?
Yeah, I think I can take that, Tycho. Yeah, that's right, and it came down as we expected that Guardant360 ASP was similar to previous quarters in this $2,600-$2,700 range. Yeah, it's new products with, you know, lower reimbursement just bringing down that overall blended. That was expected. We'll probably expect that, you know, to continue through 2022.
On guidance, you know, at the high end, you're coming in, you know, a tad below the street despite, you know, the foundation royalties. Is that really just reflecting lingering COVID uncertainties and anything you can say about clinical volume trends in the first quarter? Then also is the U.K. lab contribution embedded in guidance?
Yeah. No, so I'll start, and maybe Mike can patch in. You know, we feel very bullish about clinical volumes for 2022. We're projecting 50% growth year over year, which is, you know, I think very strong and excellent to see. You know, that being said, we did see some impact from Omicron in the first part of first quarter. Physician access was certainly limited. We're seeing that begin to resolve very nicely, and so we're hopeful that throughout the year we'll start seeing more positive trends in terms of really moving away from some of the negative impact of COVID. In terms of the U.K. lab, you know, I think that's still in its early days.
It's not a significant contributor to this year. I would say that, you know, we're projecting very strong growth in the precision oncology business, both from pharma volume samples and clinical samples. One of the challenges has been just the development services revenue. We're just in a lull, really. We have large projects ramping down and new large projects ramping up, and we're sort of in a trough in terms of between those two stages. I don't know if, Mike, there's anything else you want to add.
Okay.
Yeah, I don't think so. Anything else from me, Helmy. I think you covered that all.
Okay, thank you.
Okay. Helmy, lastly on just on pipeline, on smart liquid biopsy, are you able to kind of fine-tune timelines there and talk about what needs to happen ahead of the launch? Similarly on Reveal, can you just talk about reimbursement, you know, updates there?
Yeah, smart liquid biopsy, as is typical, we'll launch that to biopharma initially. That'll be later in the year. We hope to present a lot more details about that platform at our Investor Day in the fall. Shortly thereafter, we'll launch it to the clinical markets. We're very excited about that new platform. We're very excited to share details around that. With Reveal, you know, there's been some back and forth, and we've submitted more information, and we're still waiting for final feedback from MolDX.
Okay. Thank you.
Yeah. Thank you, Tycho.
Our next question comes from Brian Weinstein from William Blair. Please go ahead.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the question. I guess starting out, you've talked about utilizing different types of technologies as you kind of build out your capabilities, especially around smart liquid biopsy, but I'm just curious about kind of more of a multimodal approach here. Can you talk about the importance of that and how you're positioning yourself to move kind of beyond genomics? You made that AI imaging deal. You were an investor in Lunit earlier. I'm just curious kind of, you know, your thinking longer term about bringing in other kinds of technologies.
Yeah. AmirAli, take that?
Yeah, sure. Brian, actually we are very excited with a bunch of tech stacks that we have at Guardant and some that we are working on that we haven't talked about obviously yet. You know, at Guardant in general, we have this mentality that based on unmet clinical needs, figure out what are the technologies that you can use to really open up that unmet need in a very meaningful way and impactful way. That's why, like for instance, on our epigenomic front, you know, on methylation, we have a novel assay. Like many other players in the field who are just using off-the-shelf reagents and hoping for the best, we never had that mentality and, you know, we built a novel methylation assay.
On fragmentation side, again, on epigenomic front, I think we are second to none in terms of our performance there and contributions there that, you know, hopefully over time we would talk about the detail of how that technology stack works. Regarding radiology AI, definitely that's something that we are working mainly with our partners. You know, one of them is Lunit, that we talked about it before. Hopefully like in near future, maybe in the fall, analyst day that we are gonna have, we can go very into some of these details more.
Great. On CRC as that product gets launched, I'm just curious how you see that product over time playing out in terms of where volume comes from. Obviously there's unscreened folks, there's colonoscopy, there's stool DNA, and then there's FIT-FOBT. I think you're kind of leaning on the unscreened side, but I'm just curious kind of what the plan is there to really target those patients, especially seeing that most of those don't really interact very much with the healthcare system potentially anyway. How do you really go after the unscreened people, and where do you think your volumes will come from?
I think initially, like, you know, that unscreened patient population, new to screening patient population, which, you know, what we mean by that is the age of 45- 49, there are total of about 40 million-50 million of them, that are in play. Really the unmet need is really big. In fact, a good fraction of them are actually in touch with the health system. Like when you just look at the people who say yes, they wanna get tested by stool-based kind of, colorectal cancer screening devices, at the end they never submit their samples. Or basically, you know, it's really a lossy workflow just based on how much patient follow through is needed and really the patient preference of doing those kind of tests or not.
A bunch of them are in fact really connected with the health system, and we feel very good about it. I think really like, you know, as PCPs get experience with our test and ECLIPSE readout comes, and they see really our superior performance, that hopefully, you know, we expect and hopefully ECLIPSE is gonna have confirmation for it. I think, based on patient preference, which is toward blood, a bunch of those testing has a potential to get converted to blood-based, CRC screening. But we have to see. We have to see what the ECLIPSE readout would be and, the initial experience of the doctors with our blood test, how that would be.
Great. Thank you so much.
We now turn to Tejas Savant from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. Good evening. I'll start with one on MRD and then switch to biopharma. Helmy, can you share any sort of quantitative color on adoption so far, and what exactly is embedded into your guide for Reveal and Response? Is it fair to assume it's contributing to volumes, but you're not expecting much in terms of contribution to your clinical revenue this year?
We continue to be very pleased with the progress around Reveal. We see very robust adoption of that, you know, product. I think the patient story that, you know, we mentioned, I think, you know, shows some of the really exciting applications of that technology and how it's having impact, today. In terms of, you know, I mean, we're not, you know, right, for competitive reasons, we're not necessarily breaking, things out in terms of each of the individual products. We may in the future, but we're keeping that, volume kind of aggregated at this point. I would say that, in terms of, revenue contribution, certainly the core products, you know, Guardant360 are contributing the bulk of our clinical volume.
We do have a risk-based approach in terms of our guidance, in terms of the likely kind of puts and takes in terms of reimbursement. Obviously, private payer reimbursement on the Reveal side will take much longer, with Medicare being a nearer-term opportunity. We think, you know, with tissue, we think that's also a nearer-term opportunity and response once again, I think will be more similar to Reveal.
Got it. That's helpful. One follow-up on pharma. Are you seeing any impact from cancellations here in terms of your backlog, or should we be expecting a more back-end loaded year in 2022? Then on the smart LB launch that you spoke about as being positioned for pharma customers, is it fair to expect that to essentially be a replacement for GuardantOMNI on a go-forward basis at a similar price point or too early to tell?
Yeah. Maybe I'll start with the smart liquid biopsy and maybe Mike, you can speak to the first question. Smart liquid biopsy, we typically launched a biopharma initially , especially in the RUO setting. It allows us to fine-tune that test and really start I think important clinical collaborations around collecting data. It's really no different than other products that we've launched in the past. We do see it as segmenting our customer base between smart liquid biopsy, Omni and Guardant360 CDx. We see it as another opportunity to really segment and provide a full gamut of tests for the entire spectrum of applications that biopharma will have. Certainly smart liquid biopsy will be the future of Guardant360 at some point.
Maybe to add on that on the biopharma volume, you know, we had a very strong closeout of the year, and we've seen that sort of healthy rebound in the second half of 2021, and we see that definitely flowing into 2022. We've not really been impacted by any cancellations or any real impact on the business. It's always back-end loaded on the biopharma side. Our Q4 is always by far the strongest quarter. Although we're forecasting biopharma volume growth of greater than 30%, it will be back-ended. I think we'll see sequentially lower volumes in Q1, and then that start to ramp up throughout 2022, again, to get to that 30%+ growth on volume.
Very helpful. Thanks for the time, guys. Appreciate it.
Yeah, thanks.
Our next question comes from Puneet Souda from SVB Leerink. Please go ahead.
Hi, Helmy. I'm early. Thanks for taking the question. First one on screening, if I could ask. You know, ECLIPSE you mentioned is nearing enrollment completion of 13,000, with 12,750 enrolled already. Could you maybe just elaborate where colonoscopies stand and, you know, do you feel still good about reaching the desired event rate for CRC that you wanna have in this trial? Anything you can provide there, that'd be helpful. A question that we get from investors that is around advanced adenomas. You know, how important are they in your view, and should we expect to see any data before the pivotal ECLIPSE readout?
Sure. Thanks, mate, for asking a question. In terms of the 12,750 actual enrollment, we reached that, I think, middle of December now. ECLIPSE is active. You know, the patients are going through the colonoscopy. Additional patients are getting in through the whole workflow of the journey in terms of biopsies and diagnostic tests for the patients that colonoscopy find something in them, and then staging, which typically involves some additional imaging to really figure out the stage of the disease. Different patient population is in different phases of that journey.
So far, you know, we have over 10,000 colonoscopy reports, but even for the ones that we have colonoscopy reports, bunch of them are, you know, going into next phases of the diagnostic journey till we really get into the CRC identification and confirmation by the central pathology that we have. That's why this thing takes few more months. You know, all in, without going into a lot of details in terms of the timeline, you know, still we are expecting that hopefully we are gonna get a quick readout sometime around middle of this year. We're excited to see what's gonna happen there. Regarding advanced adenoma, we talked about it earlier too, and, you know, it's kind of interesting.
When we look at the PCP market as of that, at least based on our findings so far, and mainly coming from a 300-physician survey that we've done.
The differentiation of advanced adenoma performance across different available tests out there are, you know, not there. Still, PCPs cannot really distinguish different tests based on their performance. A lot of focus has been around CRC sensitivity. Having said that, in mid-term to long-term, I believe the advanced adenoma performance would get a, you know, a lot of. We're gonna see a lot of detailing and messaging and education in the field. Over mid to long-term, this could be a competitive kind of a factor still. That's why we worked on the advanced adenoma development and data generation. In terms of timeline to put the data out there, the data that we have with our partners and, you know, collaborators, they're gonna get published and presented in conferences obviously.
ECLIPSE readouts, which is basically we have full control of disclosure of that data, the top-line data, whenever we have it's gonna get disclosed very quickly without any bundling to conferences, obviously. In terms of timeline, we have to see which one is gonna be ahead. I think the main data is gonna be presented as part of ECLIPSE readout.
Got it. Super helpful. Just a quick follow-up on MRD and Reveal and recurrence monitoring. Help me, what sort of data readouts we should be looking out for, you know, in terms of maybe larger patient size or other prospective trials or more actionability around the Reveal? When can we get an early glimpse of the smart liquid biopsy performance? Thank you.
Yeah. No, great questions. You know, obviously, we presented some updated data, some new data at ASCO GI recently, and we're very excited by that. We presented some data on breast at JP Morgan, and we're hopeful that we can present kind of a fuller analysis of that in the interim. I would say that those two trials, I think, will continue to have data readouts, you know, throughout the year in the interim. There are other studies we are working on besides ORACLE and COBRA and some of the larger studies that will likely read out over the next few quarters. It's something where the engine is working, and we're hopeful that there'll be a steady stream of data, not just across CRC, but other indications.
I would imagine the smart liquid biopsy platform, probably the deepest and kind of most extensive maybe preview we would give of that would probably be at our Investor Day in this fall.
Okay. All right. Fabulous, guys. Thanks.
Yeah. Thank you.
We now turn to Derik De Bruin from Bank of America. Your line is open.
Hello. Good afternoon, and thank you for taking my call. A couple of questions. I think the first one is on biopharma. I'm getting asked by investors about the competitive dynamic in that space, just because there's clearly a lot of companies that are going on there trying to go into that market. Can you talk a little about, you know, you know, how your partners are choosing Guardant and are they running head-to-head trials with, you know, with 360 and with Reveal and some of the other things like this? Just some of this, like what gives a flavor of some of the studies that are going on in the competitive dynamic in there would be really helpful.
Yeah. No, that's a good question. I would say that for therapy selection market around 360 and Omni, we're past that head-to-head phase. I mean, that was a few years ago. That's an area that we do extremely well. You know, I think, you know, if we don't win, it's largely because, you know, maybe someone's broken the bank on their end in terms of cost or, you know, so on. We obviously wanna keep our margins in line, wanna make sure that, you know, our costs and prices kind of remain stable. It's not something we typically compromise on. Yeah, we feel like we've had excellent win rates there. We're working with over 100 biopharma companies now and growing. All the metrics we track are very positive.
We don't see much churn on the biopharma side. In terms of new products, we're often in that phase where pharma companies are doing head-to-heads, you know, analyses. We've also been very pleased with you know results of all the head-to-head studies that we've been a part of. We very much see it as the early days of Guardant360 and Omni. We're seeing interest from some of the newer areas we're working on, smart liquid biopsy and other products.
We see that not only is the demand for existing products continuing to grow, even something like Guardant360 CDx is growing, you know, growing very nicely, and we're seeing more demand as that's now an approved platform that, you know, has sort of de-risked some of the analysis that can be done with that. We're seeing, you know, really strong demand from new products that we're launching as well. We're very pleased with the breadth of the portfolio, and as it's getting broader, we're seeing we're able to create a stronger engagement and frankly stronger moat around our relationships with biopharma clients.
Thanks for that. Just one other one. Just digging up some ancient history. When we were doing the IPO, you know, in 2018, there was a lot of focus on lung during our discussions, and then that shifted more to CRC for obvious reasons. I guess, what's evolved and what's changed, you know, in the lung assay? I mean, you guys, you've got a next-generation assay, but how has it sort of been enhanced? Is it with the new smart protocols? Also, you know, there is another company out there that's looking in the liquid biopsy space on lung cancer. I mean, at first glance, they look like they're using perhaps some similar technologies.
Any sort of, like, compare and contrast on what's going on in the market and how that's evolved over time would be really helpful. Thank you.
Amir ?
Yeah. In terms of the lung versus CRC, the question is mainly around the screening. The exciting thing is, I think since 2015, that we started publicly talking about our LUNAR program, which is around our screening and MRD. We talked about multi-cancer kind of initiatives. Even during those days, there were four cancers that I believe we started at the same time, colon cancer, lung cancer, breast cancer, and ovarian cancer, and a few other cancer types over the years got added in terms of understanding the biology and generating visibility data. Now, why CRC became our lead anchor indication is really because of other factors, including regulatory pathway, now in fact reimbursement pathway.
Looking at it this way, that once we have this FDA-approved Medicare-covered test, really our test is indicated for vast majority of people at age 45 or above. That's a very good actually anchor indication for us to really add other cancer types on top of that. That's why I think CRC has become our anchor indication. As you've seen, like, we are adding lung, and throughout 2022, you're gonna see the data from a few other cancer types. I think already in some conferences we've shown data in pancreatic, bladder, and maybe a couple other cancer types, but you're gonna see more of those. It's been really a multi-cancer screening journey for us with CRC as our anchor lead indication.
We now turn to Max Masucci from Cowen and Company. Please go ahead.
Thanks for taking the question. First on MRD, you know, do you have a rough idea or expectation, you know, of what the split will be between MRD monitoring clinical volumes coming from the adjuvant setting, versus tests used for cancer recurrence monitoring in 2022? How quickly do you expect that volume mix to shift in favor of cancer recurrence? Is that a 2023 event?
You mean just to kind of break it out, like, you know, first kind of test after in the adjuvant setting versus tests for monitoring that are subsequent to that first test?
Yeah. Yeah, exactly. Just in 2022, what percentage of an MRD monitoring volumes across all vendors, you know, will come from tests that are used on patients in that 6-month adjuvant window versus those that are in remission and are using the test for, you know, cancer recurrence monitoring?
Yeah. We're still in the early days, you know, and obviously our call points is mostly to the oncologist. Given that we're still ramping up, you know, very strongly, we're getting a lot of those initial time points. We think that, you know, throughout 2022 and certainly into 2023, majority of the tests will continue to be that initial time point. You know, we are seeing the strong growth in that sort of recurring testing stream as well. We're monitoring both sides, seeing that mix, and it's something that, you know, I think we're very pleased with the progress with. I think over time, to your point, one of the advantages of a blood-only test is really being able to access that prevalent population.
If you think about the 15 million cancer survivors, there are, you know, the majority of them, 90% are more than a year out from their curative resection or that adjuvant kind of period. We see that, you know, as we continue to build our position, that there's an enormous opportunity we have before us. Even as we build out our primary care franchise, for instance, on the screening side, there's really a lot of synergistic interplay we can have in terms of accessing that prevalent population, even in the primary care setting. We're very excited by kind of what the future holds for us.
Makes sense. You've built a 100, you know, 100+ person primary care sales team. It would be great to hear what sort of initiatives and responsibilities the PCP sales reps have on their plate today, you know, how much time and effort they're dedicating to, you know, the Guardant Shield LDT launch versus, you know, preparing for a broader rollout in 2023, after potential FDA approval.
Yeah, sure. Actually, the team is now well onboarded, well-trained, and a bunch of them got deployed to the field, setting the scheduling and, you know, meetings. Some of the meetings, in fact, started to happen.
As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, you know, in terms of bringing awareness to blood-based cancer screening, getting the feedback from our targeted PCP list in terms of the way we are looking at the market. I can tell you that we are very pleased with a bunch of these early feedback that we are getting from the market. In fact, many of them are waiting for Guardant Shield LDT to come live. Many of them already have patients in mind that if we were live, they want to start using the test. Very encouraging for us and it's really confirmed a bunch of assumptions that we had. The team is busy with, you know, prepping and getting this LDT launch as a very successful launch for us. You know, they're gonna actually expand their activities to support the IVD launch.
All the focus for us at this time would be a successful LDT launch in 2022. Well, in the first half of 2022.
We now turn to Jack Meehan from Nephron Research. Please go ahead.
Thanks. I had a question for Mike. You know, you talked about the investments going into the business. I was just hoping you could walk us maybe down the income statement, gross margin, R&D, sales and marketing, G&A, and just give some color on cost guidance for 2022.
Yeah, sure, Jack. On gross margins, you know, we always talk about this 60%-70% sort of target that we have. For 2021, you know, we were very successful, though we had gross margins for the full year at about 67%. I think, you know, we'll expect to see some pressures on gross margins in 2022, mainly coming from the fact that we've got, you know, new products, the volume's starting to ramp up, but it's gonna take time to get reimbursement. So we probably expect the gross margins to be in the sort of the low 60s. On the OpEx side, again, yeah, we talked about the investments on the prepared remarks earlier. You know, we increased our OpEx about 70%, and this is non-GAAP OpEx, about 70%.
Mm-hmm.
In 2021. Most of that growth was coming from R&D and in sales and marketing. We made heavy investments there. I think when we look at 2022, that growth level is gonna be lower. It's probably gonna be a growth of about 40%. Probably, you know, most of that growth will be on the commercial side. You know, we hired roughly 100 people on the screening side of the business towards the end of last year. All of those expenses are gonna flow into 2022. I think, you know, most of that growth will be coming on the sales and marketing side.
On the research and development side, you know, we're still pushing on the product portfolio and generating data and for oncology products. On the screening side of the business, continuing to develop the multi-cancer screening device. Again, we expect the OpEx to grow about 40% in 2022.
We now turn to Matt Sykes from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Thanks for squeezing me in. I'll just leave it to one question given the time. Just on the community oncology market, just given the importance to your clinical volumes. I think you mentioned that the commercial team's around 250. Just what are your plans in terms of growing that? Do you feel like you've got a good size right now to drive that volume growth? Just on the 50% of interactions with oncologists that are in person, are there expectations that that increases or have some of the digital engagement that your reps have been doing could offset that if that sort of 50% level stays the same throughout the course of the year?
Yeah, good questions. You know, I think we're hopeful that you know, essentially that the 250 reps we have, you know, I think there's still some room to grow in terms of really getting up to speed in terms of some of the new hirings we've made. Obviously, the access hasn't been you know, the best in terms of you know, when those reps have come on. We see a lot of room to potentially grow as restrictions are lifted and access has opened up. We're hopeful that you know, on the, I know many of the pharma companies have sort of downsized some of their teams and are going to much more digital engagement. You know, this test you know, there's a lot more information behind it.
There's a lot that we do to actually help support physicians, especially on the decision support side. We really see that as an opportunity for very close engagement with physicians. That being said, we are increasing our investments on the digital side. I think there's a lot of opportunities there that have opened up not just of where the technology has gone, but I think you know, physicians I think are much more adept and more open to some of those engagement channels now. That's definitely an area of opportunity for us and growth. The second part of the question?
Hey, thank you.
Okay. Thanks.
We now turn to Dan Leonard from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you. I was just hoping you could elaborate on the Shield LDT launch? How are you framing success if you're not planning for material revenue in 2022? Could there be more of a revenue opportunity than you framed? Another blood screening test is on the market with some healthy sales expectations for 2022, so perhaps you could compare and contrast your opportunity. Thank you.
Yeah, sure. You know, our strategy for commercialization of Shield, in general, LDT or down the road IVDs, to go through a classical route of, you know, engagement with payers and securing reimbursement pathways in order to make sure we can go for the long-term win here, which is unlocking this $20 billion TAM and 10s of millions of people need to really get access to our screening test. As a result, like in the early days, obviously, since we don't have any coverage policies, any payments by payers, we expect very minimal kind of ASP, very, very low. As a result, we cannot contribute materially in a meaningful way to the top line of Guardant revenue.
The first major reimbursement that we are expecting and planning now is hopefully post FDA approval would be Medicare coverage, and after that, hopefully followed up by Medicare Advantage, and bunch of early payers would come on board following the Medicare decision. But that would be, like, in the post FDA approval, which at this time we are expecting in 2023 if that review goes well. That's the main reason that in 2022, at this time, we are not projecting any material revenue contribution because of very low ASP.
We now turn to Patrick Donnelly from Citi. Please go ahead.
Hey, guys. Thanks for squeezing me in here. Helmy, maybe one for you, just on the international side. I know you guys have laid a lot of groundwork there, you know, in Europe. You have the Japan JV. How should we think about that kind of building in 2022, whether it's a catalyst set or maybe even some volume build. What should we be keeping our eye on the international side as you guys continue to expand there?
Yeah, no, great question. Yeah, we're very excited about the progress we've made over the last couple of years. In Japan, I think we're nearing an important catalyst, which is regulatory approval of Guardant360. We're hopeful that'll come in the coming months. As we mentioned, it's a very large market opportunity with 400,000 late-stage patients, reimbursement rates that are similar to reimbursement rates in the U.S. around comprehensive genomic profiling. We're building up that team, and we're gearing up for, I think, a very nice launch of that product. Given you know, ramp times, it's unlikely to be significant in 2022, but I think it could be you know, something very nice in 2023 in terms of its contribution.
In terms of Europe, we're also laying the groundwork there with two labs that should be up and running the next 12 months or so in the U.K. and Spain. We're very hopeful that in those partnerships, we can work together with those KOLs and academic centers to really secure public reimbursement, you know, once those labs are up and running. That'll be a longer term event horizon, but it's something that I think is a very nice setup for us to really do international the right way and hopefully in a way that really unlocks a significant revenue opportunity.
For our final question, we turn to Kyle Mikson from Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Hey, thanks. I want to go back to Shield for lung though. Let's say you launch Shield for lung in, like, a few years, presumably after, you know, the CRC launch. Maybe you have reimbursement approval for CRC at that point. How do you envision, like, the two cancer assays faring in a market where you already have, you know, maybe 10-50 cancer tests already kind of relatively established? I just wanted to ask, do you think there's disadvantages to being one of the first to market, and that could actually help your case?
Yeah. You know, we have a LDT route and an IVD route. You know, Guardant Shield LDT and Guardant Shield IVD after FDA approval. You can expect that LDT device would have faster cycle of upgrades and innovation behind it. With Guardant Shield IVD is gonna have basically longer time horizon for approval. For instance, in the case of lung, I expect we should be able to upgrade Guardant Shield LDT to include lung indication much, much faster than at the time that we have Shield Lung readouts for FDA submission and going through FDA review cycle to really upgrade that device. That's gonna take a few years for us. Similar story can get applied to other cancer types.
A panel of cancer types can get added to the LDT device much faster than getting IVD claim for those cancer types. I hope that answered your question.
We've come to the end of our Q&A. We'd like to thank you for joining today's call, and you may now disconnect your lines.