BEAT November 13, 2025

HeartBeam Q3 2025 Earnings Call - Preparing for Commercial Launch with Pending 12-Lead ECG FDA Clearance

Summary

HeartBeam detailed strong progress toward commercializing its pioneering portable, cable-free ECG system capable of synthesizing clinical-grade 12-lead readings. With foundational FDA clearance secured in December 2024 and a second clearance for the 12-lead synthesis software anticipated by year-end 2025, HeartBeam is poised for an early 2026 market debut focused on concierge and preventive cardiology practices. The company emphasized a carefully controlled regional rollout, robust IP protection with 24 patents and number-two global ranking for 12-lead ECG innovation, and an ecosystem integrating on-demand cardiologists and AI features to enhance patient engagement. Financially, HeartBeam reported steady quarterly losses under $5.5 million but maintained cost discipline amid near-term cash constraints, while outlining strategic funding options tied to hitting critical FDA milestones.

Key Takeaways

  • HeartBeam received foundational FDA 510(k) clearance in Dec 2024 for its arrhythmia assessment system comprising device, app, portal, and algorithms.
  • A second FDA 510(k) clearance for software synthesizing 12-lead ECG from 3D signals is expected by year-end 2025, a critical step for commercialization.
  • The company achieved 93.4% diagnostic agreement in a pivotal VALID-ECG study comparing its synthesized 12-lead ECG to standard systems.
  • HeartBeam’s system is unique as a credit card-sized, cable-free device that provides clinical-grade, synthesized 12-lead ECG readings at home.
  • An exclusive partnership was signed with HeartNexus to provide 24/7 on-demand ECG interpretation by US board-certified cardiologists.
  • Initial commercial launch will focus on two US regions, Southern California and South Florida, targeting concierge and preventive cardiology practices.
  • HeartBeam plans a subscription model providing the device and cardiology reads, with symptomatic readings using credits for cardiologist review.
  • Manufacturing is secured with a US-based partner using off-the-shelf components, minimizing supply chain risks at launch.
  • Company cash stood at $1.9 million at quarter-end, with ongoing efforts to reduce operating cash burn and strategic funding options in place.
  • Future growth includes expanding clinical trials for cardiac event detection, potential new FDA indications, and ramping commercial scale with reference accounts and distribution partnerships.

Full Transcript

Conference Operator: Welcome to the HeartBeam third quarter 2025 financial results conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. Before we begin the formal presentation, I would like to remind everyone that statements made on the call and webcast may include predictions, estimates, and other information that might be considered forward-looking. While these forward-looking statements represent our current judgment on what the future holds, they are subject to risk and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. We are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which reflect our opinions only as of the date of this presentation.

Please keep in mind that we’re not obligating ourselves to revise or publicly release the results of any revision to these forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. Throughout today’s discussion, we will attempt to present some important factors relating to our business that may affect our predictions. You should also review our most recent Form 10-K and Form 10-Q for a more complete discussion of these factors and other risks, particularly under the heading "Risk Factors." A press release detailing these results crossed the wire this afternoon and is available in the investor relations section of our company’s website, heartbeam.com. Your hosts today, Rob Eno, Chief Executive Officer, and Tim Brounstein, Chief Financial Officer, will present results of operations for the third quarter ended September 30 of 2025. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to HeartBeam’s Chief Executive Officer, Mr.

Rob Eno. Please go ahead.

Rob Eno, Chief Executive Officer, HeartBeam: Thank you, Operator. The topics we’ll cover in today’s call are listed on the slide. We’ll start with an overview of the HeartBeam System and the product vision. We’ll touch on our recently achieved and upcoming milestones and highlight the upcoming commercial launch strategy, followed by financial results. We’ll end with a Q&A. Before we dive into updates since our last call in August, I wanted to remind everyone about our vision and our initial product, the HeartBeam System. HeartBeam’s dedicated to developing groundbreaking ECG technology for patients to use at home to allow them to feel confident about their heart health. HeartBeam’s developing the first-ever portable, cable-free ECG that can synthesize a 12-lead ECG. A unique IP-protected approach captures the heart’s electrical signals in three dimensions, or non-coplanar directions, and synthesizes the signals into a 12-lead ECG.

The system’s designed to be easy to carry and easy for patients to use at the time of symptom onset, anywhere, anytime. The technology is supported by an on-demand cardiologist who can interpret the clinical-grade ECG and triage patients appropriately to ensure timely care. As a reminder, in December 2024, we received our foundational FDA 510(k) clearance. This was for the system as a whole for arrhythmia assessment, the credit card signal collection device, the patient application, a physician portal, and signal quality algorithms. This major milestone validated our unique approach. In January, we submitted our second FDA 510(k) application. This is for the software that synthesizes a 12-lead ECG from our 3D signals for arrhythmia assessment. We’re engaging in the final steps with the FDA related to our 510(k) submission and continue to anticipate clearance by the end of the year.

This clearance will be a major inflection point for HeartBeam, as these two clearances together will form the product with which we’ll start our initial commercialization. We believe that the HeartBeam System can be part of one of the most important trends in medicine today: the movement of clinical-grade devices from the hospital and clinic to becoming a part of daily life at home. Connected clinical-grade technologies are changing the healthcare landscape by expanding access, reducing healthcare costs, and enabling personalized medicine. From continuous glucose monitors to home blood pressure cuffs, these technologies empower patients and provide physicians with insights that lead to identifying conditions earlier and monitoring trends over time. Heart disease is the leading cause of death worldwide, and most cardiac events, whether arrhythmias or ischemia, happen outside of the medical setting. Diagnosing these events is crucial, and ECGs are the most common cardiac test.

Yet most at-home options have been limited to downgraded versions, unable to provide a clinical-grade 12-lead output. HeartBeam’s credit card-sized system will change that by delivering a synthesized 12-lead ECG into the patient’s hands, starting with the arrhythmia assessment application. The ability to get clinical-grade insights when they need it, wherever they are, will enable patients to get more timely care. When a patient has symptoms and uses the HeartBeam system, they first open the smartphone application, which guides the patient through the process of taking a recording. Once the recording is complete, it’s sent to the HeartBeam cloud, where it’s processed and immediately sent to a cardiologist for review. Last month, we announced an agreement with HeartNexus, a group of U.S.-based board-certified cardiologists with coverage across the United States.

When a patient has arrhythmia symptoms and takes a recording with the HeartBeam System, a HeartNexus cardiologist will send an ECG interpretation back to the patient. This agreement is a key part of the product and one of the final pieces needed for our commercial launch, which is anticipated to be early next year after our FDA clearance for the 12-lead synthesis software for arrhythmia assessment, which we anticipate receiving before the end of the year. Next, I’d like to remind you about the larger ecosystem we’re building around the HeartBeam System. This ecosystem dramatically increases the overall value of the system and will drive deeper adoption. As I mentioned, at the core of the ecosystem is the HeartBeam System itself, the first and only credit card-sized, cable-free device that synthesizes a 12-lead ECG. This is complemented by an on-demand, U.S.-based, board-certified cardiologist available to review ECG readings 24/7.

Our market research confirms that this concept resonates strongly with both physicians and patients who have indicated a willingness to pay a premium for this functionality. Building around this foundation, we’re creating an ecosystem to maximize the benefits of our technology and encourage stronger engagement among patients. Key components of our ecosystem include automated arrhythmia assessments for use during routine recordings, integration with wearables that trigger patients to take readings when their wearable produces inconclusive results or if worrisome underlying parameters are detected, community features with tailored educational content, and AI wellness features such as ECG-based cardiac age insights. We will also be able to provide long-term trending of the HeartBeam synthesized 12-lead ECGs, allowing the patient’s physician to get longitudinal insights, including the trending of specific ECG parameters over time.

Creating this ecosystem will add unique insights and actionable data for both patients and physicians that are unavailable elsewhere and add to the premium offering of HeartBeam. The team has done an exceptional job of achieving the milestones we said we were going to achieve over the past year. The highlights are listed here. Last December, we received our foundational FDA clearance for the HeartBeam System for arrhythmia assessment. In January, we submitted our second FDA 510(k) application for the 12-lead ECG synthesis software for arrhythmia assessment. We successfully met the clinical endpoints in the VALID-ECG pivotal study, which is the basis for this 12-lead synthesis submission. The study demonstrated a 93.4% overall diagnostic agreement between the HeartBeam synthesized 12-lead ECG and a standard 12-lead ECG in the assessment of arrhythmia. These results were presented at the Heart Rhythm Society meeting in April.

We also started our early access program, or beta testing, which has provided us with valuable feedback, allowing us to enhance the onboarding, training, and overall user experience. Finally, as I mentioned, we signed the agreement with HeartNexus to service the cardiology reader service. We have a number of important milestones in the coming weeks and months. We continue to anticipate the FDA 510(k) clearance for the 12-lead ECG synthesis software for arrhythmia assessment this quarter. In 2026, we expect to start enrollment on additional clinical trials on the clinical and cost-effectiveness benefits of HeartBeam. The focus of our clinical studies to date has been a comparison with standard 12-lead ECGs. These planned post-market studies will be important for adoption and ultimately for payment and reimbursement. We are also preparing for commercialization. We anticipate hiring the Chief Commercial Officer and other key members of the commercial team upon FDA clearance.

We also anticipate initial commercial agreements with concierge and preventive cardiology practices. While our focus remains squarely on working with the FDA toward the 12-lead ECG synthesis clearance and preparing for commercial launch, we achieved several milestones that help us toward our longer-term goals. Important data were presented at two recent scientific meetings. First, at the HRX Live meeting in September, an abstract was presented on the capabilities of the HeartBeam AI algorithm in classifying arrhythmias. Earlier this week, at the American Heart Association scientific sessions, data were presented on the promise of the HeartBeam 3D, three-lead technology for the detection of coronary occlusions. These studies add to the growing body of clinical evidence. They demonstrate the progress and promise of our AI efforts, as well as the potential to apply the HeartBeam technology to heart attack detection. IP continues to be at the core of the company’s efforts.

With three newly issued patents, we now have 24 issued patents worldwide. In addition, HeartBeam was recognized as a global IP and technology leader in portable cardiac diagnostics in a report from the IP firm PatentVest, with HeartBeam ranking number two worldwide in the 12-lead ECG innovation out of 243 companies analyzed. As we prepare for our initial launch, we’ve established clear strategic pillars. First, we’re creating a new product category. The overarching focus of our efforts will be establishing the HeartBeam System as the first personal cable-free synthesized 12-lead ECG. We believe that the HeartBeam System is clearly differentiated from other offerings by combining an easy-to-use device that can produce a 12-lead ECG with an on-demand cardiologist who can provide ECG assessments. Second, we’re preparing a controlled market entry.

We anticipate starting with a small number of prominent concierge and preventive cardiology practices, both independent practices and those associated with major healthcare systems. These practices will provide an opportunity to get early, real-world feedback and will serve as reference accounts. Beyond that, our strategy is to focus initially on two U.S. geographic regions to prove the business model, followed by expansion of this model into additional regions. We plan to establish a small direct sales and marketing organization in the U.S., with sales reps and implementation specialists focused on a geographic region. We’re exploring multiple options that will allow efficient expansion, including distribution partners and chains of concierge practices. A final key element of the strategy is demonstrating the value of the HeartBeam System to patients and practices, driving retention of our users over time.

We’ll focus on the patient experience and provider engagement to drive recurring use of the system as part of our strategy of developing a subscription model. Now, I’ll turn it over to Tim to discuss our financials. Great. Thank you, Rob. I’ll quickly go through some of the key financial data for the quarter ended September 30, 2025. We continue to be focused on our cash management as we maintain strong financial discipline aligned to achieving milestones. When we look at the quarter net loss for the period, it was $5.3 million, or $0.15 per basic and diluted share, consistent with the prior quarter and also in line with our expectations and analyst consensus. Of that net loss, I’ll note a significant portion was related to non-cash expenses, expenses such as stock-based compensation. The result in net cash used in operating activities was under $3.2 million.

That’s an 8% decrease quarter over quarter, and it builds on the 23% decrease we had from the prior quarter. We’re pleased with our ability to balance competing priorities we have over the recent quarters by both maintaining a capital-efficient organization and also judiciously timing the key investments we need into the commercial readiness activities. You’re seeing evidence of this as we continue to reduce our cash outflow. We’ll continue to take this approach as we de-risk the business and while we’re building the proof points we need prior to accelerating investments into commercial traction and scale. Cash and cash equivalents at September 30th were $1.9 million. Obviously, with a tight balance sheet, we’re monitoring things closely, but we’re confident in our approach of strategically funding the company consistent with how we’ve outlined it in the past.

We’ve got optionality in place both in the vehicles and the sources of funding, and we have confidence in our ability to achieve near-term milestones, including the FDA clearance, which we believe will be a major inflection point for the company. We remain committed to minimizing dilution for our shareholders so that they’re rewarded for their time and commitment to our company and our vision. Our board, management team, and key insiders are more excited than ever about what lies ahead with commercialization on the near-term horizon. We believe very strongly in the value we’re creating here at HeartBeam, and getting this critical technology into the hands of clinicians and patients is going to be a really rewarding step for us here in the very near future. With that, Rob, I’ll turn the call back over to you for closing summary. Thanks so much, Tim.

To summarize, this is an incredibly exciting time for HeartBeam. We continue to engage in positive and productive discussions with the FDA, and our anticipated timeline for the clearance by year-end remains intact. Combined with the foundational FDA clearance received in December 2024, this clearance will mark a pivotal milestone for the company to initiate our commercial launch. We’ve made significant progress with our commercial readiness plans in anticipation of the FDA clearance. Of note, we announced a partnership with HeartNexus to provide on-demand board-certified cardiologist reviews of synthesized 12-lead ECGs for arrhythmia assessment. These two elements, an ECG that’s capable of synthesizing a 12-lead ECG and a cardiologist on call 24/7 able to provide ECG assessments to the patient, they’re the core of our system.

While our focus is squarely on the interactions with the FDA and preparing for the commercial launch, we continue to prepare for the company’s future. We added to the body of clinical evidence with two recent presentations at scientific meetings, one on AI and the other on heart attack detection. In addition, we added three newly issued patents, bringing the total to 24, and we’re pleased to be recognized for our IP, ranking number two worldwide in 12-lead ECG innovation out of 243 companies analyzed. HeartBeam is at a very exciting inflection point and will continue to work with our partners to strategically finance the company in a manner that adds to and creates shareholder value. We believe that HeartBeam’s technology is poised to be a fundamental advance in cardiac care.

Our team has worked incredibly hard on the development and validation of the technology, and we’re excited to be nearing the next stage in the company’s growth, introducing the groundbreaking technology of HeartBeam for patients to use at home to allow them to feel confident about their heart health. We thank you all for attending, and now we’d like to open it up to Q&A. Operator? Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touch-tone phone. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Our first question for today will come from Cal Bowser with Roth Capital Partners. Please go ahead. Hey, Rob and Tim.

Thanks for all the updates. I appreciate taking my questions here. Maybe we could start off on the discussions you’ve had with the FDA. Can you talk a little bit more about sort of what you’re working on and responses and factors that you’ll want to address ahead of a clearance? Yeah. I can’t really comment much more than that. I guess what I’d reiterate is that we continue to categorize our interactions with FDA as productive. The normal process of FDA questions and us answering them, and we’re continuing to anticipate the FDA clearance before the end of the year. From the last clearance and this one, we haven’t gone into more details of the characterization of the questions, so I’ll just leave it there. Yep. Fair enough. Good to know the timeline is still on track before year-end.

As you gear up for the commercial launch, you sort of talked about it a little bit, Rob. Are you still kind of focused on a couple of territories initially to gather feedback and intel ahead of a broader launch to, say, 5 to 10 territories? That’s exactly right. Yeah. I think the nuance on that is the very first accounts we believe will be prominent accounts, some really exciting ones that we’re talking to. Some of them are independent. Some of them are associated with major healthcare institutions. In a sense, those can be reference accounts. Those can be our pilot accounts. Beyond that, we start to go deep into the two regions to start. Exactly as you say, we want to prove the model there to show everything around our sales model, the expected coverage we think.

As we get that, we can expand to a larger number of regions. Exactly. Got it. Got it. How should we be thinking about pricing regarding sort of symptomatic versus asymptomatic readings? I know you’re able to charge a premium potentially for symptomatic readings. Great to know about the recent partnership with HeartNexus, but just trying to understand how you’re thinking through that. Now it’s a little bit early. Yeah. Sure. No. Yeah. It is a little bit early, but what we’ve identified so far are a few things. We’re planning on a subscription offering. The initial thought is that it’ll be upfront a one-year subscription, and that one-year subscription gives you the device itself and access to a certain number of cardiology reads. We’ll work on the details of that pricing level and how many reads.

What we’re building into the system, not exactly at the initial launch, but we’re building in is the automated assessment, algorithmic assessment. The vision that we’re building toward there as that comes in, that requires an FDA clearance. As that comes in, will be one pathway for routine recordings, which for the patient will have an unlimited number of routine recordings because we want them to practice and to build up their data. When they’re having symptoms, they go down this symptomatic pathway, and that is what uses one of their credits and activates the reader service. That’s helpful. Got it. Maybe one more. As you prepare for the commercial launch, how are you managing inventory levels, and how does your sort of manufacturing capabilities look at this point? Great. Tim, do you want to take that one? Sure. Yeah. Thank you so much. Yeah.

We’ve got a great partner for manufacturing, a U.S.-based contract manufacturer. What’s great about the latest round of our device that we have for commercialization, it’s all off-the-shelf componentry, nothing customized. From a product line or from a build line standpoint, we’ve got the capabilities built out. It’s all about for us in the near term, when you talk about launch over the first year plus, the building of devices isn’t a concern to us. Line of sight to parts, no real long lead time parts. Obviously, dynamic situations, so monitoring that. Given they’re all off-the-shelf components, we’ve got a number of different areas we can source, known areas we can source parts from. Really confident in the manufacturing side, and it’s all about determining the demand and building into it.

The real area of focus is on workflow and really making sure we nail the onboarding piece. I would say that is more of a focal area of getting it right than the manufacturing side. I appreciate that. I’ll jump back and cue congrats on all the progress here. Thanks for the update. Thanks. Thanks so much. Thank you, Cal, for your coverage. Appreciate it. Your next question will come from Bill Sutherland with the Benchmark Company. Please go ahead. Thanks. Hey, Tim and Rob. Thanks for the questions. Wanted to just maybe find out a little more color on the two initial market launches that you had planned. Maybe a sense of the availability, Tim, that you’re going to be looking at there.

Just a couple of assumptions to help us think about the numbers that we might just begin to think about for next year and maybe the following year. Tim, would you take that? Yeah. Sure. No problem at all. Yeah. The first two geographies we’ve said before, most likely we have as Southern California and South Florida, two really strong territories with a lot of great accounts and inbound demand there. The way we sort of look at it is the territory size, if you think about an average, the initial territories we’re going after, 75,000 patients roughly that we would be targeting in those regions. You can do a really concentrated rollout in terms of the number of accounts that you really need to talk to to start to get some good penetration there.

We plan on going to, as Rob indicated, individual practices and some of the institutions that have concierge practices associated with them to nail workflow, really make sure that the patient experience is right. Within those territories, as we build that out, there are a number of concierge chains that we’ll be able to look at to help accelerate adoption and growth. It is all about getting it right in the first couple of quarters, so keeping expectations modest in terms of what that means from a revenue and user perspective. As we get to the second half of 2026, that is when we start to see some of the real penetration into those geographies. As we head to 2027, when those concierge chains likely come on, obviously, we’ll be working to accelerate that faster.

I think those three waves are how we’re looking at it. Okay. And how do you sort of target the marketing? Because it’s partly, I guess, involving the cardiologists themselves, but then some direct to the patient. I know that this is an out-of-pocket type of expense. Sure. Yeah. I’ll take that one. Right. To start with, obviously, for everyone, it’s a prescription device, and we’re targeting these practices, concierge and preventive cardiology practices. These are practices that have these patients and are comfortable having discussions about items that are patient pay. The first stage in our process is talking to those accounts, explaining the product, explaining how it can help their practice. We plan to work with the practice to support them in outreach to their patients.

To really be the practice talking to their patients about the technology and potentially adopting it. We can certainly give them materials and support them through that. In a sense, working with and through the practices. We think over time, part of the way of thinking about this region by region is there are other ways to move beyond the patients that are already at these concierge practices. We think that can happen through a referral business where patients can refer patients who can either go join the concierge practice or get access to the technology through other clinicians and potentially some direct-to-consumer marketing. We obviously think to be as efficient as possible, those first couple approaches of working with the concierge practice and the preventive cardiology practice and adding referral is probably the most efficient.

That is part of what we learn as we do the early stages of these commercialization in these couple of regions. Great. Thanks. I am wondering, you are establishing this as a new category. When you go into the practices, are they using something at this point that gets at some of the functionality of HeartBeam and that you will have to take that, take their position? Yeah. It is going to vary. Some of them do not have anything like this. Some of them may be using the existing one-lead ECGs that are out there from various companies. We do not think there is anything that is commonly used that can synthesize the 12-lead but also has the reader service tied to it. It is a mix. Some might be new, and some might be offering things already or encouraging their patients to use things already.

The feedback has been very positive in our market research with patients and in market research to practices and in direct conversations with practices that even despite that current landscape, they see incremental value in this offering and are excited about taking advantage of it. Great. Okay. Thanks for all the updates. Appreciate it, guys. Thank you, Bill. Thank you. We will now turn for any webcast questions. Our first webcast question asks, "You ended Q3 with $2 million in cash. What are your plans for additional funding?" Sure. Happy to take that one. Yeah. I can’t share specifics on plans, but I’m happy to add as much color as I can from my prepared remarks. I think I mentioned the optionality we have in place, both vehicles and sources of funding, and just reiterating our confidence in our ability to achieve these near-term milestones right ahead of us.

We believe with the inflection point we’re going to see, it will provide us an opportunity to strategically look at the balance sheet. We’re balancing two important priorities. One, heavily we care deeply about minimizing dilution for our existing shareholders. We’ve got, but having a proper balance sheet to capitalize the opportunity ahead of us is obviously important. I believe it’ll unlock the stock by having a proper capital markets profile in place, one that this company deserves based on the opportunity ahead of us. We are strategically balancing those priorities, and we believe we’re getting close to having the opportunity to make both of them a reality for the company. We’re going to stay steadfast on the path to get there. One of the webcast questioners asks if there are any contracts that are currently sitting on your front burner. Yeah.

I characterize that as we’ve had, we’re having great discussions with sites that we think could be the early users of the system. There are some large practices. There are some very prominent practices. We had really good discussions there, and post-FDA clearance and early commercialization, we’re looking forward to being able to announce more of those. Do you have any expectations for the level of sales next year following the commencement of commercialization? Yeah. Happy to take that, Rob, if you want. Please. I haven’t provided guidance, but again, let me provide as much color as I can in context to help answer it. I think first, HeartBeam’s becoming a commercial entity for the first time in 2026. We’re going to be hyper-focused on user experience, getting things right for physicians and patients.

That means we may need to go slow in the very early days of the first quarter of launch, the first half of the year. But we anticipate, as I was describing to Bill, the second half of the year is where sales and user base begins to increase in a more meaningful way. Obviously, I mean, based on some of the inbound demand we’ve gotten, we believe we can get things going faster than that. But just knowing that we are becoming commercial for the first time, we’re trying when we model this out, we try to be pragmatic in doing so. We’ve got newly issued coverage on the company. And so the active research reports that are out there do a really good job of capturing how we model things out early days.

As we get the data points we need to expand into additional territories, we’re going to be looking for ways to accelerate growth and have some inbound demand on how that’s going to happen. Based on the conversations we’ve had with concierge and preventive cardiology accounts to date, we’re very excited by what could be meaningful demand. Once you obtain FDA clearance for arrhythmia detection, what is your planned pathway for pursuing an additional indication for myocardial infarction detection? Yeah. It’s a great question. We’ve addressed that previously, but I’ll go through it again here. We have announced that we already have started initial discussions with FDA. Yes, we are planning to pursue that. We believe it’s the same product and an expanded indication.

We have two proof-of-concept studies that have been done and presented of the similarity between our output and that of a standard 12-lead in patients with ischemia or heart attacks. What we’ll do is we want to talk to FDA to understand more about the regulatory path and more about the clinical trial needs. The expectation is that we will need to do a clinical study in one way or another that will show the performance of our system in comparison to a 12-lead in that population. We have ideas of that and looking forward to talking more with FDA about what they’re looking for and how to implement on those plans. Will you work exclusively with HeartNexus, or are you planning to or open to expanding your network to other telecardiology firms? Yeah.

First of all, we think HeartNexus is great and excited to partner with them. The strategy is we want this to be something that patients can use if they have symptoms 24/7. We want to make sure that we do not put the prescribing physician necessarily on the front line if they do not want to be 24/7. We are getting feedback from some accounts that they might want to take on that themselves. We are working on a version of the product offering to specific accounts in which the account themselves will take on the capability to do the reading. Beyond that, we do not have any plans right now to go beyond HeartNexus. We think their ability to scale with us is there, but have this option if accounts are interested in doing that function of the offering themselves. Yeah.

I would just add, I think what’s great about HeartNexus at our stage of launch is they have coverage across the U.S. For a company of ours where we’re going to be learning what our usage rates are, they have the ability to go quickly with us early days. I think it’s just an amazing group over at HeartNexus, and they believe in this technology and want what’s best. They are open to exploring all sorts of avenues with us as we really start to scale. I think both of us are open to expanding as we really learn what demand looks like. Yeah. Thanks, Tim. That’s great context. They really are a great partner. Regarding your commercial launch, are you looking or considering partnering with other companies as strategic partners to increase production or operational capabilities in any way? Yeah. Sorry.

Let me just, yeah. Absolutely. I’m just trying to make sure I can answer the question in the best way. We’re definitely looking at all different types of strategic partners. We’ve talked a lot about that. One of the areas we want to focus on is how do we scale most efficiently. There are a couple of ways we believe we can scale efficiently, and that’s with distribution partners or focusing on concierge and preventive cardiology practices. That, from a sales and distribution perspective, is one of the key things we’re going to look into as we prove the concept and start to progress. We are open to and have had ongoing discussions with strategic partners in all kinds of different areas and are certainly open to exploring collaborations.

We’ve talked about collaborations in the past on the AI algorithm side and the data side and even potential partners that could be co-development partners for some of the technologies that are in our pipeline. Thank you. That concludes our webcast questions. Thank you. I would like to turn the call back over to Mr. Eno for his closing remarks. Please go ahead. Great. Thank you, Operator. I wanted to thank each one of you for joining the earnings conference call today. We look forward to continuing to update you on our ongoing progress and growth. If we were unable to answer any of your questions today, please reach out to our IR firm, MZ Group, who would be more than happy to assist. Thank you. The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.