Penumbra, Inc. (PEN)
NYSE: PEN · Real-Time Price · USD
325.33
-1.15 (-0.35%)
At close: May 1, 2026, 4:00 PM EDT
326.00
+0.67 (0.21%)
After-hours: May 1, 2026, 7:55 PM EDT
← View all transcripts

Earnings Call: Q3 2021

Nov 3, 2021

Operator

Good afternoon. My name is Suzanne, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Penumbra's third quarter 2021 conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there'll be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press the pound key. Thank you. I would now like to introduce Ms. Jee Hamlyn- Harris, investor relations for Penumbra. Ms. Hamlyn- Harris, you may begin your conference.

Jee Hamlyn-Harris
Investor Relations Officer, Penumbra

Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining us on today's call to discuss Penumbra's earnings release for the third quarter of 2021. A copy of the press release and financial tables, which includes the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation, can be viewed under the Investors tab on our company website at www.penumbrainc.com. During the course of this conference call, the company will make forward-looking statements pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements regarding our financial performance, commercialization, clinical trials, regulatory status, quality, compliance, and business trends. Actual results could differ materially from those stated or implied by our forward-looking statements due to certain risks and uncertainties, including those referenced in our 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, filed with the SEC.

As a result, we caution you against placing undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, and we encourage you to review our periodic filings with the SEC, including the 10-K previously mentioned, for more complete discussion of these factors and other risks that may affect our future results or the market price of our stock, including but not limited to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business, results of operations, and financial conditions. Penumbra disclaims any duty to update or revise our forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, developments, or otherwise. On this call, certain financial measures are presented on a non-GAAP basis. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures is provided in our posted press release. We anticipate the prepared comments on today's call will run approximately 18 minutes.

Adam Elsesser, Penumbra's Chairman and CEO, will provide a business update. Maggie Yuen, our Chief Financial Officer, will then discuss our financial results for the third quarter. Jason Mills, our Executive Vice President of Strategy, will discuss our updated 2021 guidance. With that, I would like to turn over the call to Adam Elsesser.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Thank you, Jee. Good afternoon, everybody. Thank you for joining Penumbra's third quarter 2021 conference call. Our total revenues for the third quarter were $190.1 million, a year-over-year increase of 25.8% as reported, and 25.6% in constant currency, and a 3.2% sequential increase from the prior quarter. For the third quarter of 2021, we recorded operating income of $8.8 million or 4.6% of revenue, compared to an operating loss of $20.2 million or 13.3% of revenue during the same period last year. Against the backdrop of the spreading Delta variant, particularly in the first part of the quarter, our team executed very well. Our vascular business achieved record results, and our neuro business nearly matched a record quarter as well.

Our business was exceptionally strong in the United States, where our latest products in both vascular and neurothrombectomy are experiencing strong adoption. Overall, our business accelerated throughout the quarter, driven by the RED series of stroke catheters and continued strength in vascular thrombectomy, while our embolization business also performed well, especially as the fall season progressed. I also want to acknowledge our physician customers and hospital staff who, against challenging circumstances, especially with COVID, worked particularly hard to take care of their patients. As a company, we think we are in the best position we've ever been to help more patients than ever before.

As we look forward and the world emerges from this pandemic, the three key dynamics that have defined Penumbra, constant innovation, hiring the best people, and execution, once again defined our work in the third quarter and give us a lot of confidence that we can deliver strong, durable growth for years to come. As it relates to hiring the best people, we are adding remarkable people to the Penumbra team. In addition to the new engineers, other professionals, and best-in-class salespeople that we added, I would like to call your attention to new senior additions. Fred Havard and Joan Kristensen recently joined us with decades of senior medical device experience. Fred will lead international commercial efforts as Senior Vice President, focused on areas outside of Europe and North America. Joan will lead our efforts in Europe and the Middle East as Vice President and Head of Europe.

Also, Riley Russell, a former senior executive at Sony Interactive Entertainment, working on Sony PlayStation and third-party developers, has joined us as Executive Vice President of Third Party Partnerships for Immersive Healthcare. Amir Rubin, the former CEO of Sixense, is leading our research efforts for immersive healthcare as Executive Vice President of Research for Immersive Healthcare. Also, we will continue to promote as well as add additional senior members to the team in the quarters ahead. Now let's focus on our products. Starting with our vascular business, we reported growth of 40.3% year-over-year to $105.5 million in the third quarter. Vascular thrombectomy revenue increased 10% sequentially in the United States, with strong performances across venous, PE, arterial, and coronary.

We continue to see accelerating growth in new physician customers adopting our thrombectomy products in the third quarter, which we think is a testament to both excellent patient outcomes and the value proposition our proprietary computer-aided Lightning Thrombectomy System brings to the healthcare system. We are focused on the opportunity to expand the paradigm of single-session therapy to many more patients going forward. As evidenced by strong results in the third quarter, our computer-aided Lightning technology is resonating with an increasing number of physicians and is becoming an integral part of the treatment algorithms in PE, venous, and arterial procedures. Indeed, both Lightning 12 and Lightning 7 produced strong growth in the quarter, growing double digits sequentially in the U.S.

Like other unique and transformational products we have developed, our Lightning platform is the product of our focus on constant innovation, dedicated to what's truly important to successful and safe outcomes for patients, and the most talented team of engineers and product development professionals in the industry. Moreover, we continue to invest in innovation, clinical studies, and market development initiatives to reach the 90% of patients that can still benefit from this technology each year. In sum, we are just getting started, and our team's work continues. Moving to coronary, we continued seeing an accelerating number of physicians utilize CAT RX to treat their patients in the quarter. We have a tremendous opportunity ahead of us with CAT RX, having reached only about 10% of the coronary patients we believe we can help the most, those with high thrombus burden.

Also, we look forward to the presentation of results of the CHEETAH study, which will be highlighted during the featured clinical research session at the upcoming TCT conference in Orlando, Florida, in two days, on Friday, November 5 th. I will be in attendance, and I hope to see many of you there. Within our vascular embolization business, we matched our record second quarter results, notwithstanding Q2 benefited from some catch-up in deferred procedure while this quarter faced a modest COVID headwind. The uniqueness and breadth of our vascular embolization portfolio continues to resonate with physicians who are finding more reasons to use our products in both chronic and acute settings, including continued strong adoption of Ruby LP, which had another record quarter.

Let me now turn to our neuro business, in which we recorded growth of 11.5% year-over-year to $84.7 million in the third quarter. The neuro team has done incredible work alongside our physician customers throughout this pandemic. The initial launch during the quarter of RED 72 and RED 68 in the United States went extraordinarily well. Paired with RED 62, the RED series expands upon our U.S. stroke portfolio, which recorded robust 17% sequential growth this quarter. Physicians in the United States have responded very positively to the RED series. The extraordinary trackability and clot removal capabilities of the RED series, driven by our new REDglide coating technology and proprietary catheter architecture, are unrivaled in the field. The breadth of the RED series allows physicians to choose the catheter that best matches the patient's vessel size.

In sum, the RED series is designed to give physicians the technology they need to use aspiration as frontline treatment and maximize the ability to achieve first pass success. One of the hallmarks of our neuro business is portfolio breadth, with our stroke, access, and embolization franchises complementing each other extraordinarily well. Our neuro access business produced another record quarter, led by continued adoption of BMX96 and strong international growth. Our neuro embolization business nearly matched our record Q2 results, notwithstanding the COVID-related headwinds to these types of procedures in the third quarter. In sum, we expect momentum to continue in our neuro business as we continue to invest in our team, our innovation engine, and important initiatives to expand access to our neuro products to more patients going forward. Let me now turn to our immersive healthcare business.

We hosted an Investor Day in late September that marked a monumental moment for Penumbra. In addition to announcing the acquisition of Sixense, a leader in virtual reality technology and our longtime partner, we outlined plans to build a platform to provide immersive therapy to tens of millions of patients across a broad range of healthcare settings. The combination of our proprietary hardware, tracking technology, software, and unique content sourced from our own studio, second party partners, as well as a robust group of third-party developers defines the REAL platform and the ecosystem we plan to build as we try to help over 50 million patients in the U.S. alone. The feedback we have received since this event from the healthcare community has been extremely positive. We are dedicated to the important work ahead.

Turning to our international markets, China continues to be a strong contributor to our business, and we see significant opportunities for additional growth well into the future. In addition, we continue to see good momentum in our Japanese business, where we look forward to introducing our latest stroke and neuro products, our entire vascular product portfolio, and eventually our immersive healthcare platform in the future. Our EMEA, Latin America, and Asia Pacific businesses all showed solid growth year-over-year, and we think there are many opportunities to expand our presence in each one of these geographies going forward. Overall, notwithstanding the challenges all companies are facing, we are confident that we are set up to help more and more patients with our existing and future products across all of our product categories and geographies.

I would now like to turn the call over to Maggie to go over our financial results for the quarter.

Maggie Yuen
CFO, Penumbra

Thank you, Adam. Today, I will discuss the financial results for the third quarter, 2021. Additional details will be contained within our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. For the third quarter ended September 30th, 2021, our total revenues were $190.1 million, an increase of 25.8% reported and 25.6% in constant currency compared to the third quarter of 2020, and sequential growth of 3.2% over the second quarter of 2021. Our geographic mix of sales in the quarter were 70.9% U.S. and 29.1% international. U.S. and international reported growth of 23% and 33.5% respectively compared to the same period in 2020. Moving to revenue by franchise.

Revenue from our vascular business grew to $105.5 million in the third quarter of 2021, an increase of 40.3% reported and constant currency compared to the same period last year. Compared to the prior quarter, revenue from our vascular business grew by 4.7%, driven by strong performance in peripheral thrombectomy volume in the U.S. Revenue from our neuro business was $84.7 million in the third quarter of 2021, an increase of 11.5% reported and 11.1% in constant currency compared to the same period a year ago, with growth across neuro access, embolization, and thrombectomy franchises.

Gross margin in the third quarter was 63.1% compared to 60.2% in the same quarter last year due to benefits from additional volume and stable product mix. We are pleased with our ability to increase our manufacturing capacity and expand our supply chain and manufacturing footprint in 2021 to support rapidly growing demand for our new product launches. In the coming months, we will continue to accelerate our investment in our Roseville manufacturing site, including hiring and training product builders, transferring multiple key manufacturing processes, and improving efficiency and productivity. This may continue to have short-term margin impact as it did in the third quarter, but will set us up for strong margin expansion opportunities in coming years.

Total operating expense for the quarter was $111.1 million, or 59% of revenue, compared to $111.1 million, or 74% of revenue for the same quarter last year. Our research and development expenses for Q3 2021 were $16.7 million compared to $34.9 million for Q3 2020. SG&A expenses for Q3 2021 were $94.4 million compared to $76.2 million for Q3 2020. In the fourth quarter of 2021, we anticipate payments related to research and development milestones and one-time expenses associated with the Sixense acquisition. We estimate these additional expenses in Q4 2021 in the range of $35 million-$45 million, the majority of which is non-cash.

For the third quarter of 2021, we recorded operating income of $8.8 million or 4.6% of revenue compared to an operating loss of $20.2 million or 13.3% of revenue for the same period last year. We ended the third quarter with cash, cash equivalents, and marketable security balance of $267 million, an increase of $28 million in operating cash. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Jason to discuss our 2021 guidance.

Jason Mills
EVP of Strategy, Penumbra

Thank you, Maggie. With the update of our third quarter results, we are formally increasing our 2021 revenue guidance range to $735 million-$740 million, which would represent 31%-32% growth over 2020 revenue of $560.4 million. This updated guidance compares to our previous 2021 guidance range of $720 million-$730 million given on our second quarter call in August

We see multiple drivers of growth going forward, both near and long term. In the fourth quarter, we expect sequential growth compared to our record third quarter results, driven predominantly by vascular thrombectomy across venous, PE, arterial, and coronary, further expansion of our peripheral embolization business, and increasing contribution from our new RED series of catheters for stroke intervention. Overall, consistent with our approach to setting guidance in the past, our updated 2021 revenue guidance represents our current views on our markets, timing of new product launches, and other relevant inputs. I will now turn the call back to Adam for closing remarks.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Thank you, Jason, Maggie, and Jee. As we report the third quarter and we move through the fourth quarter, Penumbra is well-positioned to help more and more people in the months and years ahead. We are making investments to constantly innovate both in neuro and vascular, as well as the newer area of immersive healthcare. We are hiring the best people in all parts of our business, and we continue to execute in our day-to-day work. These three elements have defined our success for many years. Finally, I want to acknowledge and thank everyone at Penumbra for doing so much and working so well together to design, manufacture, and make available all of our products to physicians and patients, even in these challenging times. Thank you for your attention on the call today, and we'd like to open the call to questions. Operator, please go ahead.

Operator

At this time, I would like to remind everyone in order to ask a question, press star one and then number one on your telephone keypad. Please pause for just a moment as we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Larry Biegelsen from Wells Fargo.

Larry Biegelsen
Senior Medical Device Equity Research Analyst, Wells Fargo

Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. Just let me start off on the guidance. You reported obviously a very nice quarter here, you know, compared to your historical seasonality. The Q4 guidance at the midpoint implies lower sequential growth than we typically see from you guys, and it's only about 12% year-over-year growth. What are you seeing that's leading to that conservatism, and how do we put that into context for 2022? The Street's assuming about 17% year-over-year growth, and I just wanna confirm you're still confident in the $1 billion in 2023, and I had a follow-up.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Larry, it's a great question. Let me start with the last question then, and then I'll let Jason take over with some of the specifics. The answer is, we are definitely confident about our 2023 comment about $1 billion. I think if you look at how we've done this quarter and the guidance going forward, it gets you there pretty quickly. We have a lot of confidence. I think our commentary today shows that. I'll let Jason talk about the specific guidance, but no question, we feel very confident about the future.

Jason Mills
EVP of Strategy, Penumbra

Yeah, just before we leave the $1 billion comment, I'll just add a little bit to what Adam said. As you might recall, Larry, at the time we said that we actually said $1 billion+ . Just to remind you that the plus referred specifically to our immersive healthcare business. That continues to be the way we look at that comment at this point in time as well. I appreciate your question about the guidance. Obviously, you know, the sequential increase in our business in the third quarter was quite strong. It was a strong performance as we talked about across both neuro and vascular businesses.

Obviously, stronger sequentially than a lot of folks and obviously representative of the strength of our products and our business. We're cognizant of that strong record growth, and we're also cognizant of the world and what others are saying about COVID. As we talked about in our remarks, we saw pretty good growth throughout the quarter, and we expect that to continue into the fourth quarter, which is why we expect sequential growth to continue.

Larry Biegelsen
Senior Medical Device Equity Research Analyst, Wells Fargo

All right. Thanks for that. Just for my follow-up, so Adam, on the CHEETAH data, what do you think physicians will be focused on? How do you plan to leverage the data? Just Adam, we didn't hear anything about Lightning. You know, is that still on track? Thanks for taking the questions.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. Well, first of all, I think I said a lot about Lightning. I think you meant Thunderbolt.

Larry Biegelsen
Senior Medical Device Equity Research Analyst, Wells Fargo

Thunderbolt. Sorry. You're right.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

If I'm not mistaken. I know the names are close.

Larry Biegelsen
Senior Medical Device Equity Research Analyst, Wells Fargo

You are.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Let's talk first about CHEETAH. It's two days away. As you know, I want to be very respectful to the physicians who are presenting the data and the appropriate rules around that. I obviously am gonna be there and look forward to talking about it with anyone after the presentation. We can address that in a couple of days.

Needless to say, there's a lot of data to go through, and we look forward to doing that. As it relates to Thunderbolt, I think you guys know me well enough to know last time I mentioned the name sort of publicly, we like to let our actions and the products speak for themselves. It seemed appropriate this quarter not to continue to have that conversation, but there is nothing, and I mean nothing, about that you should take as anything on the negative side by the fact that I didn't mention the name.

I think you guys can interpret the fact that I didn't mention it in the public comments the way I meant it to be.

Larry Biegelsen
Senior Medical Device Equity Research Analyst, Wells Fargo

Thanks, Adam.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Thank you, Larry.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Bill Plovanic from Canaccord Genuity Fund.

John Young
Equity Research Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Fund

Hi, it's John on for Bill tonight. Thanks for taking our questions. Adam, if we could go back to CHEETAH quickly, c an you talk about the overall opportunity in coronary and then how are you gonna balance that with your work in arterial DVT and PE? And then perhaps can you just talk about the call point overlap, any possible synergies there?

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Sure. You know, the way we've talked about that market, and I mentioned it on the prepared remarks of this call, is really going after the patients that have a really high clot burden or thrombus burden, the patients that really need it the most. That was what the CHEETAH trial was designed to study. That's what we'll report out. That's really been the opportunity. That's a significant opportunity. We're only about 10% penetrated and as we've said in the past, that opportunity is roughly the same size as the U.S. stroke opportunity for the U.S. patients in coronary. It's not insignificant at all.

I think you all know, the big technology change is the idea of using continuous power aspiration as opposed to some of the older technology. When you look at some of the older studies, they really highlighted the need in those studies for innovation in technology to deal with those high thrombus patients. That's the framework in which you can see and digest the data on Friday morning in Orlando. As it relates to the call point, obviously that call point is interventional cardiology. I think all of you know interventional cardiologists do a significant number, s ometimes people estimate up to around 25% of the peripheral work.

There's just an obvious synergy between those two products and really not, one doesn't take away from the other. In fact, they work very, very synergistically and the teams have been focused on that for a while.

John Young
Equity Research Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Fund

Thanks. We look forward to the data. Just as a follow-up too, on neuro, as you reach your COVID lull, how do you think about the appetite for engaging with legislators again and first responders and stroke patients in the right care setting?

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. I'm really glad you asked that question. You know, this is for the first time in, you know, a couple of years given the pandemic, I'm feeling and seeing, I guess, some early signs that things are, you know, starting to reengage. I've spent a decent amount of time talking to our physicians out there. They're starting in the earliest phases to have the bandwidth and the time and the ability to go out into their local communities and start to work on the kind of local work that they had been doing in the past. We also saw this quarter another state enact the state legislation that you were referring to. North Carolina did that.

I'm feeling pretty optimistic that as we move into this next phase of the pandemic, we're starting to see a little more momentum. As you heard in my prepared remarks, you know, our neuro team is really engaged. There's so much energy and momentum. You saw that in the sequential growth in the U.S. and it's a really exciting time to push the technology forward. At the same time, we're coming out of a really difficult couple of years.

John Young
Equity Research Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Fund

Thanks for taking our questions.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Robbie Marcus from JP Morgan.

Robbie Marcus
Senior Analyst, JPMorgan

Oh, great. Thanks for taking the questions and congrats on a great quarter.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Thanks for that, Robbie.

Robbie Marcus
Senior Analyst, JPMorgan

Maybe to start, Adam, you spoke about a lot of different new product launches, Lightning 7, some of the RED products. You talked about China and some of the adoption there. How do we think about the impact it had to sales in the quarter and what you're expecting, you know, let's say over the next six to 12 months, also throw in coronary. You know, you don't break out products or the different sub-line items for those businesses. How do we think about, you know, where we're seeing the biggest incremental dollar growth?

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

It's a great question. Well, we do obviously break out neuro versus vascular, so, you know, you'll see the benefit of the RED series, you know, and future products, you know, I hope over the next six months to a year, pretty clearly in our neuro business. As it relates to the vascular business, and I said this in my prepared remarks, it's all working. We saw really successful growth both on PE and venous and arterial as well as coronary. We're lucky, you know, we have the ability to really positively impact patients on all four of those categories.

I think it's unnecessary to sort of break out which is more because they're all working and successful right now. That's, I think, one of the really huge opportunities as the field starts to really digest and accept the idea of single session treatment. It's no longer just a thing that people sort of thought about philosophically. It's now becoming a lot more rooted in the viewpoint of physicians because, in some part, because of the pandemic and the need to free up ICU beds. They're finding success, you know, particularly with the Lightning series in PE, venous, and arterial, and being exposed to CAT RX in their daily practice.

With CHEETAH, I think we'll see, but I think that can continue pretty dramatically. It's hard to break it down in a way to say which is contributing more because all of the team is focused on all of them, and all of it matters and all of it's contributing. That gives us, I think, the confidence that you hear in our voice that we have a lot of growth to come.

Jason Mills
EVP of Strategy, Penumbra

Hey, Robbie, just to follow up a little bit on that, going back to some of our prepared remarks. Obviously, when folks look at our Lightning 7 and Lightning 12 products, those are speaking to, you know, arterial and venous to a large extent, in transfer. We did talk about double-digit growth sequentially in both of those. Obviously, this quarter anniversary in the year-ago quarter, which was pretty nearly a full quarter of the initial launch of Lightning 12. Just a couple of other things to just point out and remind. We talked about the U.S. stroke business was up 17% sequentially. That's obviously because of the receptivity of the RED series of catheters.

Overall, in the United States, peripheral thrombectomy being up 10%, you know, cuts across all four of those areas we talked about, arterial, PE, venous, and coronary.

Robbie Marcus
Senior Analyst, JPMorgan

Great. Thanks for that. Maybe a quick follow-up. You know, it's been a while since we got some, you used to give out details on how many procedures you thought were happening in the U.S. and outside the U.S., neurothrombectomy markets. If you have any sense of, you know, maybe where the U.S. and Europe is on track for procedures this year, and if there's any way to gauge how, you know, just the business performance in those markets have been since the recall last year, would be really helpful. Thanks a lot.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah, I don't think it's fair to give out specific numbers, because they're a little harder to track during this phase. We'll certainly try to do that going forward as best we can. You know, to throw out numbers, you know, sort of without having the sort of confidence is a little bit harder. As you know, there are lots more players in the field and everything that makes it a touch more difficult. I will reiterate what I said. I do think, you know, the last, you know, almost two years, not quite a year and a half, has been relatively, you know, first, it obviously went down dramatically at the very beginning of the pandemic and sort of recovered.

I do see and again, just you know, purely anecdotal at this point, so I wouldn't want to, you know, be more aggressive than that, but I do see and hear an optimism around growing the number of patients. That's really started a month or two ago. I think North Carolina is just a good example of sort of the energy that's still out there in order to sort of do this work and drive those patients. It's a good question. We'll try to do more to give you as much specifics, but I don't want to just throw out numbers. We wanna be as accurate as possible.

Robbie Marcus
Senior Analyst, JPMorgan

All right. And if I could squeeze in one quick one. China, I know that used to be all or predominantly a Medtronic market. Any sense of the impact you're making there? Is it still real early days, or how do we think about the impact you're seeing? Thanks.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. I mean, look, China's a large market and, you know, to quantify the impact, you know, to their business is hard, because it's hard to know that from here. I will tell you, you know, from the conversations I've had, there's an awful lot of interest in moving that market to aspiration-based technology. You know, the physicians there have known about it for a while. They're excited to get the products that can do that work. ACE 68's the product that was more recently launched, and we're seeing some real success in those cases. I think, again, very early days, you know, significant opportunity.

As we've said in the past, we're using, you know, technology there that's a touch older than the technology we have here. When you look at that between now and, you know, the future where we can continue to bring the most current stuff, I have a lot of confidence that we're gonna continue to do quite well in the China market going forward.

Robbie Marcus
Senior Analyst, JPMorgan

Great. Thanks a lot.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah, thanks, Robbie.

Operator

Next question comes from the line of Bob Hopkins from Bank of America.

Bob Hopkins
Managing Director, Bank of America

Oh, thanks, and good afternoon.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Hi, Bob.

Bob Hopkins
Managing Director, Bank of America

Hey. Hey, guys, and Maggie. I was wondering if we could dissect Q3 just a little bit more. Maybe I'll ask two things about the third quarter. You said that growth accelerated over the course of the quarter. I was just wondering if you could put a little more color around that in terms of how pronounced that was. Secondly, about the third quarter, I was wondering if you could talk about the impact of COVID because in some regards it's an obvious. I mean, obviously it's a negative because of disruption to hospitals. You know, the nature of COVID is that it's prothrombotic and so there's also a positive aspect potentially to your business, and one of your competitors calls that out on a quarterly basis.

Just wondering if you could provide a little more color on Q3 around those two topics, the acceleration over the course of the quarter and then, you know, how COVID impacted your numbers in terms of that headwind and tailwind perspective.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. A really good question. Let me take a shot at doing it as best we can without just sort of guessing. The first part about the quarter, the quarter looked surprisingly normal in the trajectory of the quarter for a third quarter. That's what we were trying to say. You know, most quarters do accelerate as the quarter goes, particularly in the third quarter, you know, where you start out in July. This looked, you know, relatively normal. That's what we wanted to point out. You know, we knew COVID was there. We saw spikes particularly, you know, in parts a little later in the quarter.

It didn't have an impact in for us. Now why is that the case? You know, was that patients that would not otherwise have had thrombus but had it because they got COVID? We've done a little bit of, you know, sort of anecdotal conversation with people on that. We don't think that was the majority of, you know, or even a significant part of the growth. We think that we're really past that. You know, most of those patients are being treated earlier, and so they're not showing up with the kind of thrombus that needs to be removed in a mechanical setting.

A lot of it is really just new physicians being exposed to the technology over time going, "It's time to switch," you know, either from another tool that they're using or from TPA, and they're learning the benefit of the Lightning both, again, on the arterial side and in PE and particularly in venous as well. I think it was really just sort of, you know, the normal growth of a really important product that does really good work for patients, and that's what gives us a lot of confidence that we'll see this continue for a while.

Bob Hopkins
Managing Director, Bank of America

Okay. That's great. Just one quick follow-up on, you mentioned 10% sequential growth in vascular thrombectomy. I know all of the components of that seem to be doing quite well between PE and venous and arterial and coronary, but what is the range around that 10% sequential? I mean, are there one of those four growing, you know, 20% or 30% or, you know, and some low single digit or is it more bunched up around 10%? Just wanted to get a sense for the range of performance within the four franchises.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. Well, they're really three, because it's hard to really know with any kind of specificity within Lightning 12 cases whether Lightning is being used in PE or in venous. Albeit, you know, we have a feel that we're doing well in both of them, but I can't give you, you know, with any kind of certainty the difference there, because it's the same product. But I can tell you that all of them are doing well. I think we called out Lightning specifically. You know, it's newer. There's more work to be done. You know, so between that and CAT RX, Lightning did particularly well. Again, we'll pick this conversation up after Friday going forward.

Again, it's a good spot to be in, where all of it is contributing to our growth right now.

Bob Hopkins
Managing Director, Bank of America

Thank you.

Jason Mills
EVP of Strategy, Penumbra

Yeah. Bob, just to reiterate what I said a bit earlier. We did say that 10% growth was a U.S. growth number sequentially. Just making sure you heard that. Then we did also call out double-digit growth for both Lightning 7 and 12 franchises respectively. Obviously, consistent with what Adam said, it's hard to tell, i.e., DVT versus PE on that front. Then just as a quick addition to your first question, and you talked about the paradigm of whether it's prothrombotic or not. I think it's, you know, we would just point you to a different paradigm, which is the paradigm of single session therapy is certainly resonating more and more.

Obviously what goes along with that is, the single session therapy, you're obviously not using up the resources from an intensive care unit perspective that you might otherwise. That is a paradigm that we're seeing and probably continues.

Bob Hopkins
Managing Director, Bank of America

Okay, great. Thank you very much.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Thank you, Bob.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Margaret Kaczor from William Blair.

Brandon Vazquez
Equity Research Associate, William Blair

Hi, everyone. This is Brandon on for Margaret. I first wanted to just kind of focus within neuro still. It was a really nice quarter, especially within the U.S. for stroke. You know, I appreciate maybe you don't have specific numbers for market share, but is it a fair characterization to say 17% sequential growth is maybe above the market? I guess what I'm trying to get at is, you know, after a somewhat period of maybe disruptions and a little bit of recall, do you kind of feel like with the RED series of catheters here, you're on the offensive now and you're taking share as you're heading into next year?

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yes, absolutely.

Brandon Vazquez
Equity Research Associate, William Blair

Okay. Simple enough.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Oh, I can tell you more. Yes, absolutely. We're very excited about it. There's no question we're in a great spot right now. The RED series is just doing amazingly well, and there's just not enough time in the day to get it out there as fast as we want. You know, this is not even a full quarter, and we're seeing, you know, a lot of success. Yes, it is really heartening, it's exciting, morale is high, and physicians are really reacting positively to it.

Brandon Vazquez
Equity Research Associate, William Blair

Got it.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

The market did not likely grow 17%, that is right .

Brandon Vazquez
Equity Research Associate, William Blair

Right. Adam, maybe just in a broader sense, you had hinted at increased investments or just maybe a focus on market development efforts, maybe within vascular. That's especially important given how large the market is, and there's maybe more for you to go after. Just curious if you could talk about what kind of market development efforts you're all investing in. You know, getting from 10% to 20% penetration and beyond maybe requires some of that. What are the things that you're investing in and how important are they to maybe the next, like, 12 months of growth?

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. It's a great question. So there's, again, similar to stroke, you know, where we spend time with, you know, communities and the hospital systems, doing outreach to make sure patients were getting to the right place. Here, the outreach is a little different, but with folks and physicians who believe in single session and wanna continue that, there's local outreach to make sure that the referral patterns are in place, and that the patients are getting to see the physicians who are already sort of committed to treating them in a single session. There's definitely work to be done and work we are engaging and doing to do that. The other area, of course, is in clinical work.

We're running some studies right now, but really importantly is the studies that we're starting to really think about and frame up, that particularly in certain areas like PE, you can think about really going after all of the other patients that aren't even getting TPA, but are just getting medical management and how one would attach those. We've talked about that in the past, but you know, we've always wanted to be sure and learn a lot more. I think as we continue here, we're starting to understand more and more the benefits of the product and technology and starting those conversations. Again, lots ahead, pretty exciting time to bring this technology to more and more people.

Brandon Vazquez
Equity Research Associate, William Blair

Got it. If I could just ask one last one. The new hires internationally were interesting, clearly an area that you're investing in. Is there anything that this maybe signals to new strategies? You know, have you reached a level where you kind of need to tweak how you're approaching those markets, and what could that mean for 2022 growth in the international markets? Thanks.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. Look, we've always, as a company, looked to continue to hire, you know, the best people that we can possibly hire that know things we don't bring huge expertise in areas that we can continue to learn from. And the two international hires, Fred and Joan, are just that. You know, two really extraordinary people who can just bring a ton of experience and bolster with their experience things we don't know as well. I do expect that we can continue to see growth in international in the years ahead. It's exciting to have them. They're great additions to the team.

Thanks, Brandon.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of David Rescott from Truist Securities.

David Rescott
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Truist Securities

Hey. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. First, I guess, on the.

Jason Mills
EVP of Strategy, Penumbra

Hi, David.

David Rescott
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Truist Securities

Peripheral thrombectomy segment. Hey, Jason. You know, there's been some M&A in the space that we've seen with some of the larger diversified med tech companies over the past couple months or so. I guess, you know, how do you think about the competitive landscape shaping up here? I mean, do you see a competitive advantage for some of these thrombectomy products to be within a portfolio alongside some other complementary products that address the vascular space? I would just like to get some sense on how you're thinking about the positioning for increased competition going forward.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah. Look, I've been really happy to see, particularly some of the big companies, acknowledge that, removing clot in the body, you know, in a mechanical thrombectomy tool, without TPA and other stuff is the way to go. That is a huge sort of statement to the whole field that we're on the right track and I think people are starting to really pay attention to this is the future. I think it is all incredibly important and not unexpected, that would happen. The fact it's happening now, I think is perfect. As it relates to technology itself, we have a lot of confidence in our sort of computer-aided Lightning Thrombectomy System. It works really well.

We know the other technologies pretty well. Just as we are, we're in really good shape, but we also, as you know, don't ever stay still. When you add in the innovation coming in this field that we are working on, we have a lot of confidence that as the market continues to switch from TPA drip to thrombectomy, we're gonna be right where we wanna be to capture a lot of those patients and do really, really well for those patients.

David Rescott
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Truist Securities

Okay. That's helpful. I guess just following up on kinda some of the commentary that you talked about on market development within the peripheral thrombectomy segment. I mean, it seems like there's been some competitors, you know, specifically within pulmonary embolisms that have announced some head-to-head RCT trials. I know in the past that you've kind of commented on or expressed at least an interest in doing some kind of head-to-head studies within the venous segment, I guess what's the strategy here or at least the overall thought behind potentially either having or not having some kind of head-to-head data?

You know, if you don't have it or if you don't necessarily kind of invest in that segment, I mean, how do you think about kind of the dynamics between, you know, growing the market as opposed to kind of gaining market share within that segment?

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah, no, it's a really, really good question, and I'm glad you asked it. I alluded to it just in my last answer, but maybe I'll be more clear. PE, which is really what you're talking about, is today the smallest segment of patients in the U.S., if we're talking U.S. numbers, that are actually treated with some form of intervention, the majority being TPA, you know, dripping TPA over a period of time. And it's only about 20,000. It's significant, but it's a relatively small group compared to the number of patients on the venous sort of DVT and arterial side that are intervened on.

The real opportunity is to go after the much larger group of patients that aren't intervened on that are just given medical management, but could likely they have submassive or massive PEs and could potentially benefit earlier rather than waiting until those become quite acute. That's the study that would open up the field, that would grow the field. The studies that are going on now, no judgment on them, but they're really market sort of share type studies, and that's, you know, less interesting for us, given the sort of size of the growth that we're experiencing, and the opportunity we think our product is gonna have.

We're really focused on a kind of study, we haven't announced it, but as I alluded to, we're starting to understand enough to have those dialogues with some of the physician leaders as to what would really open up the market in a more significant way. The randomized studies that are currently going really are focused on the same relatively small pool of patients.

David Rescott
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Truist Securities

Okay. That's helpful. Thanks for taking the question.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Yeah, my pleasure. Thank you.

Operator

Again, if you'd like to ask a question, press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. Next question comes from the line of Joanne Wuensch from Citi Research .

Joanne Wuensch
Managing Director, Citi Research

Good afternoon. Hi, and thanks for taking the question.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Hi.

Joanne Wuensch
Managing Director, Citi Research

It looks like two questions. One is on gross margins. It looks like the new manufacturing site that you have is beginning to weigh on that. How do we think about that, not just for the fourth quarter, but into next year?

Maggie Yuen
CFO, Penumbra

Yeah, Joanne, thanks for the question. So, as to our investment in our Roseville site, impact to our margin, I mean, I want to, in my remarks, say that they're all intentional investment. I mean, we accelerate the investment, quite a bit, all because of our projection of our long-term volume growth. So, as with any investment in setting up manufacturing site, the impact to the short-term margin impact will be a little bit choppy, but it will continue to support margin expansion activities throughout the year. I just want to also add that, at this point, we have not seen material impact to our margin because of macro supply chain and inflation area.

We believe that all these productivity investments is going to help us to offset some of the macro impact in the long term.

Joanne Wuensch
Managing Director, Citi Research

Okay. My second question has to do with REAL revenue, or revenue from the REAL system said another way. You know, people have this already in their models from what I can tell. I mean, based on what I can piece together, for next year ranges anywhere from $3 million-$26 million, which could be the difference between you meeting or beating consensus. Can you just sort of help us get our head around that, so that we're set up right? Thanks.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Let me try to address it as best I can without going into guidance or numbers for 2022, because we're just not doing that on this call, and I wanna be clear about that. The opportunities in immersive healthcare, we think are, as you know from our Investor Day, really huge, significant. It will take us time to do the work that we laid out in the Investor Day. The work is a number of things. We have to continue to work on the platform itself and doing the work to build that capacity so that we can host and have developers working with us in terms of content.

We also have to do the work to provide a viable business by getting a pretty significant install base. All of that is in the earliest stages of doing the work. Whether or not the revenue, you know, is significant, we'll give you a decent amount of guidance when we start talking about our 2022 guidance. The goal is to sort of lay that out, do that work, not chase the sort of short-term revenue next year or, you know, as we sort of do this. That is important.

That being said, we have a lot of excitement because after Investor Day, where it was then sort of public and we can start to talk about it, we've had a lot of conversations with healthcare community who would be, you know, in effect, participating this, buying this, you know, utilizing this with their patients, with their residents and so on. I gotta tell you that, as I said in my prepared remarks, the interest, excitement, the need to have one company, you know, a trusted company in healthcare provide this, where it's all clear, it's all contained, the data's secure. It's a sort of a proper use of this great technology.

That level of interest, frankly is, I won't say it's surprising me. I knew it was there, but it's really heartening to see that it's coming after that sort of public discussion. Stay tuned. We'll do our best to give you specific numbers as best we can in the future, but I think we're well on our way here.

Joanne Wuensch
Managing Director, Citi Research

Thank you.

Adam Elsesser
Chairman and CEO, Penumbra

Thank you.

Jason Mills
EVP of Strategy, Penumbra

Thanks, Joanne.

Operator

There are no further questions at this time. Ms. Hamlyn- Harris, I turn the call back over to you.

Jee Hamlyn-Harris
Investor Relations Officer, Penumbra

Thank you, operator. On behalf of our management team, thank you all again for joining us today and for your interest in Penumbra. We look forward to updating you on our fourth quarter call.

Operator

This concludes this conference call. You may now disconnect.

Powered by