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Q-linea reported a significant increase in recurring income for the third quarter of 2025, showcasing a 370% growth compared to the same period last year. The company’s strategic initiatives, including a reduction in operational expenses and workforce, have positioned it for future growth. According to InvestingPro data, the stock is currently trading near its 52-week low, with an RSI indicating oversold conditions. The company maintains a market capitalization of $19.38 million, with its stock seeing a slight dip of 0.02% following the earnings call.
Key Takeaways
- Recurring income grew by 370% year-over-year for the first nine months of 2025.
- Q-linea plans to reduce its workforce and operational expenses significantly.
- The company is targeting a rights issue of SEK 322 million, with 85.6% already covered.
- Expansion into the Middle East is underway, with presence in over 15 countries.
Company Performance
Q-linea has demonstrated robust performance in Q3 2025, primarily driven by substantial growth in recurring income. The company has effectively managed its operational costs by reducing its workforce from 150 to 83 employees and consolidating its offices in Uppsala. These strategic moves are expected to reduce monthly operational expenses to between SEK 11.3 million and SEK 11.8 million by 2026. InvestingPro analysis shows the company maintains a strong current ratio of 5.54, indicating solid short-term liquidity, though it’s currently experiencing negative EBITDA of -$17.59 million.
Financial Highlights
- Recurring income: Increased by 370% year-over-year.
- Current cash at hand: SEK 42.6 million.
- Planned rights issue: SEK 322 million, with 85.6% already guaranteed.
Outlook & Guidance
Q-linea is optimistic about its future growth, with plans to deploy 30 ASTar systems by the end of the year. The company is also preparing for the FDA submission of its V2 menu, which has garnered significant customer interest. Based on InvestingPro’s Fair Value analysis, the stock appears undervalued at current levels. Q-linea expects to strengthen its market presence in 2026, supported by its strategic initiatives and secured financing. Subscribers to InvestingPro can access 12 additional ProTips and comprehensive financial metrics to better evaluate the company’s growth potential.
Executive Commentary
CEO Stuart Gander emphasized the company’s market potential, stating, "We see five to seven million tests in our space." He also highlighted the company’s focus on deploying 30 ASTar systems, saying, "The 30 is the number to chase for and drive for the entire Q-linea team." CFO Christer Samuelsson reassured investors about the company’s liquidity, noting, "We have going concern, which means that we have necessary liquidity to cover the operation for the next 12 months."
Risks and Challenges
- Market Competition: The exit of Accelerate Diagnostics presents an opportunity but also a challenge to capture their market share.
- Regulatory Approvals: The success of the FDA submission for the V2 menu is crucial for future growth.
- Economic Conditions: Macroeconomic pressures could impact the company’s planned rights issue and expansion efforts.
Q-linea’s strategic focus on innovation, cost reduction, and market expansion positions it well for future growth, despite a slight dip in stock value post-earnings call. The company’s proactive measures to secure financing and streamline operations reflect a solid foundation for achieving its long-term objectives. For deeper insights into Q-linea’s financial health and growth prospects, investors can access the comprehensive Pro Research Report, available exclusively on InvestingPro, which provides detailed analysis of the company’s performance metrics and future potential.
Full transcript - Q linea AB (QLINEA) Q3 2025:
Conference Operator: Welcome to the Q-linea Q3 report 2025. For the first part of the conference call, the participants will be in listen-only mode. During the questions and answers session, participants are able to ask questions by dialing #KEY-5 on their telephone keypad. Now, I will hand the conference over to CEO Stuart Gander and CFO Christer Samuelsson. Please go ahead.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Hello, everyone. Welcome, and thank you for joining this presentation of Q-linea’s Q3 report. You have Stuart Gander here, President and CEO, and I’m joined by my CFO, Christer Samuelsson. We’ll do this a little bit following our traditional process here. Just a quick disclaimer that we’ll take as read and understood. Moving ahead to the topics for today, I will start, as usual, with a commercial update. I will share some of the feedback that we’re getting from customers in our various interactions and some of that word of mouth that’s starting to spread very nicely between customers. I will talk about our priorities here for Q4 to close out the year strong. Before I hand it over to Christer, I’ll walk through our financials for the quarter. As ever, at the end, we’ll reserve time for your questions.
All right, and for those who just have a few minutes to join us, a few key messages that I would like to emphasize and for everyone to walk away with today. The first one, you know, the quarter was a strong one vis-à-vis consumables demand on the instruments. A couple of things driving that. Firstly, we had a large number of instruments that were sold during Q2 and one during Q1 that were activated during the quarter. Those obviously started to pull through volumes. We continue to see some increases in, let’s say, same instrument pull-through as customers are getting their protocols worked through and are starting to test on a larger set of their patients. Overall, the commercial pipeline continues to grow very nicely. The U.S.
team has expanded their number of customers that they’re speaking to, and particularly in the, let’s say, the front end of the pipeline or where we expect the contracts to come through is starting to build up. We’ve got over a dozen that are either in evaluation or setting up an evaluation currently or already in contracting. Those obviously have a fairly near-term outlook with strong visibility. On the EMEA side of things, Franco and team have also been busy. Italy continues to build up nicely. We proceed with more than 10 or so opportunities in Italy. I’ll talk a little bit more later on the eStar deal and how we see the country dynamics evolving there. Broadly, and perhaps even more exciting, the rest of Europe is continuing to build up. We do expect some contracts outside Italy during the quarter.
We have our first evaluations being planned now in Asia and Latin America. As of now, we are in commercial discussions in over 15 countries, which we’re very excited to see. We do expect a strong close to the year. We’re pushing hard to close those contracts, especially in North America. It’s fairly traditional that institutions do their capital purchase contracting in Q4. It tends to be back-end weighted. We hope for a strong quarter to close out. Another dynamic that’s driving this is one of the competitors in the field, Accelerate Diagnostics, has informed their customers that they will not be able to support the installed FINO base of instruments. That has triggered a number of conversations. Many of those customers were already looking at ASTar, but it’s set a timeline somewhat more urgently for many of the customers. We’re working actively with those players to pick those up.
The other news on the more internal side of things, we’re very pleased with the work that Henrik Jacobsen and the operations team have done, pulling in all of the activities needed for our in-house production. That’s now completed and signed off. Going forward, all of our discs will now be fully produced in-house, which has a significant decrease on the cost of goods per disc on a go-forward basis. It’s good timing because now, as I said, we see the consumables volume starting to pick up. Finally, we have and continue to work on the operational cost. This is following the stated plan and strategy that we shift our resources towards the market-centric activities, getting in front of customers, getting the word of RapidST and ASTar out into the market, and continue to refine and focus our development activities.
Now that we’re through some of the big heavy lifting to get ASTar ready, we’re working on some strategic build-outs for the ASTar platform, but are able at the same time to continue to reduce the resources on the back end, so to speak. We’ve brought down spending during Q3 and have a plan going forward to take out an additional roughly 10% of the cost base. With that, maybe just some orientation for those new to Q-linea and the AST market. Q-linea manufactures a flagship diagnostic medical instrument called the ASTar. It is the leader we contend in our field for rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing. It stands out from the others, notably in the fact that it’s a fully automated random access and continuous access platform, which is very well designed for automated lab workflows for the modern lab.
It has very high clinical reliability, test reproducibility, as we say, and a high throughput for labs. It also has very low hands-on time, which is critical for the busy lab tech in this day and age. Good. With that, I mean, the journey we’re on here, I’ve presented this before, so I’ll just touch on it real quick. Again, for those orienting, this is not per se a new set of testing. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing has been around for a long time. There’s an established market. The challenge for the patients and hospitals is that the current standard of care technologies can take several days, 48 to 72 hours, to produce an actionable result for the physician. Essentially, the ASTar produces that result within six hours.
What we anticipate and are starting to see with the increased demand on our tests is that for critical patients, that testing will move towards the rapid AST systems such as ASTar, obviously starting with blood infections that drive sepsis, being one of the most acute critical patient categories. There are other critical non-blood infections as well that will move over time, we believe, to rapid AST testing. If you run the rough numbers, we see five to seven million tests in our space. We see pricing holding up in that target range of $120 to $180 per test fairly consistently now. That generates a market just for the blood testing of $600 to $900 million that we’re opening up here and starting to see grow. On that note, sales development during the quarter. I will admit here that the quarter did not close as many contracts as we’d hoped.
We now have ended with 17 instruments in active routine use. I did mention that we turned on six of the instruments that were sold earlier. That’s nice to see that that time to installation and go live is continuing to shorten as we anticipated. The contracts we did get were both in the U.S. and Italy. We do see that there is a strong build-up, like I said earlier, especially in the U.S. here as contracts are entering their final stage. I do expect the quarter to close out strong. We continue to push hard towards our 30 target for the year. Obviously, before we talked about this last quarter, we had in the front of us an eStar tender in Italy with nine instruments. We’re openly disappointed, of course, that our previously successful appeal of the eStar tender decision was overturned by a court in Rome.
Whilst there has been no final award of that tender, and there may be things to come on that side, we now give lower visibility for sure on those nine instruments. With that, the upper end of our range last time, 30 to 40, we think is quite unlikely. However, we do have plenty of instruments in the pipeline here that we’re working through. The 30 is within shot on a strong Q4 close here. That’s supported by these 15 countries that are now active. Our direct team in the United States and Italy are working hard on their own pipeline of customers. We work through a network of distributors and agents in other countries around the world. Franco’s been leading many of those, and Jim is active on the Latin America side of things.
What we see here now is conversations we’ve had earlier starting to warm up, and distributors are coming to Q-linea with specific customer cases and evaluations that they want to run. Our posture on geographic expansion has been a measured one to conserve resources and be very, very thoughtful on where we put time and energy. We’re directing both towards where antimicrobial resistance is particularly high, i.e., there’s strong clinical need, but also that there’s a clear willingness to pay and a flagship customer willing to adopt in the market. In my experience, once the top institutions in any given country adopt, you start to get a rethinking of the standard of care, and from there, let’s say the proverbial snowball starts to roll.
Our approach now is to work with distributors to identify those flagships and invest in a very targeted way with our partners into those relationships to then grow in the market. I would hope to see that during Q4 instruments will go to more markets here, setting up for evaluations that would convert early part of next year. On that note, we did ship already for Saudi Arabia. That’s the third evaluation ongoing in the Middle East with our partner Amico, which has built a very robust pipeline in that region. I expect to see that 2026 is a strong year. We now are represented in the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. Obviously, three of the cornerstone markets for that region tend to set standards. I think that bodes well for the outlook. I already spoke about the U.S. pipeline.
I would say one dynamic there, obviously, Accelerate Diagnostics had a fairly robust installed base of customers that are now used to using RapidST and seeing the clinical benefits of that. Now those customers can no longer be served with consumables. They’ve turned to Q-linea for an alternative. We’re working with several of them now on an accelerated contracting process. As I’ve talked about several times, that can be sometimes a bit of a convoluted one in the U.S. with large institutions. Given the clinical urgency to maintain patient care, we’re optimistic that some of these will move through more quickly, which is good. Those are the highlights for the quarter and obviously the substance, let’s say, for how we maintain that target of 30 to close out the year. The team also keeps working at the opening end of the funnel, engaging with customers directly.
One of our best avenues to do so remains the face-to-face interaction at conferences where dozens or even hundreds of customers are accessible, and we can have rich conversations and demonstrate the instrument. Several of these happen over the summer season in the U.S., the largest of which being ADLM in Chicago, where I was present, and the team also represented us in the regional shows in Texas and in New England. I was present also with the team in Birmingham, United Kingdom, for the biannual IBMS conference, where we joined our distributor Prolab to catch up with customers there. The general theme of these is very consistent. We continue to put publications out into the space. That’s what these conferences are about and why customers go. They want to see the latest science.
We want to make sure that Q-linea is seen at the forefront of that, and the data continues to just reinforce the evidence that we’ve demonstrated before on the clinical impact of ASTar in practice, and that body of evidence continues to build. In parallel, our clinical affairs team has been engaging closely with, and with some results now, with the pharmaceutical manufacturing friends in our industry, obviously the ones who produce the antibiotics that are on our panel and for which the patients will be treated. For us, this represents one of the trickier parts of the development process. There’s obviously some cost there, but just getting those formulations ready and stable takes time and some specific expertise. Very pleased that we’ve now signed development partnerships with three of them.
They will help us with some of the, obviously, the raw materials for that, but also notably support on getting those formulations. Reducing time and cost for us to bring new drugs to market on what we internally call our V3 menu. We’re also very pleased to present together with Blasted the results from our work together this year on showing an ultra-rapid workflow. The direct from blood, if you recall the slide I showed a couple earlier, is the holy grail for our industry. Direct from blood testing, cutting out the need to incubate the blood culture, so another 10 or 12 hours. The results there were very strong. Obviously, plenty of work to be done for a commercial product, but we’re pleased with the work with the team, and the results continue to show that ASTar delivers nicely as part of the workflow.
On that note of demonstrating the science and listening to the customer, I just put one example here. There were several, obviously, also presented in U.S. conferences from our U.S. customers. As I mentioned, I was over in Birmingham at the IBMS. One of our customers, Jennifer Munkhaus, I think presented very nicely data from her lab there. It’s one that we’ve seen an increase in the usage as this data has come forward, demonstrating, of course, that the NHS trust has perhaps an appropriately conservative approach to taking on new technologies. They want to see that the clinical evidence is there. The lab started using ASTar, has now been able to demonstrate the impact as shown here, and now gotten sort of the nod from their local trust to go ahead and make that available for patients across the system.
There isn’t anything, let’s say, especially surprising about the numbers here because we keep showing something very similar, but nonetheless, a huge tribute to Jennifer for the great work pulling this together. It reinforces the reduction of time to patient therapy, in this case by around 1.7 days, and every hour counts in sepsis, as we know. The team has made an estimate here on what they determine to be the savings for the trust of £2 million. I think that’s a very important one to highlight since the main constraint, let’s say, for many of the clinicians and labs eager to adopt RapidST is that the healthcare budget holders are trying to find ways to fund new technologies and therefore scrutinizing and showing that health economic case is important.
This is another data point for us in what we call our business impact model that we discuss with customers every day. It’s a tool that we show that helps a hospital to see what the clinical and the economic impact is in their facility. You know, it’s one thing taking it from us. It’s another when a customer shows it to their own stakeholders and to their peers in the field, which carries even more weight. Great to see these coming out. More of these continue to come basically every quarter.
Our attention now is really pushing here to close strong on 2025, highlighting three areas, obviously starting with that commercial side, the conversion of the pipeline that I mentioned, the drive to 30 ASTar systems in field, partly but not entirely supported by the additional FINO users that are reaching out to us, and we can get those through on a slightly fast-tracked approach. I mentioned the first evaluations in Asia and Latin America. These are somewhat more distant markets geographically, some perhaps with some language and training challenges we’ll need to work through. It’s a test for our team that’s ready and been preparing for this. We’ll get some of those going and then really continue to drive that consumables pull-through growth on the platform.
Obviously, the new installations will do that of their own, let’s say, but we work closely with customers to discuss with them, you know, why they, if and why they stratify customers. Unfortunately, budgets don’t allow all customers to use the test for all patients, which is a difficult choice to make in a clinical environment for critical patients. We work with the customers and try to get them more data so they can work on that with their stakeholders. We will continue to do that, which ties into the clinical priorities where the team is, of course, focused with those frontline customers. At the same time, completing some of the strategic efforts that I mentioned earlier. We’re very happy that our internal work is completed now for the version two menu. We’re ready to submit, waiting for the U.S.
government to reopen here, and we’ll hit send more or less right away. The work is being presented at ID Week in Atlanta. I’m actually in Atlanta as I speak here, where we will present the results from using ASTar as a multi-prep workflow tool, which has benefits from both cost and also operator time and potentially even sort of reliability of preparing things for the end-to-end test. Very excited about that. That provides another avenue for value for our customers. We’re also working to prepare the first publication of results for non-blood AST testing with our research partners. There’s more to come. We keep alluding to that side of the patient population since they’re potentially even more numerous than blood patients. We expect to see that having an impact on our business in the fairly near future.
On the financial side, I’ll turn it over here to Christer to talk through the details. Our commitment is to continue to refine down the cost base as we get both more efficient on our operations. We achieve some scale here now as we’re able to get efficiencies. We will work on a couple of key initiatives such as, for example, moving the entire team to our Palmbladsgatan factory location in Uppsala. We currently have two offices in the Uppsala region, so that will generate some savings. I think it will also reduce some of the geographic frictions in the local team there, making us even more efficient. Some of the external costs as well will continue to come down both through efficiencies, but also as projects wind down and we complete those.
We’re targeting a 10% reduction through 2026, which still gives us the resources we need to drive the commercial agenda and deliver on those strategic projects. Finally, I think Christer will touch on this, obviously completing the rights issue that we’ve announced for Q4. With that, Christer, I will turn it over for you before coming back for questions.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Thank you, Stuart. I’ll provide you with a financial update and start with the top line revenues. It’s glad to see that the recurring income has grown, and we had a record month in September, although from fairly low numbers, but we can see a 370% increase if you compare the nine months in 2025 with the nine months in 2024, which is obviously good. From low numbers, but we are on that growth curve now, and we can see that, which makes us happy. Switching to the OPEX side, as Stuart said, the focus is on efficiency. The focus is to bring the OPEX down, and we are confident that we will do that. We are targeting a 10% reduction from the current rate we have now, which is about SEK 13 million per month. That is what we can see in 2026 and going forward.
On the financing side, as Stuart said, we will get to the rights issue. Before that, there are a few things that have happened during the third quarter. We had a reverse share split of 1,000 to 1. That means that the number of shares has decreased by dividing the actual numbers we had before by 1,000. The current number is 6.4 million shares. We have also conducted a reduction of share capital. That was concluded also in July. We now have a share capital of SEK 643,000, and the quota value is SEK 0.1. We also have handed in two new grant applications to the EU. I will touch upon that a bit later. Continue with the OPEX development. As I said, the OPEX has come down. There is lower, and we can see that also during the third quarter.
Obviously, if you look at the number of employees’ development from Q1 2024 and onwards, we have gone from 126 down to 83. If you look even further back into 2023, we were up at 150 employees. We have come down a fair bit, which obviously affects the OPEX, the personnel expenses. As you said, there are also some major R&D projects that come to an end, which affect the other external costs, which will help us to bring down the OPEX even further and get to the at least 10% reduction in 2026. We have some events to come linked to the rights issue. There is a fairly hectic period now. Tomorrow, we will have an extra general meeting held in Uppsala. I think we have some participants, maybe even on this call that will come in real life. Otherwise, there are not so many that come to this.
It does Lindahl’s office in Uppsala, our legal partner. Also, tomorrow, there’s a last day of trading in the company shares with the rights to receive subscription rights. On Wednesday, there will be a prospectus published from us. Also on Wednesday, there is the first day of trading in the shares without the subscription rights. You can trade in the subscription rights between October 27 to November 5. The subscription period for this rights issue starts October 27 and ends at November 10. We aim to present the outcome around the 11th of November of this rights issue. The rights issue, if I start on that one, is gross SEK 322 million if 100% is subscribed. We have now 85.6% guaranteed or covered by subscription rights.
If you start with the cash at hand end of September, the SEK 42.6 million, and then you go with the guaranteed amount, SEK 220 million, you will get to SEK 262 million. That is, you can call it secured. If we get the 100%, which we obviously aim for, you will get SEK 266 million with 100%. Together with the existing cash, you will be north of SEK 300 million secured financing. As I said, we have the spending going forward with the SEK 11.3 to SEK 11.8 million. There’s a span here. If you go down a little bit further on the slide, obviously, this is the spend we have if we don’t sell anything. We will sell, obviously, and we will get some gross profit from this sell. You can do your own math on these things.
Additional sources of financing, we are applying for grants where we see fit. We have done a couple of good applications in the third quarter, and we are waiting eagerly to see the outcome of these. One of them has a hybrid financing part of it, but that is more technical. There is a grant part in that one, and then there’s an investment part in it. We are looking for working capital financing as well, and we are in discussion with banks, Swedish banks, helped by other entities to offset the risk. That would be really good when we grow and with our business model, reagent rental model, where we actually put the instrument with the client and get paid when they sort of buy the consumables. That will increase the assets on our balance sheet and will require some financing.
We think we have some good chances of acquiring that kind of financing. The gross profit, as I indicated before, will increase quarter by quarter. We have this reagent rental model, and when we put new instruments out, that will generate some recurring income, and that will grow quarter by quarter. Just to reiterate a little bit on the OPEX, the $30 million we see now, or a little bit below, that will be for this year. Next year, we will be between $11.3 to $11.8 million per month. The working capital has not gone up this year, but it will go up next year. That will play along with the placing of instrument. That’s how it works. The investment in fixed assets has been low this year. It will increase next year when we see the volume come, and we have to invest in automated production units.
Finally, a statement from the board, which is obviously clear now when we have the rights secured at 85% and more, that we have going concern, which means that we have necessary liquidity to cover the operation for the next 12 months. Stuart, I hand over to you.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Thank you, Christer. It is back to questions then.
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Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Unless we have some phone questions, I can step into the activity feed and take the questions from the written questions. Stuart, this is one for you. The 30/40 machines that we have said before, will that happen? What happens? That’s a question from a listener.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Yeah, it’s a great question. We obviously targeted a number to close out the year. The 30 to 40 range was fairly broad, acknowledging the ASTar tender in Italy had nine instruments, and we expected to get that, let’s be honest, but I couldn’t count on it. The upper end of that range was an ASTar with ASTar, and the lower end was hedging the ASTar placement. We’re still pushing for it. Q3, we’d hope to close some of the contracts that we can see and are actively working on to put us sort of over the 20, but we’re confident many of those will come here in the short term. The pipeline remains very robust. I know there’s questions, let’s say, on are these customers converting? Are they selling? Where’s the results? We are seeing it in the field, and it’s taking some time to get the contracts written.
We’ll come back to that, of course, at the end of the quarter here. The 30 is the number to chase for and drive for the entire Q-linea team.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Right. There’s a question on the EU financing, EU tender on 400 machines. The question is, is Q-linea participating and have we managed the step one? If it’s the one I think it is, yes, we have managed step one and we participate in that EU tender process. Yes.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Yes, I assume it’s referring to the HADEA call.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Correct.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: As you mentioned, the 400 instruments, yes, we have been accepted past the first stage.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: There is a question on the Accelerate Diagnostics systems. Stuart, do you see that one? Can you take that one?
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Yeah, I see those now. Good question. The question is, how many Accelerate Diagnostics FINO systems are in the market today? Are all of these active and addressable? It’s a good question. Obviously, we don’t have the perfect insight on our competitors’ installed base. There have been various reports and I think general industry assessment that they may have distributed up to 300 instruments. That wouldn’t be the same number of hospitals. The design of the FINO is such that it’s a one test, one instrument. There could be several FINOs per hospital. We know that to be the case in instances where we see it. I think a safe figure might be something between 80 and 100 customers active in some way. Obviously, given that platform, not all of those would be at a high level of activity. When you talk about addressable for Q-linea, it’s a great question.
We would say that’s at least several dozen, right? We have visibility on a good chunk of those already on both sides of the Atlantic in the U.S. and Europe. Obviously, we need to work through with the customers to convert. I can say that we’ve seen already situations where we consolidate several FINO instruments to one ASTar, just given the automation capability of an ASTar instrument. It won’t be a one-to-one, but we work at the level of the hospital and the lab. There’s definitely dozens at this stage that we’re chasing.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Another question on the HADEA. Yes, we have applied and yes, we have managed the step one and we are into the step two. I think we have answered that one already. Another question on, let me see here, if Q-linea has got answers or not from the new V2 panel and if we have customers that are ready if the FDA gives an OK for version two of our panel.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Great question. Quick answer to that is yes, absolutely. We in the U.S. are actively grouping our customers into essentially three groups. One that are ready to go directly with ASTar today, some of whom will just use the menu as is. Others will validate on their own the remaining tests under LDT. That’s category one. Obviously, they’re pushing to close. A large body of customers have tried the ASTar or looked at it and have told us that they want to take it up when our V2 ASTar menu is there. The reason for that basically boils down to there are a couple of drugs in the U.S. standard of care that they want to see results for that we have on our EU panel. They know those drugs work. They can see the data from our EU studies.
They’re sort of happy to wait, let’s say, so they don’t have to do the LDT. We put those into a bucket to follow up on during Q1 of next year as we anticipate the FDA process should take. We estimate around six months. It can be anything from 90 days to 180 days after submission. That will definitely have an effect. The third category to close it off are those who say they’re still thinking about RapidST but don’t have a budget now or don’t. We keep them on the list to follow up later. That’s a big group of hospitals that are continuing to work on their budgeting and getting the resources to put RapidST in place. There’s more than enough customers in the first two buckets to meet our targets for both this year and next year.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Right. We have another question on the 30 contracts. I think you have addressed that one, Stuart.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Yeah, sure. It’s just a question of timing, right?
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Yeah, yeah.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: When do we get these over the line? Absolutely.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: There is a question on timeline for enabling ASTar for isolates and lookalikes.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Great question. I referenced that in terms of our publications. We’re working on data with users in the field to put that together. We expect publications during next year. That will obviously help. The ASTar platform is approved for use with blood testing. This is something that, for research purposes, is for customers. That said, there’s high demand for that. We do expect that will have an impact on our business during next year. It’s a bit hard to quantify, just given that. I mean, if it was fully adoptable by all customers and routine use off the bat, as our blood test is, then it would be easier to predict the volumes. I can’t say exactly what it would be, but I don’t think it will be insignificant even during next year.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Great. We have so far a final question on the risks for a delay on the FDA process. That’s a step one. Maybe you can address that one on the risks if there’s a delay.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Yeah, good question. Very material. The U.S. government, unless something happened very recently, remains closed. We cannot submit to the FDA, nor can anyone, despite that the industry pays our own fees our own way for these things. It’s a bit frustrating, but they cannot take new applications. We will be ready to hit send as soon as that opens to receive applications. Beyond that, the risk of delay, I mean, they do time limit the decision, like I said. There is a limit to how long it can be. We would expect that the review will be somewhat shorter this time. First of all, it doesn’t contain the instrument itself. It’s only a menu update. That reduces the amount of work and uncertainties, which is great. Number two, they’ve obviously seen the ASTar and the data already.
We’re basically, call it, improving or presenting more data for combinations that they’ve already seen. We think it’s quite robust, and we’ve obviously in our pre-submission dialogue with the FDA gotten input on what to show them to make them confident we can go through. We’ve now collected that data. I can’t say too much for obvious reasons, but we remain very confident in the version two menu. Not to prejudice an FDA full review, but from what we see, we don’t see a major concern at that level. It’s just down to process and the FDA and if there’s any more delays in the U.S. government, I would say at this stage.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: I think so far we have a last question, which links to the FDA and version two menu. That is, what share of pipeline awaiting V2 clearance? Can we say anything about that?
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Yeah, it’s probably not far off to say that there’s sort of at least half of the customers that we’re engaged with are saying, you know, we’re going to wait, with a quarter being in the first bucket, like we’re kind of ready to go and so on. A big chunk saying we want to wait for V2, and then there’s a chunk that are in that third bucket. It’s a significant number, mainly because they don’t have to do the LDT evaluation. Yeah, it’s the majority.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Great. No more questions in the activity feed. I think that’s it, Stuart.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Great. Thank you everyone for joining. Thank you for the questions, great ones. We look forward to coming back in Q4 on that pipeline and our commitment to getting to 30 here.
Christer Samuelsson, CFO, Q-linea: Thank you.
Stuart Gander, President and CEO, Q-linea: Thank you.
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