Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Quidel Corporation First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, instructions will be given for the question and answer session. If anyone has difficulty hearing the conference, please press star zero for operator assistance. I'd now like to turn the call over to Mr. Ruben Argueta, Quidel's Senior Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining today's call. With me today is our President and Chief Executive Officer, Doug Bryant, and our Chief Financial Officer, Randy Steward. Our fiscal first quarter 2022 earnings release is now available on ir.quidelortho.com, our investor relations website. We will also post our prepared remarks on the Presentations tab of our IR website following the conclusion of this call on May 4th, 2022 for a period of 24 hours. Please note that some of the information we provide during today's conference call will include forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, the types of statements identified as forward-looking in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q that we will file later today, which will be available on our IR website. Actual results may differ materially from those projected in any forward-looking statement.
For a further description of the risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements as well as risks related to our business and the proposed business combination with Ortho Clinical Diagnostics, please see our annual report on Form 10-K and subsequent periodic reports and registration statements filed with the SEC. Furthermore, this conference call contains time-sensitive information that is accurate only as of today. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update these forward-looking statements or time-sensitive information which speak only as of today. Today, Quidel released financial results for the three months ended March 31, 2022. If you have not received our earnings release or if you would like to be added to the company's distribution list, please contact me at 858-646-8023.
Following Doug's comments, Randy will briefly discuss our financial results, and we'll open the call to take your questions. I'll now hand the call over to Doug for his comments.
Thanks, Ruben, and welcome everyone. We really appreciate your time and interest in Quidel. We had an extraordinary start of the year. The first quarter was historic. We achieved record revenue on the top line, record profitability that flowed through to the bottom line and record cash on the balance sheet. Our first quarter truly demonstrates the earnings power of the business as we build on the significant investments we've made and execute against our growth roadmap. Our diverse suite of assays, increasing brand strength, and growing installed base of SOFIA analyzers continue to propel our market expansion and broaden our post-pandemic opportunities. Our new product pipeline, including our revolutionary Savanna platform that we expect to launch in the U.S. later this year, further adds to forward momentum and runway. Yes, once again, the entire Quidel team performed very well.
From product development in our R&D organization to the responsiveness of our manufacturing and operations teams, through our commercial channel, we fired on all cylinders. Our first quarter results put us in a strong financial position, creating additional flexibility to strengthen our balance sheet while we continue to drive R&D investment to further develop and broaden our portfolio. Let's take a look at some specifics. Revenue for the first quarter of 2022 reached just over $1 billion. That's a pretty extraordinary 167% increase over the prior year period. It was driven primarily by strong performance in our rapid immunoassay product portfolio. Total rapid immunoassay revenue increased by $655 million in the first quarter of 2022 to $893 million. We saw significant sales of QuickVue At-Home OTC COVID-19 tests.
While COVID-19 testing made up the bulk of this heightened demand, it's noteworthy that non-COVID sales grew 56%. We're almost double that if you exclude the Beckman BNP business, as we saw increased sales of SOFIA ABC combination, test for Influenza A+B and SARS FIA, as well as increased demand for SOFIA influenza tests. Although we haven't seen a typical flu season, flu continues to linger. Interestingly, ILI right now is at 2.1% of visits, and while we are seeing increasing seasonal influenza activity in a few states, this highlights the importance of diagnostic testing and the significance of having a differentiated menu, which is part of our post-pandemic strategy to widen our point of care footprint and introduce our full portfolio of assays to both patients and healthcare providers.
Relative to COVID-19, we're seeing softening demand, and we expect this trend to continue as we head into the summer months. In fact, we started to see this in the first quarter as test demand shifted significantly from retail outlets to the federal government and to a lesser extent, to the professional segment. This shift allowed us to focus on delivering more tests to the U.S. government than we originally anticipated. In the first quarter, we shipped approximately 70 million QuickVue At-Home OTC COVID-19 tests to the federal government. We will ship the remaining 35 million tests to the government in Q2 to fulfill our 108 million test commitment. As you can appreciate, we remain in close conversation with the federal government and related government agencies to determine the government support strategies going forward.
We are in discussions with the government to supply an incremental number of tests in Q2, Q3, and we'll update you on any order that is placed from those discussions. Our longer-term expectation is that COVID-19 tests and infections and related testing demand will continue to wane as COVID-19 becomes more seasonal, similar to flu demands. We currently are not forecasting a significant revenue contribution from our COVID-19 products in the back half of the year. The prospect of endemic SARS seasons amplifies the long-term benefits of the brand awareness we have generated and the strategic partnerships we have built with retail and distribution powerhouses. These trusted relationships provide us with access to point of care and over-the-counter channels for both COVID and non-COVID product lines going forward, which is exciting.
Consistent with the anticipated shift in COVID-19 testing demand, we continue to bolster our resilience in the post-pandemic future by accelerating assay development and production and further expanding our footprint at the point of care. Given our pipeline, we have high confidence in our ability to capture evolving healthcare trends that will drive both future growth and profitability. These opportunities include a number of products we've discussed on previous calls, such as QuickVue and our SOFIA Q device, new SOFIA assays, as well as new products, our, in our cardiometabolic and gastrointestinal segments. Foremost among our upcoming product launches is our flagship Savanna molecular platform. As you know, we already have CE approval for markets outside of the U.S., but our main focus is on getting the necessary approvals to launch Savanna in the U.S. later this year.
We plan to submit our Savanna EUA for RVP4 next week and submit our 510(k) in July, with two more 510(k) panel submissions set for year-end and three more submissions by the end of Q1 2023. Meanwhile, our teams are hard at work scaling Savanna instrument production and transitioning to fully automated manufacturing. Experienced as we are, over the last couple of years, we've learned a lot about hyperscaling production and managing complex supply chains. You can rest assured we're leveraging the lessons we've learned in expanding COVID-19 testing capacity to our other products. Once online in the fall, our Savanna cartridge automated manufacturing line is expected to begin its ramp-up and output to over 1 million cartridges per month with $300 million annual revenues anticipated within three years of U.S. launch.
Of course, we're also immensely excited by the opportunities presented by our planned acquisition of Ortho Clinical Diagnostics. As I've said before, this acquisition will more than double our market opportunity to over $50 billion among the point of care clinical laboratory and transfusion medicine segments. We're thrilled by the potential catalysts we see in the combined business. Our teams are working well together, planning for the integration and the highly complementary nature of Quidel's and Ortho's portfolios is expected to create ample cross-selling opportunities across a deep and diverse matrix of customers and channels to significantly accelerate market penetration worldwide after closing. We believe it is a truly compelling formula that can position the combined business for long-term growth and a lasting global impact in delivering advanced diagnostics that improve human health. Integration planning is going well.
We've formed 15 cross-functional teams, defined 87 projects, plus defined day one, day 30, and longer timeline objectives with the day one must-haves either on track or complete. Operationally, no risks have been identified that would create significant disruption on day one through day 30. Of course, there's a lot of work still to be done and challenges are being identified, but no critical path items are delayed. Overall, we are very pleased with the cadence and progress that we've made thus far and are excited about getting to day one. We are bullish on the acquisition and look forward to harvesting the expected $90 million in cost synergies by end of year three and $100 million in revenue synergies by 2025.
We expect investors have recognized the value that can be created by bringing the companies together and will vote to approve the deal. Here's a quick snapshot of the process to closing. On April 11, we began mailing our joint proxy statement. On May 16, there will be stockholder meetings for each of Quidel and Ortho to vote on the business combination. On May 26, we've scheduled the U.K. court hearing, and on May 27, we anticipate the successful close of the transaction subject to receipt of the stockholder vote, the U.K. order, and satisfaction of other customary closing conditions. In closing, I'm incredibly proud of our employees and their commitment to making a positive impact in our fight against COVID, and more than pleased to see them now applying that same focus and commitment to their work addressing a post-pandemic world.
It goes without saying that I am exceedingly encouraged by our performance in the first quarter. It's clearly one for the record books, and we have a long, exciting roadmap for our continued growth and success as we advance diagnostics to improve human health. It's our mission, and we're happy in the knowledge that we're making a difference. Randy?
Thank you, Doug, and good afternoon, everyone. I'd also like to thank all of our employees who demonstrated Quidel's strength of spirit, perseverance, and dedication to deliver such outstanding results. Due to their tireless efforts, we again achieved another record quarter for revenue, eclipsing our previous high-water mark of $809 million set in Q4 of 2020. During my tenure here, I've seen Quidel grow substantially, and Quidel's incredible culture has been the driving force behind such explosive growth and our sustained excellence. I'm very proud to be a part of what we have achieved here at Quidel. As Doug mentioned, total revenues for the first quarter of 2022 were $1.002 billion compared to $375.3 million in the first quarter of 2021, achieving growth of 167%.
This growth is primarily due to increased rapid immunoassay product revenue, which was driven by the continued fulfillment of the US government order for over 100 million QuickVue COVID-19 tests. Total SARS revenue in the quarter from all products was $836.1 million, and this compares to $269.1 million in the first quarter of 2021, a growth of 211%. In total, we sold over 126 million COVID tests in the first quarter. 113 million tests were QuickVue, 12 million tests were SOFIA, and over 2 million were all other tests. Foreign currency exchange had an unfavorable impact of $1 million in the quarter.
Influenza revenue was $89.1 million, and this is versus $16.4 million in the first quarter of last year. Included in the influenza number for the quarter was $54.2 million in SOFIA ABC revenue, $25.4 million in SOFIA flu revenue, and $5.9 million in QuickVue flu revenue. Rapid immunoassay revenues were $892.8 million in the first quarter, showing growth of 276% from first quarter of 2021. Within this category, SOFIA product revenues were $224 million, of which $137.9 million were attributable to the SOFIA SARS antigen test. As just mentioned, influenza revenue was another strong contributor to this group, adding $79.6 million in revenue.
QuickVue product revenues in the quarter were $667 million, of which $657 million were attributable to the QuickVue SARS test. For the cardiometabolic immunoassay business, revenue was $50.2 million, lower than the prior year quarter as a result of the agreement we entered into with Beckman Coulter in July 2021. As a reminder, the agreement states that in connection with transitioning the Beckman BNP business to Beckman Coulter, Quidel receives annual cash payments between $70 million-$75 million per year through 2029. In the first quarter of 2022, we recorded revenue of $16.8 million associated with this agreement. The quarterly revenue was based on product shipments in the quarter to Beckman Coulter.
For the full year though, the minimum revenue to realize is $70 million, and it's irregardless of product shipments. The Triage business generated revenues of $33.4 million versus $33 million in the first quarter of 2021, with growth in Asia, Pacific, and Europe, Middle East, Africa, offset by a decline in the US. Our molecular diagnostic solutions revenue was $46 million in the quarter as we saw a continued demand for the Lyra SARS-CoV-2 products, which constituted $38.2 million of the total molecular diagnostics solutions revenue. Solana revenues were $5.7 million in the quarter, and Savanna revenue was an incremental $400,000 in the quarter. Specialized Diagnostic Solutions revenue increased 23% to $13.3 million, driven by an increase in sales of our DHI respiratory products.
We realized good growth in the core business as revenue, excluding the COVID-19 revenues and Beckman BNP revenues, increased 105% over the first quarter of 2021 to $149.4 million. Rapid immunoassay revenue increased $73 million, or almost 300% due to an increase in the flu and strep revenue. Triage business increased 1% and molecular revenue increased 20%, though on a small revenue base without COVID. We also saw strong performance in our specialized diagnostic solutions revenue, as stated previously. Gross profit in the quarter increased to $740 million, and gross margin was 74% of revenue. This compares to a gross profit of $302 million and 80% gross margin for the three months ended March 2021.
The increased gross profit was due to the greater product sales of QuickVue At-Home OTC COVID-19 tests. The decrease in gross margin was driven by a shift in product mix from higher margins of the SARS test to lower margin QuickVue SARS test, and this was partially offset by improved manufacturing absorption. On the spend side of the business, we continue to invest in R&D and specifically our Savanna platform. We're also spending in support of our longer-term initiatives, such as new SOFIA assays that can leverage our larger installed base of instruments and new markets, next-generation platforms, and SOFIA Q, to name a few. In the first quarter of 2022, R&D expense increased 13% to $26.4 million.
Sales and marketing expense for the quarter increased to $65.4 million, resulting from higher freight expense due to higher sales volume, higher product promotional spend associated with the QuickVue At-Home OTC test, and higher compensation costs driven by increased headcount. This year, we will continue to invest in people and resources to expand our reach, as well as increase our spending in marketing, product promotion, and corporate partnerships in support of existing and new markets. G&A expense in the quarter increased by $5 million to $24.5 million, primarily due to higher compensation costs driven by outstanding performance during the current per-period. As it relates to the provision for income taxes, we recorded $140.7 million in income tax expense, resulting in an effective tax rate of approximately 23%.
The higher tax expense for the quarter compared to the same period last year is a result of an increase in pre-tax profits and a decrease in tax deductions from stock-based compensation. As of March 31st, we had $1.275 billion in cash and cash equivalents. In the quarter, the company invested approximately $22 million in capital expenditures. In April, we made our scheduled $48 million payment to Abbott for the Alere assets, leaving one final payment of $40 million due to Abbott in April 2023. From a use of cash perspective in the second quarter, we expect to use the majority of the cash on the balance sheet to help fund the cash payment to the Ortho shareholders at close.
After close of the transaction, Joe Busky will be stepping in as the CFO for the combined companies, and Joe will be an incredibly strong contributor going forward. I'll still be involved with Quidel, but going forward more in the background to ensure continuity and help as appropriate. It's been an incredible journey over the last 10-plus years, and I am truly blessed to be a part of this great Quidel story. The company is in the strongest position it has ever been in numerous ways. I built friendships that will last for the rest of my life and would like to think that along the way I've provided some value that will drive Quidel to even greater achievements going forward. Thank you very much for all of your support over the last 10-plus years. With that, we conclude our formal comments for today.
Operator, we're now ready to open the call for questions.
Great. Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If for any reason you would like to remove that question, please press star followed by two. Again, to ask a question, press star one. As a reminder, if you are using a speakerphone, please remember to pick up your handset before asking your question. We will pause here briefly as questions are registered. The first question comes from Alex Nowak with Craig-Hallum. Please proceed.
Great. Good afternoon, everyone, and Randy, enjoyed working with you. A metric we were watching going forward for COVID testing is the low water mark per month. In spring of 2021, it was $20-$25 million of COVID test sales per month. Last quarter was said to be higher, but we didn't exactly know that figure. Do we have a new low water mark for the back half of the year to think about?
You know, Alex, it's very challenging to really identify a low water mark just because of government participation and the prevalence of, you know, the virus here or as we go forward. At current time, I would say what we had stated previously probably is good as anything we can see at this point. I will say, though, that we're not forecasting a significant amount of COVID revenue in the back half of the year.
Okay. Understood. Maybe expand a bit more on the day 30 and maybe the day 90 plans after closing the Ortho deal. Maybe highlight some of the first action items you're gonna be undertaking.
Well, I think initially, you know, we're getting to close. We've done a lot of strategic planning, but it's really hard to really get into the execution mode until after close. You know, within 30 days after close, we have to file our first Q as a combined entity. We're very focused on, you know, really the first 90 days or actually through the end of the year to really focus on just driving both businesses, making sure that, you know, we're performing as the expected performance requirements. Then we really get into kind of more of the combined entity execution here entering into 2023. Certainly we will be planning during that, you know, during that whole time period, looking at cost synergies and revenue synergies as well.
Just one more here. Maybe expand a bit more on the menu expansion for SOFIA and QuickVue At-Home, just when we can start to see these new products hit the market.
I'm sorry, Alex. You were asking about additional OTC products in the OTC market?
OTC and standard SOFIA for professional, just the menu expansion timelines there and what to expect.
Yeah. I'll jump in on that one, Alex. I would just say that the R&D guys would tell you they've got a number of products in development on SOFIA. And so we see that as a major growth engine moving forward. The instrument placements out there at greater than 75,000 certainly represents this huge opportunity for further development in that space. You know, overall, I think on the OTC side, it's more about putting together the clinical trials necessary to get these products over the OTC performance hurdles. You know, more specifics moving forward, clearly as we have phase zero, phase one, et cetera, identified for SOFIA, we will be in a position when we do our next analyst day to talk about things in more detail.
Obviously at this stage, that would be premature. Rest assured, we moved from 20 R&D projects per year to over 50 that we're working on in any given year. Most of those, for the most part, are SOFIA.
All right. Thanks for the update. Thanks.
Sure. Thank you, Alex.
Thank you. The next question comes from Brian Weinstein with William Blair. Please proceed.
Hey, guys. This is Dustin on the line for Brian. Just to start with Ortho, I'm wondering since it's been about 5 and a half months since you announced the deal, has there been any change in how you see the value of the asset and where the combined company could play in this space?
Yeah. I would say the key change is as we get to know the team over there, we're increasingly impressed by both the executive team and the management team. I actually see more value than we probably had anticipated. Of course, until you get to know people. You know, at the end of the day, it's putting people together. Until you understand the people that you're working with more and more, it's really hard to pre-deal understand the value. I would just say, personally, I look at more of the people side of things as everybody in our company knows, and I would say I'm super impressed by the talent in that organization.
I think Chris Smith and the executives there have brought on board a lot of really good people, and I think that that's gonna be helpful moving forward. Other than that, we don't see anything. There's no detraction from the critical path on anything that we're working on. It for the most part, I would say, is all super positive.
That's good to hear. In terms of flu, we're wondering if you guys have any more visibility there. Wondering about inventory levels and anything you're seeing in the channel, kind of as we prepare for next season.
Yeah. No, inventory levels are pretty consistent with what we've seen over the last, you know, couple of years relating to all of our core products. As you know, coming out of inventory distribution is managed pretty tightly, so no buildup on that at all. We did see a little bit of increase on our COVID revenue inventories, but that's obvious since we were in, you know, pretty high demand going into the quarter, but overall I think on average we're somewhere between three and four weeks of inventory at distribution, so we're in good shape with that, with that statistic.
Okay, great. Just one last one for us. We're wondering on what was the ex-COVID, ex-flu rapid revenue in the quarter, and what kind of pull-through are you guys seeing there? Thank you.
Uh, do you know ex...
Mm-hmm.
Well, the pull-through, I guess, I'll follow up with you related to the exact number, but the pull-through actually in the quarter on all of the core revenue is very strong. We saw a significant increase with strep, with RSV, as well as with our pregnancy tests. Really across the board, we saw growth versus Q1 of 2021. I'll get back with what the actual number was on that.
Thank you. The next question comes from Casey Woodring with JPMorgan. Please proceed.
Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. On the incremental government COVID contracts past the 35 million tests in 2Q, you know, how have conversations around stockpiling evolved since the beginning of the year? Is that something that you think is still realistic for the second half of this year or even in 2023?
We're in consistent and weekly conversations on that topic, whether it's stockpiling more, manufacturing, et cetera. I would, without being too specific, I would say that we can expect to see some level of orders. As I think, you know, I've said and Randy has said, as we learn exactly what the numbers are gonna be, we'll certainly let everybody know. Yes, we are in conversations. Yes, we've had discussions about some specifics, but you know, just lately, it was just a couple hours ago, we were having a discussion on a response that we're making on a certain request. But you're gonna want, Casey, I know you're gonna want more detail than that, but we'll provide that when we have more firm commitment.
We'll be transparent about it for sure.
Got it. Okay. On SOFIA ABC, you know, how should we think about that test in an endemic COVID environment? Was that ABC number you called out for this quarter largely Omicron driven? You know, should we assume kind of similar volumes between the ABC test and the flu standalone test moving forward?
Well, I think it's fair to say we did see an uptick in flu in the quarter, and that drove a lot of that ABC, but you're right. It's certainly interesting that the Omicron variant in many folks manifested itself in symptoms that were very much flu-like. A lot of people, including myself, would've described it as so sort of a mild flu. I can see how that would drive physician behavior to make sure that we understand whether it's flu or COVID.
Gotcha. Just last one from me. You talked about Savanna launching in the U.S. in the back half of the year. Can you remind us of the margin profile of both the instrument and consumables there on Savanna? How do they compare to SOFIA and also how do they compare to the combined company's margin profile? Thank you.
Thanks, Casey.
Yes. On Savanna, the nice thing is the instrument cost is very reasonable, so we're estimating that a lot of it's gonna be on a reagent rental agreement. We'll do it over a three to five year contract is what we're currently estimating in the U.S. The margin profile when we're, you know, at volume with our cartridge manufacturing, certainly our target is to be incremental to our kind of overall 65%. We're looking at margins probably in the below 70% margins here as we get traction going into 2023.
Got it. Thanks.
You're welcome.
Thank you. The next question comes from Jack Meehan from Nephron Research. Please proceed.
Good afternoon. First, Randy, just wanted to say, it's been both fun and great working with you over the years. I also have a feeling this won't be the end. Hopefully see you around in San Diego or elsewhere in the future.
Appreciate it.
lead off questions talk
Always up the building.
Sounds good. Wanted to start just back on SOFIA. You know, the installed base is, you know, just kind of reflecting over the last couple years, it's expanded a lot, 79,000 instruments now in the field. Can you just give us a mark to market on what the mix looks like today between physician office, hospital, urgent care versus non-traditional sites that might have scaled up for COVID?
Yeah, it's interesting, Jack. We have seen a little shift, and we're now seeing, you know, placements, we're now seeing about a little over 15% of the placements are in urgent care. We're seeing hospitals at about 25%, and then POL is around 50%. In the hospital setting, you're now seeing an increase. Per hospital, usage around 6 instruments versus what we had said was four before. I think the growth you're seeing is, you know, really in current customers adding, hospitals and additional placements as well as expanded into urgent care, as we've talked about previously.
I know, like, obviously the visibility and the kind of future COVID demand isn't great for anybody, but was just curious, you know, maybe what you're hearing from your SOFIA customers around kinda what the ongoing utilization of these instruments is gonna look like, whether it be for COVID or some of the other assays under development.
That's a good question, Jack. We're gonna have to see what we see moving forward. You know, we're projecting and we're hypothesizing that we're gonna be in a, you know, we call it post-COVID, but effectively this is just another virus that presents itself from year to year it seems. That's the answer on that side I think. Then moving forward, obviously we're, you know, we're forecasting and we're putting together business development plans around these new assays and I think there's a strong chance that we've identified the things that are important to our customers moving forward. I'm speaking obviously, Jack, specifically about the things we have in development.
Got it. On Savanna, submitting under EUA, and then you have the 510(k) submission coming in July. Can you just talk about, like, what the approval pathway looks like? Do you think you'll get EUA approval? You know, what is the 510(k) on top of that? Just you know, what's the timeline look like for kind of full approval of Savanna?
Well, in the pre-COVID situation, I would've been able to speculate with some degree of certainty around the timeline with the FDA. I think it's safe to say that particularly on 510(k)s, that you know prevalence is driving the clinical trial, but then the approval process, you know, depending on the value of the particular product, it's not quite as short as it used to be. In the old days we would've said 90 days for most things and it's entirely possible that that goes out another month or so.
Okay. Final question. On the cardiometabolic business, the Triage sales were up 1% year-over-year. It's probably a little lighter than, you know, I think the way you've described revenue in a given quarter in the past. Just were there any headwinds that you saw? Just any additional color on triage specifically would be great.
Yeah, Jack. The, you know, the shortfall was really all U.S.-based and looking into it a little bit more, I think it's more just kind of a sell in versus a sell through, 'cause we looked at the sell through data in U.S. and it was up, I think in high single digits. I think it was more an inventory situation than it was really a demand for the product. That still would've put the
Okay.
It would've put the growth more in the mid-single digits, you know, considering that issue. It's more of a just timing issue than it was a sell through issue.
Maybe for you or for Doug, any thoughts on high sensitivity troponin, just, you know, how the feedback is from field on that and, just any revenue contribution you can call out at this point?
Well, I think we had good success in launching in European markets in particular, and you know, we continue with the clinical trials from here in the U.S. I think the feedback from KOLs in particular who have looked at the product has been quite good. We're not quite there yet in terms of the clinical trial, but we expect to be there shortly.
Super. Thank you.
Thanks, Jack.
Thank you.
Yeah. Thanks, Jack.
The next question. The next question comes from Andrew Cooper with Raymond James. Please proceed.
Hey guys. Thanks for the questions and Randy, to echo everybody else's sentiment, it's been fun to watch everything over the last many years and wish you the best if we don't see you quite as often anymore. Maybe just first on Savanna, you know, we just listened to Ortho call out some chip issues, far from the only one. I think, Doug, you've commented in the past that's been a little bit of a challenge for the instrument side. Are you able to build some inventory for as we head into this U.S. launch? Once you close the deal, is there any thinking that, hey, you might get a little bit more leverage with some of those chip suppliers? Anything to look out on that front?
That's a very interesting question, Andrew. I would say that we've had challenges that we've sorted through for the most part. We're not in a position where we're building a ton of inventory, but at the same time we're making progress. We're building enough instruments to put more instruments in the R&D organization. We're building more instruments that can supply the European launch and certainly, we're anticipating having some level of inventory as we launch. It's a great question though, because worldwide supply chain issues are, you know, pretty big across the board. I do think that we have an opportunity in combining the company to explore things that we can jointly do together.
Certainly, Ortho purchases a lot of products that go into their instrumentation and that could be helpful, but that's something to work on and explore and I'm hopeful that that's the case. Because at the end of the day, I see the only constraint with the launch, honestly, being our ability to get enough instruments into the market as quickly as possible, as well as our ability to manufacture cartridges at very high volumes. You know, we've learned a lot about hyper-scaling. Got an organization that's got a lot of strength now that we didn't have before in terms of supply chain. Phil McLellan and the team in operations have done a phenomenal job so far.
A lot of work to be done, but I'm pretty confident in the team and I've got some talented folks that are working on it.
Okay, great. Maybe just one more. I think you commented, I think the number was 87 projects from the cross-functional teams. Can you give us a sense for, you know, how much of the $90 million of cost synergies maybe come from those projects? What's, you know, fully identified and fully baked versus, hey, we've identified something, but don't quite have the plan really put together. Just sort of where are we in trying to capture that $90 million right away?
Well, what we're aimed at and what we're gonna achieve in 2023, and we expect to have a roadmap that we can help describe for you in terms of all that. I would say that, for the most part, the things that we had identified were possible. Reductions are certainly there, and there are others that give us great confidence that the number that we've called out is not over-projected. Year one, 2023, is what we're aimed at right now, and I would just say based on what I know right now, I'm pretty confident.
Great. I'll stop there. Thanks for the questions.
Thank you.
Thanks, Andrew.
If you would like to ask a question, press star one. There are no additional questions. I'm sorry.
Sure.
We do have a follow-up from Andrew Cooper. Please proceed.
I was trying to be generous and let other people ask, but I'll fire one more at you guys just in terms of SOFIA Q. You know, it came up a couple of times in the call, but trying to get a sense for, you know, what the hurdles are to get that product to market a little bit more aggressively and what you're looking for before we can expect, you know, more concrete commentary and a broader launch.
Yeah. I like the question, Andrew. The product performed exceedingly well with the COVID product that we had, but we made a determination that launching into the market with one product was not a great idea. We're working on what other menu items would go on that. We have manufactured. There is a situation where we've got inventory, so we're looking at what other products that we'd wanna put on that. Specifically, I think it's probably a pretty good product for the professional market, but obviously could be a candidate for an OTC product as well.
Okay, great. Thanks again.
Thank you. That is all the time we have today. Please proceed with your presentation or any closing remarks.
Well, I'll conclude just simply by saying it was a great quarter. The team really stepped up and rose to the challenge, and I appreciate it very much. I don't wanna sign off before saying that I know you all appreciate very much the way that you've dealt and communicated with Randy over the years and he's still gonna be around. We're gonna try to keep him in the game. He's got that place in Santa Fe that he can't wait to get to, but we're still trying to dangle the carrot out there to keep him involved.
He's got a wealth of experience and, you know, in addition, you know, he's collegial, he's determined, he's optimistic, and we're still gonna keep him around for a while, but, he's gonna be very helpful as we move through the integration. You know, there's not too many people in our space that have his sorts of experiences. He's a little bit feisty from time to time, but, you know, that's a good thing. I'll just say on behalf of you all and our company that we appreciate Randy, everything that you've done. With that, I would say thanks everybody for your interest in Quidel, and I hope you enjoy the rest of the day.
Ladies and gentlemen, we thank you for your participation and ask that you disconnect your lines. Goodbye.