Talphera, Inc. (NASDAQ:TLPH) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Talphera, Inc. (NASDAQ:TLPH) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript May 13, 2026

Talphera, Inc. beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $-0.04, expectations were $-0.07.

Operator: Welcome to the Talphera First Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference Call. This call is being webcast live via the Events page of the Investors section of Talphera’s website at www.talphera.com. You may listen to a replay of this webcast by going to the Investors section of Talphera’s website. I would now like to turn the call over to Raffi Asadorian, Talphera’s Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.

Raffi Asadorian: Thank you, and thank you for joining us on the call today. Today, we announced our first quarter 2026 financial results and associated business updates in a press release. With me today are Vince Angotti, our Chief Executive Officer; and Dr. Shakil Aslam, Talphera’s Chief Medical Officer. Before we begin, I want to remind listeners that during this call, we will likely make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties regarding the operations and future results of Talphera. Please refer to our press release in addition to the company’s periodic current and annual reports filed with the SEC for a discussion of the risks associated with such forward-looking statements. These documents can also be found on the website within the Investors section. I’ll now hand the call over to Vince.

Vincent Angotti: Thanks, Raffi. Good afternoon, and thank you to everyone joining our call today. It’s been less than 2 months since our last update, and we’re excited about the progress we’ve made this year in the NEPHRO study with our ongoing enrollment at current clinical study sites, activation of additional sites, achievement of the 50% enrollment milestone and consequently, the closure of an additional financing tranche. With this continued progress, we believe we are well positioned to complete enrollment in the NEPHRO CRRT Study this year and file the PMA for a targeted potential approval of Niyad in 2027. As mentioned, in early March, we announced the attainment of the 50% enrollment milestone in the NEPHRO study. With continued enrollment since that date, I’m pleased to report that we have well exceeded this level.

The protocol changes we adopted last year, supported by bringing on new target profile clinical study sites have positioned us to achieve our goal of completing the study this year. Building on our virtual investor and analyst event in March, we continue to be genuinely excited about completing the study and submitting our PMA for potential approval of Niyad. The KOLs who participated in our March event highlighted the disadvantages with the currently available anticoagulants they’re using and their belief that nafamostat will fill an unmet need in this market. These insights as well as our ongoing discussions with other nephrologists further reinforce our belief that Niyad could have an important role in anticoagulation for CRRT, if approved by the FDA.

9 of our 12 activated sites aligned with the new target site profile that we set last year. And with nephrologists as the lead, these sites have enrolled over 90% of the patients in the study. The quality of our study sites and the principal investigators and their teams is excellent. Dr. Aslam and I have been actively visiting many of the sites over the past several weeks, and all of them are highly engaged and have expressed their desire to have a new CRRT anticoagulant approved for use. In addition, we look forward to welcoming a couple of additional institutions who have been enthusiastic to participate in the study, allowing us to maximize the 14 sites granted by the FDA. While these new sites will find us further along in enrollment, they’ve been drawn to the NEPHRO study by a deep appreciation for nafamostat’s nearly 4 decades of use outside the U.S. and a strong interest in contributing to the U.S. research with their peers on a potentially new approved CRRT anticoagulant.

Adding these final sites helps lay the groundwork for broader clinical awareness of nafamostat, which will serve us well, if the FDA approves it next year. With that, I’ll now hand the call over to Raffi to update you on the financial results for the first quarter.

Raffi Asadorian: Thank you, Vince. Our cash balance at March 31, 2026, was $21.1 million. We believe this cash combined with future conditional financing tranches will provide us sufficient capital through at least a potential Niyad PMA approval expected next year. During the quarter, we closed a $4.1 million financing tranche from the March 2025 private placement. There are 2 remaining conditional financing tranches totaling approximately $16 million of additional capital, which if the conditions are met, are expected to close around the date we release our top line data and announce completion of the study later this year. Our cash operating expenses or combined R&D and SG&A expenses for the first quarter of 2026 totaled $3.9 million compared to $2.9 million for the first quarter of 2025.

Excluding non-cash stock-based compensation expense, these amounts were $3.7 million for the first quarter of 2026 compared to $2.7 million for the first quarter of 2025. The increase in cash operating expenses in the first quarter of 2026 was primarily due to higher Niyad development expenses, reflecting increased enrollment and an increase in certain G&A expenses. I’ll now turn the call back over to Vince.

Vincent Angotti: Thank you, Raffi. I’d now like to open the line for any questions you might have. Operator?

Q&A Session

Follow Teliphone Corp (NASDAQ:TLPH)

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of James Molloy from Alliance Global Partners.

Matthew Venezia: Matt on for Jim today. I was just wondering, if you guys are going to announce enrollment and any other milestone, maybe 75%? Or is the next update going to be full enrollment and then where to expect data quickly after?

Vincent Angotti: Yes, Raffi, I’ll start it, and then you can give them an idea of kind of the data communication we’re planning. So we’re not planning on any additional enrollment updates, in particular, realizing that the balance of the study isn’t tied to any tranches until the closure of the study until the study is being completed. With that said, I think Raffi can communicate to you what our expectation is upon study completion, or enrollment completion being last patient out and how we plan to communicate data thereafter.

Raffi Asadorian: Yes, sure. Yes, I think we’ll announce last patient out. But the most important is the top line data, which should come within a month after that last patient out. Remember, it’s a very quick study, 72 hours at the secondary endpoint, 24-hour primary endpoint. So it’s a quick study, and we’re cleansing the data along the way. So it will be a quick announcement for that top line data.

Matthew Venezia: Got it. And is there any guidance you can give as to where you might be now or timing going forward, second half ’26 still looking like the most likely for a top line read?

Vincent Angotti: Yes, the second half of ’26. The study goes in ebbs and flows. And so we’re going to remain in our guidance for the second half of 2026, depending on the flow of those qualifying patients moving forward, but we’re confident in being completed this year and announcing those results this year.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Ed Arce from West Capital.

Antonio Arce: Congrats on the continued progress. Just a couple of quick questions for me as we anxiously await full enrollment and top line data later this year. The first one is these 2 new sites that you expect to come online pretty soon here and basically cap out the full complement of sites. Would you be able to disclose which sites those are or perhaps give a qualitative description of the type of site and the type of patients that they see? And then the other question is, have you received any commentary from site administrators that are treating the patients, anyone that is conducting the study? Any commentary that you could share with us about how things are progressing?

Vincent Angotti: Yes. I’ll start with the new sites, Ed, and then I’ll turn it over to Shakil to give a little more insight on those sites and the site administrators feedback. The 2 new sites, we don’t expect to be significant contributors to the study, but they have significant CRRT populations. I say not to be significant contributors to the study because they’re coming in so late to the study, but they wanted to be involved moving forward. These are study sites that match our new profile with nephrologists being the lead. One of the sites in particular is one of the top 5 as far as our data suggests CRRT administering hospitals in the country. And we’ll end up communicating those sites when we update federalgov.com on the study sites.

So you’ll be able to see who those sites are specifically in conjunction with all the balance of the sites we have to round out the 14. As it relates to the site administrators and how it’s going, I think Shakil is best positioned to communicate that while he and I have been making a rounds over the last several weeks. Remember, it’s a blinded study, but I think what’s important about this is the placebo and the product are treated similar in the protocol and the simplicity that comes with it. So Shakil?

Shakil Aslam: Sure. Thanks, Ed. Absolutely. So when we talk to the PIs and the investigators and then as well as the nurses who are running this study and who are doing testing and looking at some of the test results, they are all very, very impressed with the ease of administering this intervention, as Vince said, both placebo as well as Niyad, they are administered exactly the same way. And sure for first 24 hours, we have a little bit more intense monitoring of blood test to see how patients are responding to it. But after 24 hours, that intensity goes down. And they basically all are very, very impressed that how little variability they are seeing in the test results. So that’s quite a pleasant surprise to them that they don’t have to chase their tails trying to keep some — the parameters within a target range. Once they have somebody stable at a parameter lab parameter, they basically stay at the same value. So overall, I think everybody is…

Vincent Angotti: Shakil, can you comment on the reach or the conclusion of that stability to get to the proper dose in that first hour and why that protocol works for them and how we’re basically controlling that primary endpoint on that first hour.

Shakil Aslam: Right. So as you know, this study, we start at a starting dose, which is predefined. And 15 minutes later, we check the activated clotting time by a handheld device by the bedside, which we provide and we provide the cartridges as well. So it’s pretty standardized test across all sites. And within 15 minutes, they check the value, and we have a certain range in which we want that value to be. So about 70% of the cases, you see the ACT going in that range right at the first starting dose. Occasionally, a patient rest 25% may need 1 and a couple of them may have needed even more than 1 titration, 2 titrations, which is by the end of first hour, everybody is in the range in which they are expected to be. Obviously, I’m not going to disclose the different groups because there’s one placebo in which we don’t expect the value to change much.

But as expected, the value doesn’t change, in active treatment the value changes. But they remain within that range. So it’s a very, very stable response. And which is not a total surprise to us because nafamostat metabolism is really not dependent on any specific organ. So there are other drugs which either depend on liver or kidneys or any other organ for metabolism. And every time the function of those organs deteriorates or changes, you can see different response in whatever parameter you’re following. Whereas the beauty about nafamostat, it really is not dependent on any organ. And most of these patients, they can have fluctuating organ function, which can affect other medications such as heparin being one example. Citrate is another example.

If you have liver failure, citrate will not be metabolize as quickly. Nafamostat doesn’t have those issues. So that’s the reason why once you hit the target level, it essentially remains stable. Does that answer your question?

Antonio Arce: Shakil, just a little bit more color. So on the administrative side, can you comment to the people on the line, how many of the sites are typically using citrate as a primary intervention for anticoagulation in CRRT and/or heparin as a primary intervention for anticoagulation in CRRT?

Shakil Aslam: Sure. So of the 12 sites that we have, we don’t have any site that uses citrate as a standard of care. So there are 2 or 3 sites that will use citrate only if a patient continues to clot. And these sites do not use heparin at all. So the sites that are using citrate, they don’t believe in heparin. So they, 2 or 3 sites that have access to citrate. They are not citrate-first users, only use citrate as a rescue as citrate is the only rescue they have. We have 2 sites — only 1 site that uses heparin as standard of care of all the sites that we have. Then we have 2 or 3 sites that use heparin as a rescue therapy. So they don’t use either citrate or heparin when the CRRT started. But if they see clotting, they don’t have access to citrate, so then they go back to rescue heparin.

Majority of our sites right now, I would say, 10 out of 12 or 13 that we have, they don’t really have any first-line anticoagulant that they use for every single patient. They are really using either heparin or citrate as a rescue. And we don’t have any site that uses citrate for everybody.

Vincent Angotti: And I think importantly, Ed, when they execute the protocol in the NEPHRO study and the titration schedule, they see the ease of use, whether it’s placebo or controlled doesn’t matter, placebo or active doesn’t matter. It’s just the ease of that titration schedule compared to what their historic challenges have been with heparin and citrate and that seems to be the additional feedback. Simplicity is the main comment.

Shakil Aslam: Right. And the nurses, even we spoke visiting a site today and the nurses, they were like shocked, okay, we don’t have to do anything else? No, that’s it. That’s all the monitoring that’s required. Yes.

Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call over to Vince. Please continue.

Vincent Angotti: Thank you, operator. And I’ll just clarify my comment I said earlier about the site names, the additional 2 that will be coming on, that will be on clintrials.gov — clinicaltrials.gov, excuse me, and our next update of those sites. So again, thank you all for joining us on our first quarter earnings call. We’re really very high on what’s happening at the start of 2026 and the enrollment that’s continuing to move forward. The NEPHRO study progress has been excellent. Our commitment enthusiasm to bring the potentially new regional anticoagulant for CRRT to the market next year is unwavering. So we appreciate your attendance today, and we’re very excited about the future for the NEPHRO study as well as Talphera moving forward. We’ll provide you additional updates on our progress, and thank you for joining us on the call today. Operator, that concludes our call.

Operator: Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

Follow Teliphone Corp (NASDAQ:TLPH)