You really did separate me from the teachers.
They took their seats first.
Good to see you. Oh, my gosh. I think with the music fading, that means we're starting. Well, welcome back after lunch. I'm still Joanne Wuensch, the Medical Technology Analyst here. That has not changed. These people are new up here. Let me introduce Joe Gilliam, the President and Chief Operating Officer, Alex Thurman, CFO, and Chris Lewis, Vice President, Investor Relations and Corporate Affairs. They're from Glaukos. You can see that now. A lot to talk about, but I think I'm gonna go straight to the chase, which is guidance. I'm receiving a lot of pushback on how you decided to put guidance together. Let's start there.
How you think about kicking, you know, building off of the fourth quarter 2022 delivery, what the puts and takes were as we thought about 2023.
Sure. No warm-up question, I guess.
No, I'll tell it to the end of the warm-up.
That's fair. I think a handful of things, and it's probably best to break it down in the conversation around the individual business areas as you think about the 2023 guidance. From a macro standpoint first, you know, our thinking really was coming out of 2022 and the CMS-related, you know, headwinds and things were there. We really wanna make sure that we were kinda walking before we ran. There's a lot of reasons to be optimistic from various, you know, potential drivers of revenue in 2023. In general, we wanted to sort of see some of those proof points play themselves out a bit before we got ahead of that from a guidance standpoint.
As it relates to the individual areas of our business, you know, I'll start perhaps in the Corneal Health segment where, you know, if you look over the last several quarters, certainly the last year and a half, we've established a pattern of sort of high single-digit to low double-digit growth. I think that we feel confident about the ability to continue to deliver that high single-digit type growth in that franchise over the course of the year. The biggest drivers there tend to be the continued adoption of Photrexa in the United States. We've done a lot of investments to continue to accelerate that. We're also enhancing some of our other services around it, including co-pay assistance, things like that tend to be a gross-to-net adjustment.
We may see a little bit of that headwind against the, you know, what otherwise would be the trend during the year. On the international glaucoma side, if you look back over the last several quarters on that, we've pretty consistently, at least in local currency, FX has been on quite a journey over the last 12 to 18 months. On a local currency perspective, we've delivered 2025% growth there and feel good about it. I think it's still early days in those markets.
Having said that, entering the year, I think now at this point, Alcon has owned Hydrus, for example, for a year, and they're obviously well established internationally, and we expect to continue to see them entering in those markets, and we wanna make sure we're being prudent around those dynamics as we think about the full year 2023. That leaves the U.S. I think, you know, there it's really continued trends around the CMS dynamic, which I'm sure you'll wanna explore a little bit more, and the sunsetting of some of those things as we enter in 2023, hopefully being offset by some of the growth drivers we have, whether that be, you know, iAccess, iPRIME or perhaps most importantly, iStent infinite in 2023.
Let's start with the U.S. market. Reimbursement changed significantly, which impacted sales last year. How did it also maybe impact physician practice?
Yeah. Well, I think they're in some ways two and the same. I think that anytime you have that magnitude of change, from a reimbursement standpoint that we saw, there's gonna be some shifts in the way that patients or surgeons think about their treatment algorithm. In this case, you know, we've certainly seen that over the course of the year. That was reflected in our results. Thankfully, it wasn't the magnitude that we feared, and that candidly, we felt pretty good about the way that most surgeons continue to view the risk-benefit calculus of doing stents in combination with cataract surgery versus other perhaps more invasive alternatives.
Do they start using other types of procedures to deal with, glaucoma or maybe even stay on drops longer?
No, I think what you've seen is less about that, broader paradigm shift where it's about drops versus that. Maybe there's some of that. I think it has more to do with a shift towards a bit more invasive procedures, the goniotomies and viscodilation or canaloplasty procedures. That's what we saw really almost day one of 2022, when those CMS adjustments came into place.
Why the more conservative is my word, look towards the 2023 U.S. guidance? This is the art behind you.
Yeah.
You've annualized it. Some would even call it easy prompts.
Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's always easy when it's a spreadsheet, right?
I know.
I think the reality is anytime you come out of of a stretch like that, where as an organization, really most importantly as a sales organization, you know, you're playing a lot of defense, right? You're having conversations around economics, which is not necessarily their happy place. They'd much rather be talking about the risk-benefit calculus or the clinical utility of a product. You know, as you turn the corner this year, there's no doubt we're hopeful to be much more on the front foot. It's true, we've sunset obviously the direct impact. Those selling efforts don't go away, right? I mean, the conversations with the surgeons don't go away. You just hope that there's a dwindling impact of that. I think we saw that over the course of 2022.
It gives reason for encouragement 2023, but I, you know, I think we'd rather see a little bit more of it play out before we start getting more refined on kinda what that means in terms of that specific number for 2023.
Do you think during this transition period the market slowed significantly? What do you think happened to your share?
Yeah, I think anytime you have that conversation in a dynamic like what's gone on with the CMS cuts in the U.S., you have to break that down between volume and dollars, right?
Yeah.
I think on the volume side, certainly coming out of COVID, I have every reason to believe that the market continued to grow or grow fairly nicely over the course of the year and probably still doing so as we enter the next into 2023. From a dollar standpoint, there probably was a bit of a, well, actually a material headwind as you think about that conversion from stent-based procedures to a portion of them being done either, you know, in canaloplasty or goniotomy, which tend to come at a little lower price point. I think that was a dollar headwind to the market.
Similar to our own business, I think you lap that heading into 2023, and I think the dynamics from a market standpoint should be accelerating as you think about the combination of factors. Number one, getting that seismic move behind you, the continued move towards doing multiple procedures where, depending upon the disease progression and that patient surgical preference leaning that direction. Ultimately, and most importantly, the move out of combination cataract and into the broader standalone interventional glaucoma market, which have quite frankly dwarfs that opportunity of the combo cataracts.
A bit on the macroeconomic side, patients needing to pay copay, elderly wanting to pay out of pocket for certain things or not, depending on how their retirement portfolios have been doing.
Yeah.
What are you seeing in those factors?
I think it's a great question that the Corneal Health side of the franchise is probably more exposed to that dynamic as you described, because the vast majority of those patients are covered by commercial insurance. In the case of the glaucoma franchise, certainly in the U.S., as you know from past conversations, about 80% of those are done by Medicare patients, and a lot of those patients have, you know, secondary insurance and the like, associated with their Part B coverage. I think it tends to be more immune to that in the glaucoma side, not totally, but more immune.
On the cornea side, we haven't seen a lot of that, but in some ways, our own move to try to make sure we have enhanced copay assistance programs is designed to alleviate some of that potential economic burden for the patient in that setting.
What about for the physician who may wanna add or subtract certain mixed procedures into his or her practice? I mean, there's an upcharge or a stacking or what, pick the adjectives that may or may not happen as they start to do that.
Well, I think for the surgeons, for the most part, practices remain quite healthy at this stage. So if anything, when you have your channel checks, you'll hear more about backlog building than you will about procedural demand being an issue.
Okay.
Some of that's COVID, but a lot of it has to do with staffing, which I think has probably been exhausted as a topic at this point, but it's still a reality. Whether it's in their billing and reimbursement folks or whether that's in the, you know, the technical staff associated with procedures, it's a real consideration. Most of the docs that we talk to in the accounts, their patterns are full.
Okay.
Yeah.
being a student of ophthalmology for a long time, recession resistant, recession-proof?
Well, I think ophthalmology as a general matter, has elements of both.
Mm-hmm.
Clearly there's an area in ophthalmology, depending on, you know, various companies that you cover that have a lot more tied to the sort of economic, you know, cycles that go out there. Certainly as you get closer to, you know, private pay or patient pay dynamics, the refractive areas, et cetera, you've got a bit more exposure to those economic cycles. I think for something like glaucoma care and even quite frankly, keratoconus care, where the patient needs to have something done.
Yeah.
-those tend to be a bit more insulated. It doesn't mean that on the margin, people don't make pocketbook decisions around that, but for the vast majority of those patients, that's not really an option. They need to get the care.
Let's spend some time on the pipeline.
Okay.
You have a few products coming out.
Yeah.
iAccess was launched last year. Can you sort of give us an update on where that fits into the continuum of care, and also an update of, adoption at this stage?
Yeah. I think starting with iAccess, it's a part of the algorithm. I mean, the way we look at it is the evolution of care, whether that's based upon, you know, the evolution of doctor algorithms or economics, we wanna make sure that we have solutions available for our customers and have that available. In the case of iAccess, for those doctors who feel like a goniotomy is warranted, whether it's done on its own or with other procedures in parallel, I think we wanna make sure that that's part of it. Like everything, when we go at something like that, we try to make sure that we're providing a meaningful innovation and providing alternatives that are for the betterment of the patient. I think iAccess has that potential.
Having said that, it's obviously always gonna be a relatively small portfolio.
Right.
It's a different price point. It's used in a different, most often a different disease stage, you know, in terms of severity. While it's getting utilization, there's no doubt about it, and we're approaching a year on the market with it sometimes can get lost in the shuffle in the context of the way, you know, you all as investors looking at it from the outside would see it.
Almost a year ago at, I think it was ASCRS or AAO, one of the meetings, there was a big discussion of, where does iAccess fit?
Mm-hmm.
The concept of stacking reimbursement codes and stuff like that. Is that behind us or is that still in discussion?
I think reimbursement's always an evolution. Let me just clear up one thing. You heard consistently from us on earnings calls that iAccess had all of the features and benefits that made it capable of being a goniotomy device.
Yep.
reimbursed on that. I know there was some confusion around that. It really is a universal tool in the way it can be utilized. Surgeons, based upon whatever the reimbursement dynamics are or their own surgical preference and what they think is the need of the patient, can certainly utilize that tool accordingly. I think that in the context of whether doctors are doing it in combination with other procedures has a lot to do with the individual MAC and commercial carriers, their own surgical preference, and I think it's something that will continue to evolve. A lot of these docs who really believe in this are investing in creating the clinical evidence and the various things that ultimately support reimbursement. I think it's a journey on that front.
For us, it's about having it as a part of the portfolio, and doctors can utilize it however they deem is appropriate for their patients.
Okay. Anything else on iAccess you want to comment on before we move on?
I think we're good on iAccess.
We're good on, good on iAccess? Good. What about Intrepid? For those who don't know the product, do you wanna briefly explain it and where that fits in the continuum of care?
Well, first of all, it's based on our core technology that we know today with InjectW in combination for cataract surgery. It's a three-stent solution. It's a redesigned injector system, which we think provides increased utility for the surgeons and facilitates the utilization of the device. Probably most importantly in it is it's our first real entry into the standalone or interventional market. If you think back for Glaukos, 20-plus years ago, the reason we created the company was to be able to go after the broader continuum of care in glaucoma. The FDA was a little bit more cautious about that and wanted the combination cataract, you know, procedure to go first.
For us, it's the fulfillment of a 20-year journey to be able to start treating these patients in a more standalone, you know, setting. We were pleased to get clearance of that late last year in patients who have more advanced patients who failed medical and surgical therapy. We're now in the process of navigating the MAC consideration processes and turning on the coverage of that important product for us.
Can you remind everybody the size of the population that Intrepid targets? I'm gonna add to this: What is the MAC process?
Yeah.
What's the timing of that?
Okay. Well, I'll start with the MAC process. We can finish the size.
'Cause that's easier?
Yeah. Well, no, I don't know if it's actually anything involving reimbursement's ever easy. In the past, it's been a six to nine-month process for us, when we've gone through that, and basically you're opening up the conversation with the MACs to make sure that you get a codified policy in place, which really reassures the accounts in terms of what they'll be paid and on a consistent basis. In the interim period, you go through more case by case, so you're navigating, you're adjudicating each one of these things, and whether they've launched a pro fee or not, you tend to be in hand-to-hand combat in terms of making sure these things get paid. The overall market opportunity is really a matter of evolution.
I would say that the lowest hanging fruit, if you think about the, you know, those patients who are more severe and advanced, and they've failed surgical and medical therapy, and they may be headed down the path of a, of a very invasive procedure in terms of trabeculectomy or tube surgery. The best data we've got is there's 125,000-150,000 of those surgeries done a year.
If you think about most doctors wanting to utilize that kind of right ahead of that more invasive procedure, maybe it's, let's call it 200,000 potential procedures a year, which is, for us, a very meaningful market that we think from a doctor perspective, becomes a pretty straightforward conversation for them to have with their patients at that stage of the disease. Over time, as we've talked about, we're investing in additional studies to continue to expand that label and hopefully get into the mild to moderate standalone patient population. As you go there, it could be, you know, half a million or more procedures a year in the US.
A lot of that depends on iDose and the various things that can, you know, potentially, cannibalize each other as it thinks about the continuum of care for those patients.
In terms of getting a professional fee and going through the MACs and everything else like that, where are you on your journey?
We're in the initial phases where you make the application, you go through all that. They acknowledge that it's a valid request, you go into, you know, open meetings and drafts and everything like that. I'd say we're on schedule, but it's a relatively early innings as you'd expect.
Is that a year process?
It can be a six-month process. It can be a nine-month process. There's no statutory timeline. It could be a one-year process, but the, our historical experience has been it's a six- to nine-month process.
Okay. A code will be created at one of the MACs or at several of them, or how do you...
Yeah.
Where are we going with this?
We have the code.
Mm-hmm.
What you're really looking to do is have the coverage turned on.
Okay.
that it's no longer, you know, case by case or non-covered, depending upon the MAC. They'll crosswalk that code from a professional fee standpoint to the nearest Category I code.
Okay.
They'll establish a professional fee. Mind you, the facility fee is already established. It's more about coverage of that. They need to establish the pro fee 'cause it's a T-code.
Once that's established, you start marketing it. Is there a wait list of people who want the procedure done? Are doctors clamoring to be trained?
I think some of it's already happening. I mean, to be clear, we're already selling iStent infinite, right? There are settings that are there within these MACs. You know, we're adjudicating each of these claims. We're out there doing that. I hope that as people grow enthusiasm and they know these patients, that if they can avoid that tube or trab and they can hold off for us to make sure they're gonna get paid appropriately, that's the case. I think that for the most part, doctors are gonna do what they need for their patients. If that means, you know, doing the procedure even today, hopefully they're doing that. We are marketing it. It's commercial. It's approved.
To your point, you start putting a lot more fuel into that fuselage when you get to the place where you have fully established reimbursement.
You have the same sales force for all of the MIGS products?
Mm.
Do you have sub... Okay. Put me in the seat of I'm a salesperson or I'm a physician. I'll let you take which one.
Yeah.
You're coming in. How do you walk through the portfolio so that you get the doctor's attention to the products you want him or her to focus on?
Yeah. I don't think there's a one-size-fits-all process, right? In many ways, it has to do with that individual surgeon and where their algorithm is at and who they see, right? As you know, comprehensive doctor versus glaucoma surgeon is one thing. Are they more inclined to use goniotomy or are they stent-based? Do they see more standalone glaucoma or is the vast majority of their volume combination cataract? I think you really have to tailor that conversation based upon that and where that surgeon's algorithm is at the time. I think the biggest conversation that we have to be having as a sales organization is about raising that awareness of the standalone opportunity and the interventional glaucoma opportunity.
Making sure that these doctors are thinking on a day-to-day basis about opportunities or areas where they can intervene on behalf of the patient, to hopefully, you know, put a bullet in the progression of the disease or at least slow it down considerably. I think that's a new mindset as technologies are becoming available and approved for standalone care, that's gonna be a big push for us as a commercial organization.
Where does your commercial organization stand today versus 12 months ago?
Pretty stable.
Stable?
First of all, we've had a long track record. I think it speaks to the quality of the organization in terms of retention of our commercial organization and sort of voluntary turnover, if you will. In terms of the overall intent of sizing of the organization, we're pretty stable. We continue to add a rep here or there, depending upon territory size and if things get too large, but we're quite stable.
Okay. I'm very proud that we've waited all this time to talk about iDose. I spend a lot of time with investors on it. What oh, you recently submitted something to the FDA. Can you give us an update on where you are with the regulatory process?
Yeah. Well, thanks for that. We announced on Monday that we had submitted. In some ways it's the start of a fulfillment of a very, very long journey, and there are a lot of folks inside the company who've been working on this for well over a decade. The actual submission, I, I have not read every page, but I'm told it was over 90,000 pages of submission to the, to the FDA. It's, it's a massive undertaking, right, for the, for the organization. So for us to get that in, next step with that is obviously for the FDA to do their official, you know, acceptance of the application, over the course of the next 60 days or so, and establish a PDUFA date.
Okay. You're still on track for end of year approval?
We are, yeah.
Maybe earlier?
I don't know about that. I think, you know, what we've said on the earnings call is we're comfortable by the end of the year. The FDA has their timelines and processes. It tends to be with these type of applications that they sit around 10 months. You know, things could be a little faster, it could be a little slower, but that's our best estimate.
Do you think investors are over-focused on iDose?
I'm not sure they're focused on it enough.
Interesting.
But, uh
Okay.
No, I mean, I think that the attention shifts, and for good reason, as it becomes closer and becomes more of a reality and folks are trying to think about how to best model it or incorporate it into their own investment thesis. It's only natural that people would try to get their arms around it. I also think for a company that has historically been more oriented towards medical technology and med tech type investors, some of the things that go along with a drug or a drug-device combination, you know, are new or require, you know, re-education. We're happy to do that.
Let's pull this apart a little bit. Approval by the end of the year. Reimbursement when?
You have to break that down into the individual sort of lanes of that reimbursement.
Okay.
The facilities, the T-codes that exist today that are currently sequestered or dormant, until we turn them on, really play a process not that dissimilar than iStent infinite. The facility fee will be established. The coverage of that, the pro fee crosswalk, all the things we just talked about with iStent infinite will be a reality, for iDose as well as we enter into 2024. In parallel, the drug itself, so where our revenue comes from, will be a pass-through. For that, you'll establish pretty quickly a miscellaneous code that ultimately within a quarter or two after that, you'll get a permanent J-code established. The combination of all those things coming together and very similar to iStent infinite.
It's not a black and white seminal moment where this all, you know, turns on. It will be turned on kind of methodically over the course of that period of time. Ultimately, once they all come together, then you really can put the full sort of muscle behind the commercialization of that product.
The muscle going behind the commercialization. I'm making this up, approval second half of the year, two quarters for to get a J code. Start to ramp revenue mid 2024?
Well, again, I hope that there's revenue contribution throughout 2024, but there's clearly gonna be an accelerating effort behind it and hopefully sales associated with it as we make our way through the year.
You need a new sales force for this, or it gets-
No.
put into the bag.
Goes straight into the existing surgical, glaucoma sales force.
Does this surgical sales force, are they used to selling a combo of pharmaceutical and medical device products?
Yeah. I mean, I think for the things that matter for them, right, they're very used to this. These are experienced sales reps who are comfortable in the OR, comfortable carrying multiple products. I'm not so concerned about their ability to carry iDose. That doesn't mean that we haven't made substantial investments in other areas of our commercial organization, right? Whether that be, you know, enhancements, the way we're thinking about it from a marketing perspective, market access with payer coverage and all the various things that go there. We are making a lot of other investments to help make this go. We have a pretty good roadmap from that from our Photrexa and Corneal Health business. It's not our first time down the path of a drug-device combination or a drug for that matter.
We have a pretty good sense of what it takes, and it's just about executing and scaling that against iDose.
Why do you think investors aren't paying a close enough attention to it?
No, I think they can never pay enough attention to it. Again, I think back to when Glaukos went public, right? Even then, a big part of the conversation was, you know, combo cataract MIGS is great, but when are you gonna be able to realize the dream of interventional glaucoma and ultimately iDose as a part of it. For us to kind of finally hopefully be on the doorstep of some of that is super exciting. You know, we welcome any and all investor attention. It may not be that we're willing to answer all the detailed questions at this stage of the game, but that'll all become apparent as we turn the corner into next year.
Let's talk a little bit about phase two data for iLution for dry eye disease.
Yeah.
Help me understand how Glaukos gets into dry eye.
You mean from a commercial perspective, a development perspective?
Every aspect of it. I mean, and because seriously, you know...
Yeah.
You were a MIGS company, and you're, you know, multiple products in MIGS. you've got.
Yeah.
You know, pharma med device.
Yeah.
Oh, now you're getting into dry eye.
Yeah.
I have absolutely no doubt that there are visions for other things.
Yes.
Pun intended.
Yeah. I mean, I think about it a little bit differently. I think about it as we've always been a pioneering company. Maybe it's an overused term, but the reality is, if you think about it, there's different ways to approach building a business. One is you try to create a market, and there's others where you try to build a better mousetrap. You try to do something very differently. The history of MIGS, the history of our keratoconus therapy, these are all very different types of technologies and approaches than ever existed prior to them there. You build a core competency around that, right? How do you launch truly disruptive technologies? How do you navigate all the fun and uncertainty around the reimbursement of these things and have conversations with investors around it too.
I think with the iLution platform, you have a totally different way of approaching drug delivery, right? Really just drugs themselves. It's a pretty universally, potentially applicable platform where in a simple application of a topical cream, whether it be to the upper eyelid or both eyelids, can deliver these drugs. In the case of dry eye, we would not probably have gone directly into dry eye disease or presbyopia for that matter, et cetera, with a typical drop base. That would have been much further down our life cycle. When we came across a potentially transformational technology platform, that's what led us there. There's a whole other element of that business that would have to be built to the extent that this ultimately proves out to be successful.
I hope we'd be doing that in sequence with what would already then be a successful, you know, iDose franchise and as well as with Epioxa on the corneal side. It'd be a natural next evolution or a phase, and there's a lot potentially under the hood there with that iLution platform.
What are you thinking in terms of M&A?
I think the bar is always high, right? I mean, I think at this stage, we probably have a pretty good track record of what you can expect from us. I mean, you never say never, but we have so much going on organically and so much to appropriately fund that and do all the right things by that, our organic opportunity that we tend to prioritize transactions where we think we can create a win-win versus something, you know, more sizable that probably gets the attention of investors. You know, we're always considering all alternatives.
Given all of this, your gross margins have been really healthy in the 80s%. Does it stay at that level as you layer all of these new products on?
I'm gonna give him a break.
Okay.
I'll take that question. actually, you know, we're blessed to have a very healthy, as you said, gross margin. We like this range of 83%-84%, which for our company is wonderful. It gives us a lot of flexibility. Is there potential for it to rise over time? Absolutely. For now, you know, we'll stick with the range that we've given guidance on, we'll see how it all plays out over the next few years.
Very few people talk about margins at this level rising. What stops them from falling?
Well, the fact that it all depends on the product mix, right?
Mm-hmm.
You know, you get into these drugs like an iDose product that have a high, high margin that could keep it from...
Higher than 83 to 84.
It could. Potentially, yeah.
Okay.
reimbursement plays a big role, right? As Alex mentioned, mix and reimbursement. Obviously, we've all seen inflationary pressures on the cost side.
Right.
We've been pretty immune to that, I would say.
That gets me through the gross margin question. Now I'm gonna go to the next one.
Yep.
How do you manage operating expenses so that the company is moving closer to a break even scenario?
Right. That's kind of the focus, right? If I take you through historically-
Mm-hmm.
Our company's always been one that has lived within its means.
Mm-hmm.
We got to a point in our life cycle where we had iDose coming, we had Infinite coming, we have Epioxa, we have other things. We have this huge pipeline. It became apparent to us that we needed to enter into a phase of investments. We're in that phase right now. 2022 was an investment year. 2023 will be an investment year. We built the balance sheet to be able to do that. Once we get through this period of investment, we get to the other side of iDose, that's where we start to see that pathway to break even and profitability.
The good news is Alex has, and Tom, for that matter, have a lot of flexibility in the levers they pull. The gross margin profile you started provides a lot of opportunity for them to adjust up and down how much of that investment we wanna make.
Right.
Are you ready or have you shared publicly a goal towards breakeven?
We've not shared a goal.
No.
Just we've always said we'll start to look towards that pathway once we get on the other side of iDose.
Okay. Most of your sales are in the United States. How do you think about pushing further outside the United States?
Well, I think right now, you know the exact numbers. We're like 25% international, maybe a little bit more when you include the Corneal Health piece of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
$25, $25, $50.
Yeah.
I call it.
In mature ophthalmic markets, you tend to see it about 50/50 between the U.S. And.
Right.
International. Obviously, again, we're pioneering new markets, so I think that the U.S. will always lead. If iDose is as successful as we think it is, it'll probably weight even more towards the U.S. for a period of time, and the international market will continue to be following. We're still in early days there. You know, we've established a nice foothold in the major, you know, European markets, the major other international markets, Japan, et cetera, that you'd expect. We're emerging in some of the other, you know, I'll call it higher growth, earlier stage markets. I feel good about the trajectory that business is on and the opportunity over long haul.
Well, what markets are you in mostly outside the United States right now? Where's your greatest foothold?
Well, we're in,
16.
16 international markets. It's all the major ones you would expect. I mean, we're throughout Europe. We're in Brazil, Canada, Australia, Japan, being the biggest, you know, markets that are there. In the EU, you can imagine it's the, you know, depending on how you look at it, the EU three or the EU five that drive the big chunk of those revenues. What we have seen consistently over the last several years is pretty broad-based growth across the board because we're still teaching and growing these markets from their infancy, sort of where the U.S. was, you know, nearly 10 years ago now.
Is the adoption of the products there as robust? Is the reimbursement in place? What's the essential I'm getting at.
Yeah.
What's holding you back from
Every market's completely different.
Okay.
Every market has its own challenges. I'll give you example. There's I forget how many provinces there are in Canada. We've got almost all of them, but I think I'll get it wrong, but one or two of them are still not fully reimbursing. Germany, the same thing with the KVs. It, it is every situation is different. Some of them are more nationalized. The U.K., we've got full coverage there. It just is a situation by situation, you know, basis and that's where you invest in your market access organization and everything else to continue to drive that forward, and we've been successful in that. That's where it takes time. It takes time.
Yeah.
You know, these are not existing cardiology codes that have been around for a long time. Sometimes they'll come out, and they'll have something where they are incentivizing the wrong thing. Maybe it's, you know, standalone glaucoma instead of combo cataract. You got to go fix that. Just part of the process.
France is a great example as well. We entered the market in 2017, but we didn't get on the list until 2019, maybe two years, and then it took off.
Okay.
Yeah.
It just takes time.
Yeah. Mm-hmm.
Trying to figure out how to word this. Do you think there are too many things on your plate? Or do you think you need more on your plate? I'll put it that way.
Did my wife plant that question? No. This is gonna be a transcript. No, no.
For eternity.
No. I think we're always thinking about that balance in different parts of the organization. It's funny, sometimes you're looking a little bit more two-dimensional than maybe we do, which is it's about the stages of these things, right? You know, when we talk about retina, for example, which we haven't talked about here, you know, that's still pretty early stage. The translation of that into something that we'd have to be thinking about commercially, as I think about it, is still quite a ways off. Right now, the focus, depending on where you're at in the organization, is very different. We've got a ton of focus on building interventional glaucoma around the U.S. glaucoma opportunity, around Epioxa and delivering that in the cornea side.
We still have some time to go before we have to think about iLution and dry eye disease and those kind of things commercially. I think it's more about stage-gating these things appropriately. Part of it is, you know, the bubbling cauldron theory of investment. You don't always know what's gonna rise, so. You don't always know where reimbursement things may change or the commercial landscape may change. I think for us, it's about staying nimble and making adjustments where we need to on the fly. The more opportunities you have there, I think the better. So far, so good in terms of us managing it.
Do you think the ophthalmology market, and I'm talking companies and I guess physician consumption of products at the current time in the macro environment, just to be specific, is stable?
Do we think that the overall ophthalmic market is stable in that, in that context?
improving or declining? I'll give you-
I think it's stable to improving.
Okay.
Again, I think probably the one headwind that still remains is this idea of the staffing issues.
Yeah.
I think, you know, remember, this is a very ASC-oriented, you know, independent-oriented business, if you will, as an industry. The more dollars that were flowing in the hospital channel towards acquiring these folks, the turnover is higher in the practices. I think that's probably if you talk to a broad swath of ophthalmologists about macro fundamentals, it's the thing that would probably stand out the most for them in driving that. Beyond that, it still feels healthy. There's a lot of new doctors coming into the funnel. The patient demographics work, and in general, while we'd always like to see better reimbursement, these things are still getting paid both in terms of the, you know, public sector and the private sector.
I feel pretty good about the macro setup.
For my last question, when we're here this time next year, what are we gonna be talking about?
Well, I sure as heck hope it's a lot of iDose.
Yeah.
Okay.
No, I mean, I think it. Also I think people will start dialing in a lot more around what does it mean for standalone care? What does it mean for interventional glaucoma? How do you really start slicing and dicing that in a way that both makes sense in terms of the practical aspects of it, but then ultimately translates into the way you model the opportunity over time. You know, this is not a drug that's a pill that you just, you know, prescribe it and run. We have to build that market. I think people will be dialing that in a lot more this time next year.
Excellent. Well, thank you very much for joining us today, and I hope you have a great day.
Thanks, Joanne.
Thank you.
Thanks for having us. Thanks for all of you guys sticking it out after lunch. It's tough. All right.