Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the AVITA Medical Fourth Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Jessica Ekeberg, Director of Investor Relations.
Thank you, operator. Welcome to AVITA Medical's Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2023 Earnings Call. Joining me on today's call are Jim Corbett, Chief Executive Officer, and David O'Toole, Chief Financial Officer. Today's earnings release is available on our website, www.avitamedical.com, under the Investor Relations section. Before we begin, let me remind you that this call will include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are neither promises nor guarantees and involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from any expectations expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Please review our most recent filings with the SEC, specifically the risk factors described within the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2023, for additional information. Any forward-looking statements provided during this call are based on management's expectations as of today.
I will now turn the call over to Jim for his comments.
Thank you, Jessica. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today. I will begin today's call by discussing our financial and business highlights of the Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2023, followed by an update on our priorities for 2024. Following this update, I will turn the call over to David, who will provide commentary on our 2023 financial performance and 2024 guidance before opening the call to Q&A. During the February 2023 conference call, I outlined our 2023 priorities, our growth strategy, and committed to providing quarterly and annual guidance. Additionally, I emphasized that 2023 would mark a significant turning point for AVITA Medical, a year in which we plan to transform our business by letting multiple new indications dramatically increase our growth trajectory. I'm pleased to report we did just that.
We finished 2023 strong, delivering fourth quarter commercial revenue of $14.1 million, representing growth of 50% over the same period in 2022. This performance highlights our sustained quarterly growth trajectory. For the full year of 2023, we closed with commercial revenue of $49.8 million, representing impressive growth of 46% over the prior year. This is a significant achievement reflecting the effectiveness of our strategic growth initiatives and initial launch of full-thickness skin defects, which I will address shortly. Shifting focus to our recent developments, on January 10th, we announced that we entered into an exclusive five-year distribution agreement with Stedical Scientific to commercialize PermeaDerm Biosynthetic Wound Matrix in the United States. PermeaDerm is a transparent, flexible dressing that is cleared by the FDA for use in the treatment of a wide range of wound types until healing is achieved.
PermeaDerm's high level of permeability and flexibility allow medical professionals to stretch it, giving the clinicians the ability to customize the porosity to meet the specific needs of the wound. This adjustability facilitates wound healing. Moreover, PermeaDerm can be used alongside the treatment of many of our burn and full-thickness skin defect cases to further aid in healing. The complementary nature of these two products and overlapping call points allow us to leverage our commercial organization to effectively integrate PermeaDerm into our selling portfolio. Our commercial organization will launch PermeaDerm during March, and we will update you on this effort during our first quarter call after we have had some experience selling to our customers. The partnership marks the first step in our efforts aimed at expanding our portfolio of wound care products that will facilitate wound treatment.
Moving onto our international expansion strategy, last quarter, I unveiled our plans to expand into Australia and most of the European Union through third-party distribution partnerships. I'm happy to report that PolyMedics, our first European distributor, completed their RECELL training and launched within Germany, Austria, and Switzerland in January, as expected. We will continue to update you as we identify new distributor partnerships. Turning to the PMA supplement for RECELL GO, we have completed the in-house testing that was necessary to fulfill the FDA's request for additional information. As previously stated, we expect to submit our response to the FDA on February 28, 2024. With the restart of the 180-day real-time review, we plan to launch on May 31, 2024.
Moving on to the manufacturing and assembly of RECELL GO, we mentioned during our last call that we made the strategic decision to bring the entire manufacturing and assembling process of both the durable and disposable components in-house to our Ventura facility. We will also be completing a service center for the durable that will be located in Ventura. We are on track to complete this transfer ahead of the May 31st launch of RECELL GO. As part of the insourcing process, we have been renovating our Ventura facility to increase capacity by tenfold. This expansion will also facilitate PermeaDerm distribution, with our Ventura facility serving as the hub for housing and distributing PermeaDerm to our customers, along with our other products.
As a result of this expansion, we will have ample space for manufacturing and assembly, as well as physical distribution, ensuring efficient operations for the next five years of dislocation.
These renovations are being completed in phases throughout 2024, with the final phase scheduled for completion during the third quarter. While we work to enhance our operational capabilities to fuel our growth, we are also focused on the next expansion of our commercial field organization. Our primary objective during our first commercial organization expansion, which occurred in the early half of 2023, was aligning our sales strategy with our overall growth strategy by focusing on adoption and new cases for our new indication of full-thickness skin defects. To achieve this, we strategically increased both our sales team from 30 - 70 people and our territories from 14 - 40 to maintain small sales territories and keep our growth rate high. Specifically, we aimed for our 40 territories to average under $2 million to facilitate effective coverage, penetration, and growth.
We should be approaching the $2 million threshold during the latter half of 2024, and therefore our plan is to expand our sales force and territories again to keep the focus on adoption and growth. Moreover, an expanded sales force will allow us to intensify our efforts in the value analysis committee process, thereby maximizing our ability to capitalize on the expanded label of full-thickness skin defects. Consequently, we are adding 38 new positions to our commercial organization, which will bring our commercial organization to a total of 108. We expect our expanded field team to be in place by April 1st. With our current commercial field organization and our expanded sales force, we expect to add approximately 200 new accounts during 2024. As we discussed during our third quarter call, the broadened scope of full-thickness skin defects provides us with an opportunity to pursue many different applications for RECELL.
As part of this pursuit, we must access multiple physician specialists within a single facility to get value analysis committee, also known as VAC, approval, resulting in a lengthier sales process. We continue to affirm this expanded indication increases the patient population of RECELL by ten times over the patient opportunity with burns. In line with the expanded label of full-thickness skin defects, we are in the design stage of developing RECELL GO mini. RECELL GO mini is being designed to address smaller wounds, providing us with the opportunity to treat patients with less than five percent total body surface area affected. This device will have the same reusable durable as RECELL GO, but will have a different cartridge that accommodates a smaller donor skin sample. We intend to submit a PMA supplement in order to achieve FDA approval by year-end. Now, turning to the vitiligo initiative.
In January, we completed enrollment of 109 patients in TONE, our post-market study evaluating repigmentation and its impact on quality of life for vitiligo patients earlier than anticipated. Our initial six-month follow-up assessments are scheduled to begin in July. To strengthen the data that we are collecting, we have extended the follow-up period to include an additional assessment at 12 months post-treatment. We expect to submit both this study and our separate health economic study for publication by the end of 2024. The study dates position us to begin commercial payer coverage discussions during the second quarter of 2025. Subsequently, we anticipate a phased rollout of commercial coverage on a regional basis, with the initial phase likely to begin in the fourth quarter of 2025, supported by an appropriately sized commercial organization as coverage is established throughout the United States.
Before turning the call over to David, I would like to address our financial outlook. I previously committed to communicating the quarter in which we achieved cash flow break-even and GAAP profitability. We are pleased to report that we have established a path to achieve both milestones no later than the third quarter of 2025. In closing, 2023 marked an exciting inflection point for us, and our dedication to innovation and growth continues. We remain resolute in our commitment to unlocking shareholder value through increased adoption and sustained growth within our indications and the expansion of our portfolio. I look forward to sharing further updates on our continued progress. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to David.
Thank you, Jim. We continue to deliver strong financial results. In the three months ended December 31st, 2023, our commercial revenue increased to $14.1 million, $4.7 million more than the $9.4 million in the same period in 2022. Since Q1 of 2023, we have demonstrated sustained impressive commercial revenue growth rates of 40%, 42%, 51%, concluding the year with a Q4 growth of 50% compared to the same quarters in the prior year. Our strong third and fourth quarter results were largely driven by three key factors. First, we were able to capitalize on our pre-existing burn center accounts, of which half also have trauma centers, enabling us to immediately market full-thickness skin defects in those centers, thus boosting sales. Second, we have received VAC approval on a number of new accounts. And lastly, we continue to benefit from increased adoption in the burns market.
Gross profit margin for the quarter was 87.3% compared to 86% in the same period in 2022. This significant increase in gross margin was driven by the increase in sales and production of our product. As we have discussed previously, as production and sales increase, we benefit from the fact that approximately 50% of our cost of goods sold is fixed, representing the cost of the facility in Ventura. Total operating expenses for the quarter were $24.7 million compared to $15 million in the same period in 2022. The increase in operating expenses is primarily attributable to an increase of $2.4 million in G&A expenses related to stock-based compensation, consulting expenses, and employee-related costs.
Additionally, we incurred an increase of $3.4 million in R&D costs, which was primarily due to employee compensation costs, including recruiting costs, accelerated recruitment, and third-party costs associated with the TONE study, and costs associated with insourcing RECELL GO production to our Ventura facility. Lastly, sales and marketing expense increased by $3.9 million, primarily due to employee-related costs, including commissions, travel, and promotion expense, as a result of the expansion of our commercial organization in the second quarter of 2023. For the full year ended December 31st, 2023, our commercial revenue increased by 46% to $49.8 million compared to $34.1 million in the same period in 2022. The growth in commercial revenues was largely driven by deeper penetration within individual customer accounts, along with the launch of full-thickness skin defects through our expanded commercial team. The gross profit margin for the full year was 84.5% compared to 82% in 2022.
The gross profit margin for the year was at the higher end of our full-year guidance of 83%-85%. Total operating expenses were $86.4 million compared to $59.1 million in the same period in 2022. The increase in operating expenses is largely attributable to an increase of $15.4 million in sales and marketing costs as a result of the expansion of our commercial organization in the first half of 2023. Alongside this expansion, G&A costs increased by $5 million due to the increased headcount and related salaries and benefits, stock-based compensation, consulting fees, and recruiting costs. Lastly, R&D costs increased by $6.9 million, primarily driven by the cost of the TONE study, final work and completion of the PMA supplement to the FDA in June of 2023 for RECELL GO, and employee-related costs, including stock-based compensation.
Net loss for the fourth quarter was $7.1 million, or a loss of $0.28 per share, compared to a net loss of $5.4 million, or a loss of $0.21 per share in the same period in 2022. Net loss for the full year 2023 was $35.4 million, or a loss of $1.40 per share, compared to a net loss of $26.7 million, or a loss of $1.07 per share in the full year 2022. As of December 31st, we had cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities of $89.1 million compared to $86.3 million as of December 31st, 2022. During our third quarter conference call, I discussed the credit agreement we entered into with OrbiMed on October 18. As a reminder, $40 million of the total $90 million debt facility was funded at closing.
As we have discussed previously, we do not, at this time, foresee a need for either of the remaining $25 million tranches before they expire at the end of this year. With our current cash balance of $89.1 million as of December 31st and our expectations of reaching cash flow break-even no later than the third quarter of 2025, we are confident that we have sufficient cash reserves to achieve our goals. Turning now to our 2024 guidance, for the first quarter of 2024, we expect commercial revenues to be in the range of $14.8 million-$15.6 million. This reflects a growth rate between 42%-50% over the same period in 2023. Our annual revenue guidance for 2024 is expected to be in the range of $78.5 million-$84.5 million, which would reflect growth between 57%-69% compared to the full year 2023.
Lastly, during the fourth quarter, we made the decision to reorganize our corporate structure and wind down our legacy foreign subsidiaries to improve the efficiency of our operating and reporting structure. Due to the limited business operations of the foreign subsidiaries, the net impact of the restructuring was a $9.4 million foreign exchange gain or previously deferred unrealized cumulative translation adjustments in equity. This $9.4 million non-cash gain was recorded in other income expense on the statement of operations. We expect the restructuring to be completed no later than the third quarter of this year, at which point our primary operating company, AVITA Medical Americas LLC, will be a wholly owned subsidiary of AVITA Medical Inc., and no foreign subsidiaries will exist. With that, we thank you for joining us. And now I will turn the call back to the operator for your questions.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. One moment for questions. Our first question comes from Brooks O'Neil with Lake Street Capital Markets. You may proceed.
Good afternoon, guys. Congratulations on the terrific progress. I have a couple of questions. I guess first, I would love to get any color you can offer about the experience you're having with the hospital VACs. And then maybe you could just tell us a little bit about the experience you see if you get VAC approval getting procedures performed by the surgeons in those hospitals?
Hey, Brooks. Thanks very much. So first, let me describe the experience we're having. And very broadly speaking, we have well over 100 hospitals in some stage of the VAC process. What we're experiencing is, frankly, a longer cycle time related to the broader label. So we're, in most cases, needing to involve three or four physician specialties and as many as 10 different indications. And of course, there commensurate DRG or reimbursement. So the complexity has, fortunately, it's a little bit like a wave coming ashore. There's a lot of them. And we've been at it now two quarters. So they are starting to splash ashore. And that's a good metaphor because everybody's happy when that happens. But the experience we're having is it requires a more intense selling process.
One of the reasons we moved up during the year, our sales expansion, is so that we could take advantage in real time and more rapidly that broader label. Because you've got to, in one sense, keep in mind that on a patient level, 35,000 RECELL-eligible burn patients, but nearly 400,000 RECELL-eligible full-thickness skin defect patients. So it's really worth it for us to penetrate these hospitals. And we're getting experience in cases that we haven't seen treated before and having very good clinical results. So we're really feeling very good about the progress we're making. So during the year, to answer the obvious, we expect to add approximately 200 new accounts.
Great. That's very helpful. So perhaps we could just talk a little bit about any progress you feel you're making capturing some of the incremental burn activity within the level one and level two trauma centers you're beginning to call on?
Well, certainly, we are. That's our lead clinical data and our lead clinical experience commercially over the last few years. We find them in the level one trauma centers. The physicians typically are well aware of RECELL because they go to burn meetings. They just were not reached by our sales coverage model in prior years. So we're getting progress in those instances and much more to get because that VAC becomes more complex, right, as I was describing earlier. We are seeing those cases.
Great. Let me just ask one more. I appreciate all the color. Obviously, last year, you had a substantial expansion of the sales force. And now we're embarking on a second expansion. Can you just talk a little bit about, let's call it, your experience with the first expansion and your confidence that you can find the right people to complete the second expansion?
Well, I can tell you, on January 18th, I was at our national sales meeting in Dallas where we celebrated and did the very common awards for the sales team. What was really impressive is how many of them have become really successful and have great momentum in their territories. At the same time, our experience has been that we have the ability to really make the expansion happen rapidly because we are growing and we have a proprietary technology. It's a technology and company that, for the sales rep, really creates a special opportunity. We initiated the sales expansion after that national sales meeting. We expect to be complete hiring by the end of March. So that is an indirect indicator of the demand that exists in the marketplace to come to work for AVITA.
That's fantastic. Thanks for the color. Congratulations on the terrific results.
Thanks, Brooks.
Thank you. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Josh Jennings with TD Cowen. You may proceed.
Hi. This is Eric on for Josh. Thanks for taking the question. Within guidance for 2024, could you help us understand what you're assuming for some of your different growth opportunities here? I'm thinking the launch of full-thickness and RECELL GO. How much of the growth in 2024 do you think these opportunities will account for?
Well, first of all, our guidance anticipates growth of between 57% and 69%, so substantial growth. RECELL GO will essentially replace the RECELL manual system. So it's not very easy to separate them because RECELL GO, the durable, will not actually create a sales dollar by itself. The disposable and cassette that goes with it that processes and disaggregates the skin will replace the RECELL kit. So from an assumption point of view, it is really driven by RECELL penetration into full-thickness skin defects. That is the really big growth area. We continue to gain share in the core burns business. But in time, that will become the minority of our total business relative to full-thickness skin defects. So I mentioned earlier that we expect to add approximately 200 new accounts during the year.
The principal sales of those will all be not all, but vast majority of full-thickness skin defect cases. So that's the real driver. Is that helpful?
That is. Yeah. Thank you for that color. And then maybe thinking internationally, should we be thinking of contributions from Europe and your distribution partners there? Is that a real driver for 2024, or is that something that might take a little bit more time, and maybe we should be thinking 2025? Thank you for the questions.
Yes. Well, regarding international, as we mentioned, we've signed our first European distributor, which is covering the countries of Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. The company's PolyMedics. Now, they have been trained, and they've started their initial launch and have had initial cases. We think that the volume will build through the year, though, however, because just like any sophisticated market these days, similar as in the United States, they don't have exactly a VAC committee. They have something equivalent, though. So we'll be adding additional distributors in other European markets throughout the year. Our goal is to finish the year with Europe largely covered. We will be making contributions and projections as we get a little momentum behind us and understand the demand pattern that's going to emerge from, in this case, Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. And we will update our guidance with that in mind.
But 2024 will be the year to get the foundation in place of all our distribution partners. And 2025 will be where I think we see material revenue.
Okay. That's perfect. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Matthew O'Brien with Piper Sandler. You may proceed.
Hey. This is Phil from Matt. Thanks for taking our questions and congrats on all the progress. I guess just for starters on guidance, appreciating that guidance is back half-weighted. Do you expect an inflection as you start to knock down some of these VACs, or is it going to be more measured? I guess just any color on cadence, as guidance implies, a reacceleration of growth off more difficult comps.
Well, actually, there's a couple of drivers. The VAC approvals that we're receiving here in first quarter and that we will receive in second quarter will be more fully productive during second half. So that's a reflection. And anytime you convert a new account, you get increased adoption over the coming year following. So that is incorporated. We also are expecting, as you learned earlier, that RECELL GO will launch May 31st. And RECELL GO will replace our manual RECELL and will make cases easier to do, require less clinical support. So there's no direct sales tied to RECELL GO per se. But the conversion of our business to using RECELL GO as our delivery vehicle does reduce the training requirement for the customer and for our sales organization and inevitably will cause higher productivity. So those are rather core assumptions in our model.
No. Thank you. That's helpful. And then I guess just a follow-up, can you talk about your strategy when it comes to filling the bag with additional products, specifically as it relates to Stedical Scientific and maybe any other products that you feel AVITA will need down the road?
Yes. Sure. Well, what our mission is, is to help the patients and physicians that use our products and have our products used on them. And with RECELL, we have a real opportunity because we have a very well-proven at this point technology that does not have a direct competitor. And we are in cases with these patients who have very significant injuries and wounds. And there's other products that surround the use of RECELL that we can bring and support our customer with and help solve their clinical problems. So PermeaDerm is an example of that. The wound matrix is porous. It's see-through. It's much more convenient to manage the wound with, for example. It can be used in some cases in conjunction with RECELL. In many cases, it'll be used on its own.
So it is a meaningful from a technical point of view, it's a call point overlap of almost a full Venn diagram. There are other products that are similar. I think the dermal scaffold is a very important technology for us to invest in. We've been researching that field and expect to find a suitable technology in the coming year. So I think there's likely others that overlap this call point and overlap this patient population and physician population. We are going to really develop our company into a broader acute wound care company.
Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Ross Osborn with Cantor Fitzgerald. You may proceed.
Hey, guys. Congrats on the progress, and thanks for taking the questions. Maybe just one for me on RECELL GO mini. Would you just spend some more time on the rationale for developing this product and why RECELL GO may not be as attractive for smaller wounds?
RECELL GO, thanks for the question, Ross. I understand what you're asking. Let me walk you through. RECELL GO replaces the manual RECELL kit. That RECELL kit covered 1,920 square centimeters, which is about 10% TBSA. What we find in full-thickness is that a very significant portion of the cases the patients have the physicians have, excuse me, are under 500 square centimeters. It's very simple that to the customer, to the surgeon, using a product that's designed for 10% TBSA to treat a wound that is under five percent TBSA doesn't quite make sense to them. It seems wasteful. The reason we'll have RECELL GO mini, so RECELL GO Mini is merely a cassette that has less tissue volume than the RECELL GO standard cassette. They'll both fit into the RECELL GO durable. If you're treating a smaller wound, you'll use RECELL GO mini.
If you're treating a larger wound, you'll use the RECELL GO standard. Is that helpful?
Yes. Very helpful. Thanks for taking the questions.
Thank you. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Ryan Zimmerman with BTIG. You may proceed.
Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions.
Hey, Ryan.
I wanted to ask about the assumptions kind of underpinning your long-term profitability comments. I know it's a little too early to guide for 2025, but maybe help bridge us from here to there and kind of either what the revenue levels are or what the expense how the expenses kind of track in your mind to get there, especially in the context of adding all these reps. Again, just want to make sure investors understand your thinking there.
Well, we're not ready to give guidance for any of those elements for 2025, but I can give you some directional thoughts. On the revenue growth line, 57%-69% growth rate. Our gross profit has been and will continue to be on the resale, 85%. And so the revenue exit rate you can back into, I think, and then you can calculate the profitability into Q3 or before of 2025. I'd say it depends very fundamentally on maintaining a growth rate of greater than 50%, first of all. And so that means we'll accelerate in our guidance. In this case, not only are we having heavier revenue in the back half, we'll have a bigger organization. So, of course, we should. And that growth rate's actually accelerating against the second half of last year. So that means that's the growth rate we go into in 2025.
So I think the combination of growth rate, greater penetration into these new accounts with the larger sales footprint, remember, it only takes five kits a month for a rep to break even in cost. So we've just learned about that again, we had learned it when we had burns, and we just learned it in the first two quarters of the full-thickness launch. Just keep in mind that much bigger market, we've only been in six months. And by the time we expand the sales force a second time, we'll have only been in it nine months. So 2025 reflects penetration into that very deep market of full-thickness. Is that helpful?
Yes. Very helpful. And appreciate the color there. Maybe just to ask another question. Given you're in the value analysis process right now with a lot of facilities with the manual RECELL System and then excuse me, behind that, you're going to introduce the RECELL GO system. And its design is one where you're not collecting revenue for the system itself, but you have the consumable component. I'm just wondering, how are you smoothing that process so that there are no kind of air pockets when you go in to try and switch out and maybe change the business model a little bit with RECELL GO, appreciating the benefits it offers, but these are bureaucratic institutions that you're selling into. And you just want to make sure that there's no kind of impact as a result of that.
Yeah. It's a really good thought. The first principle of the RECELL GO launch is to make it easy for our customers and for them to understand that to get RECELL, the RES, what we call the CVAP, the spray-on skin, to get it, they will have to buy RECELL GO cassettes. So since we're not billing them for or charging them for or making them make a cost commitment to the durable, we believe that we're going to make it very easy for them to adopt.
Yeah. Okay. Fair enough. Appreciate that answer, Jim. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Chris Kallos with MST Access. You may proceed.
Thank you. Hi, Jim. Can you hear me okay?
I can. Good morning, Chris.
Good to see the result. Congratulations. I just wanted to pick up on adjacent products to the portfolio with PermeaDerm. And you mentioned scaffolds, and I imagine there are other adjacencies that you can look into. How does that impact your thinking around the sales force and how they're going to balance different products coming online? That's my first part of the question. And the second part is, do you have any thoughts around taking those products into international markets?
Yes. Multiple questions there. With respect to the adjacent products, these are products that all fit the following definition. They are used on the same patients by the same physicians and the same indications. Our rep is rather uniquely positioned because RECELL is a brand with, frankly, a bit of a halo. It doesn't have a direct competitor. The sales rep has good access to the hospital and to our customer base. Having other products that our customer might need is a real leverageable opportunity. We think that this is additive in terms of value add to our customer and additive, in fact, to what we bring the hospital in terms of fewer vendors and additive to, of course, our results as a company. The biosynthetic wound matrix of PermeaDerm fits so many more applications than RECELL.
Often, when we're selling RECELL or promoting it or discussing possible uses of it with a doctor, we might discuss several different patient indications and different patients before a RECELL is chosen to be used on a patient. All of those patients will be candidates for PermeaDerm in this case. It'll give our reps an opportunity to have many reasons to fulfill the needs of the customer. Now, to your last question, the PermeaDerm relationship is currently and the contract is a domestic U.S. agreement only, notwithstanding it's built as a real partnership in the way we're structured in this relationship. We expect to be with PermeaDerm for a lot of years.
Right. And that's very helpful. And in terms of going international with products like PermeaDerm, are you thinking that way at this point?
We're not really thinking much that way at this point, primarily because we're really in the nascent stage of our international strategy. We're just so early that the priority is to establish RECELL first, and we'll be doing that. And that will take some time. So it isn't a priority to strengthen that portfolio. In fact, what we're finding is the distributors that we're considering, including the one we did sign with in Europe, all have a broader portfolio already, which helps them sell more RECELL. So I think at this moment, this is a domestic U.S. strategy.
Yeah. It sounds logical. Thanks for that. Thank you.
Thanks, Chris.
Thank you. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Madeleine Williams with Wilsons. You may proceed.
Hi, Jim. Hi, David. Thanks for taking my question.
Hi, Madeleine.
I just wanted to ask in regards to going back to, I guess, the bottleneck with launching into the trauma centers. I mean, how much color do you get of what the ongoing process is like and whether you're going to be able to get that uplift in second half, just taking into account the guidance that you've given for the first quarter and then, obviously, full-year guidance?
Well, Madeline, I think that's a good question. I think we're largely through the consequence of the more complex value analysis committee process because we've started them, and we continue to start more. And they're coming out. The new accounts are coming out of the process, and we started new ones. So it slowed us a little bit in the fourth quarter, but not much. But we do note that it is different, and it is more complex. But what comes with that is a much bigger market with many more patient indications and many more possible treatment candidates. So I think right now, probably after this call, you won't hear much about VAC other than we're progressing really well, and we're hitting our targets for the year. And I've mentioned that we expect to add nearly 200 new accounts for the year.
We're on a good pace here in the first quarter to make that happen.
Yes. Okay. That's great color. And just in regards to, I guess, then translating that access into sales, I mean, I know there's some crossover with the surgeons utilizing in both burns and then sort of more trauma surgeons. But I mean, are they sort of already aware of being able to utilize RECELL? And is the discussion in terms of the difference between RECELL and RECELL GO already happening?
Well, the difference between RECELL and RECELL GO first of all, the output of the two of them is the same. But since we don't have FDA approval, we're not discussing RECELL GO with customers at this moment that we have to wait for approval for. I don't think that will be a big challenge for them. We've done private focus groups with them to talk about how we're going to introduce the product. It's going to be a I think the word is a wholesale conversion of our business model. So all customers who want to use RECELL will do so with a RECELL GO durable and use the RECELL cassette. So it'll be a conversion that we execute during Q3.
Yep. Okay. That's very helpful. Thanks.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Lyanne Harrison with Bank of America. You may proceed.
Yeah. Good morning, Jim and David. If I could come back to the conversations you're having about RECELL GO, I know you mentioned that it hasn't been launched yet. But if I think about the rest of the world, how familiar is the rest of the world surgeon community familiar with RECELL currently as it is? And how should we think about the rate of adoption there? And then secondly, with the PolyMedics training, did you also have them trained on RECELL GO so that they're ready to go when the launch occurs in May?
Got it. Okay. Let me make sure I line them all up. There is across Europe and Australia and Japan, I'd say good to moderate familiarity with RECELL already. That said, we were not commercial anywhere but Japan during this time. So I think we're introducing RECELL into a market where most are going to be new. Now, with respect to RECELL GO and let's just take Europe first. We are launching RECELL, it's called RECELL 1920, which is the standard system in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland now. And when RECELL GO gets its CE Mark through the MDR, which we expect sometime in third quarter, they will convert. So some distributors and some customers in Europe, depending on when we signed a distributor, may see RECELL for the first time in the RECELL GO configuration and not have ever seen the original RECELL or not have used it.
So I think it'll be a matter of timing on that level. And no, we didn't train PolyMedics on RECELL GO. That'll be something we'll do when the product is approved.
Right. Thank you. And then if I think about gross margin so obviously, well, for this quarter, you had a material improvement in gross margin. I guess that you talked about for 2024, you mentioned you're guided to 85% gross margin. Is there any reasoning why you don't think you could maintain that higher watermark of 87% going into 2024, particularly given you're increasing your volumes over that period?
Yeah. It's a good question. So first of all, just to be precise, I didn't exactly give guidance of 85%. We've been operating in that territory were my words. And there's a reason I'm emphasizing that. Our margin with PermeaDerm will be 50%, not 85%. So on resale, we will very likely be in that 85% range. And you may have captured during the call that we're making some investments in our manufacturing operation, rather substantial, frankly. And that couple margin points makes a little bit of it does make a little difference when you completely rehab the facility. So our cost structure has gone up a slight bit on the one hand. And on the other hand, we will be introducing into our mixed gross profit a 50% gross profit product.
Okay. Great. Thank you. And one last question from me is on operating costs. So in 2023, we saw 43% in operating costs, which pretty much is in pace with your revenue growth over that period. Should we expect that again for 2024, or do you expect some operating leverage, particularly towards the second half of 2024, given that you mentioned you might get acceleration of revenues there?
I'm going to have David jump in on this one.
Yeah. We don't see that same sort of percentage in 2024. We are expanding our sales force. So from a sales expense standpoint, there will be an increase. But the R&D expense is not going to increase by 43% again, as well as G&A is not going to increase either. So there will be leverage, as you indicated, as our revenue accelerates towards the end of the year in the third and fourth quarter, you will see a decrease as a percentage in operating expenses when compared to revenue.
Right. Thank you very much. That's all I had.
Thank you. I would now like to turn the call back over to Jim Corbett for any closing remarks.
Well, thank you very much to all of you for joining our call today. We look forward to our next earnings call to announce our progress in Q1. Looking forward to hearing from all of you soon. Thank you.
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