NeuroPace's Q3 2025: Contradictions Emerge on FDA Strategy, Growth Plans, Margins, and Market Expansion

Generated by AI AgentEarnings DecryptReviewed byAInvest News Editorial Team
Tuesday, Nov 4, 2025 11:30 pm ET4min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

-

reported $27.4M Q3 revenue (+30% YoY), driven by 31% RNS growth and improved operating margins (-$2.6M vs -$4.2M YoY).

- Achieved first-time positive adjusted EBITDA ($0.1M) through cost discipline and operational efficiency, with full-year guidance raised to $97M–$98M revenue.

- FDA pre-submission progress for

study and pediatric indication development, plus AI/EEG data partnerships, position RNS as a personalized medicine platform.

- DIXI wind-down expected by Q1 2026, with core RNS growth projected ≥20% in 2026 and 80%+ gross margin baseline as DIXI exits.

- Management emphasized market expansion through Level-4 centers and Project CARE, with replacement revenue expected to grow incrementally from current <10% levels.

Date of Call: November 4, 2025

Financials Results

  • Revenue: $27.4M in Q3 2025, up 30% YOY (prior Q3 2024 $21.1M)
  • Gross Margin: 77.4% in Q3 2025, compared to 73.2% in Q3 2024 and 77.1% in Q2 2025
  • Operating Margin: Loss from operations of $2.6M in Q3 2025, improved vs loss of $4.2M YOY and loss of $6.8M sequentially

Guidance:

  • Full-year revenue raised to $97M–$98M (21%–23% YoY; prior $94M–$98M)
  • Full-year gross margin raised to 76%–77% (prior 75%–76%)
  • Q4 RNS revenue expected $20M–$21M; DIXI contribution ~ $3M in Q4 and company expects to be substantially done with DIXI by end‑2025 (wind‑down extends to Q1 2026)
  • Service revenue ~ $750k in Q4
  • Full-year operating expenses revised to $94M–$95M; sales & marketing $47M–$48M; R&D ≈ $28M; G&A ≈ $19M
  • Interest expense ≈ $8M and interest income ≈ $2.5M for FY2025; cash & short-term investments $60M as of 9/30/25

Business Commentary:

* Record Revenue and Growth in RNS System: - NeuroPace reported record revenue of $27.4 million for Q3, representing 30% year-over-year growth compared to $21.1 million in the prior year quarter. - The growth was primarily driven by a 31% year-over-year increase in RNS revenue, broad-based adoption across geographies, and enhanced commercial leadership.

  • Positive EBITDA and Operating Leverage:
  • NeuroPace achieved positive adjusted EBITDA for the first time in its history, marking a significant milestone.
  • This improvement was due to disciplined expense management, consistent mix improvement, and increased efficiency in both commercial and manufacturing operations.

  • Clinical and Product Development Initiatives:

  • The company had a productive pre-submission meeting with the FDA regarding the NAUTILUS study, which supports the safety and effectiveness profile for a favorable benefit-risk assessment in the highly underserved population.
  • Progress in pediatric indication development, leveraging real-world evidence, is aimed at expanding into the pediatric patient population, aligning the data set and protocol with FDA requirements.

  • Enhanced Partnerships and Data Utilization:

  • NeuroPace is leveraging its proprietary iEEG data and AI development efforts to improve clinical outcomes with tools such as Seizure iEEG AI software.
  • The company is partnering with organizations like Rapport to support drug development and biomarker identification efforts, positioning the RNS system as a foundation for future personalized medicine.

Sentiment Analysis:

Overall Tone: Positive

  • Management called Q3 'one of record results' with record revenue of $27.4M (+30% YoY), RNS revenue up 31% YoY, first-ever positive adjusted EBITDA ($0.1M), and raised full-year revenue and gross margin guidance, indicating constructive performance and outlook.

Q&A:

  • Question from Rohin Patel (JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division): Can you help us understand preliminary thoughts on 2026 growth outlook—specifically RNS growth given DIXI revenues will be coming off—and assumptions for new indications, AI applications, and Project CARE in community settings?
    Response: No formal 2026 guidance; core RNS business expected to grow ≥20% as a baseline, with new indications, AI tools and Project CARE viewed as incremental upside; DIXI will be wound down and should be removed from 2026 models.

  • Question from Rohin Patel (JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division): Any preliminary feedback from partners on how the platform supports drug discovery/personalized medicine and milestones to watch (given early ~$0.7M in research service revenue)?
    Response: Partners (e.g., Rapport, UCB) see strong value in the RNS EEG data for biomarker and drug‑development work; data services are nascent (~$0.7M) with more partnerships and monetization opportunities expected.

  • Question from Priya Sachdeva (UBS Investment Bank, Research Division): The full‑year midpoint implies a softer Q4 despite strong YTD growth—what's driving Q4 dynamics and what are you seeing on the ground?
    Response: RNS momentum is solid (October off to a good start) but total Q4 is impacted by the planned wind‑down and lower DIXI sales; RNS second‑half growth accelerates (~23% at midpoint), while DIXI mix explains the softer total-company step.

  • Question from Priya Sachdeva (UBS Investment Bank, Research Division): With clarity on potential expansion, remind us plan/timeline into potential approval—how quickly could incremental growth be seen?
    Response: PMA supplement for NAUTILUS to be submitted before year‑end 2025; a standard 180‑day review would target mid‑2026 for a decision (timing subject to FDA review variability).

  • Question from Michael Kratky (Leerink Partners LLC, Research Division): Implied Q4 gross margin looks lower despite RNS strength—how reconcile RNS margin strength with any step down and what should we model?
    Response: RNS gross margin is north of 80% (80% a minimum); any near‑term drag on total margin is a mix effect from residual lower‑margin DIXI (~$3M); model RNS ≥80% going into 2026.

  • Question from Michael Kratky (Leerink Partners LLC, Research Division): How does Seizure ID fit in the portfolio—revenue generator or clinician support tool?
    Response: Seizure ID is an AI clinician tool to improve EEG‑review efficiency and patient‑specific programming, intended to increase access and RNS utilization; value accrues via improved outcomes and broader adoption with potential monetization as part of a software/services suite.

  • Question from Vik Chopra (Wells Fargo): Should we model 80% gross margin as a baseline for 2026 and what puts/takes remain on margins going forward?
    Response: Yes—80% is a fair baseline to model for 2026; main caveat is any residual DIXI sales in early 2026, otherwise margins should reflect an RNS‑only business above 80%.

  • Question from Vik Chopra (Wells Fargo): When will the full NAUTILUS data be publicly available?
    Response: NAUTILUS data will be shared in staged venues: a poster abstract at AES and a submission for AAN next spring.

  • Question from Frank Takkinen (Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division): Has NAUTILUS industry awareness or off‑label use contributed to the quarter—are physicians using data off‑label and did that affect results?
    Response: No evidence that off‑label use materially drove Q3 performance; investigators reacted positively to NAUTILUS safety and secondary endpoints, but quarter showed nothing unusual attributable to practice‑of‑medicine variation.

  • Question from Frank Takkinen (Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division): Is growth driven more by market expansion or market share gains?
    Response: Both—growth reflects expanded adoption and utilization within existing practices (market expansion) and share gains for device‑appropriate patients driven by differentiated data and outcomes.

  • Question from Ross Osborn (Cantor Fitzgerald & Co., Research Division): Any color on how you expect the IGE label to shake out based on recent interactions?
    Response: Plan is to seek a label aligned with the full NAUTILUS study population—label expectations will mirror the enrolled trial population.

  • Question from Ross Osborn (Cantor Fitzgerald & Co., Research Division): What level/type of data will be needed to support a pediatric approval?
    Response: Pediatric pathway will rely on retrospective real‑world evidence; the focus is aligning a fit‑for‑purpose protocol and existing data with FDA/NEST requirements rather than generating new prospective data.

  • Question from Yi Chen (H.C. Wainwright): For Project CARE, will Level‑4 centers remain the main growth source or will IGE change sales tactics; and are you on track to double CARE implants/referrals in 2025?
    Response: Level‑4 centers remain the primary growth engine; Project CARE is complementary—enabling community treatment and expanding reach—and CARE is on track versus the 2024 baseline with sequential and YOY gains, though penetration of the 1,800‑epileptologist target is still early.

  • Question from Yi Chen (H.C. Wainwright): Any updates on investigator‑initiated trials for other indications (depression, PTSD, etc.)?
    Response: IITs and alternative‑disease work are progressing conceptually; the platform's data and personalized therapy capabilities make it applicable beyond epilepsy, with formal updates to come as programs advance.

  • Question from Paige Chamberlain (Wolfe Research, LLC): For Project CARE targets (1,800 epileptologists) where are you in penetration and are you on track to more than double CARE implants/referrals in 2025?
    Response: CARE is on track to exceed 2024 implants/referrals in 2025 and penetration into the targeted epileptologist base has begun but remains early with a long runway; internal metrics are tracked though not yet disclosed quarterly.

  • Question from Paige Chamberlain (Wolfe Research, LLC): Directional update on replacement revenue—should we expect replacement revenue to rise from current trough?
    Response: Replacement revenue is currently a small mid‑single‑digit share (<10%); initial implants remain the primary revenue driver and replacements will scale over time—model initial implants until replacements become materially larger.

Contradiction Point 1

FDA Submission Strategy for NAUTILUS

It involves the company's approach to obtaining FDA approval for the NAUTILUS trial, which could significantly impact the product's market potential and regulatory timeline.

Could you clarify your FDA submission strategy for NAUTILUS, given better outcomes in patients with lower baseline seizure frequency? Are you pursuing a broad indication approval or a more segmented approach? - Rohin Kirit Patel (JPMorgan)

2025Q3: Our strategy remains to go for an indication involving the totality of the NAUTILUS data and the totality of the population, with clinically meaningful and statistically significant treatment effect seen in prespecified secondary endpoints. We plan to pursue an indication across the entire population. - Joel D. Becker(CEO)

Given the improved data in patients with lower baseline seizure frequency, will you pursue a broad or segmented FDA approval for NAUTILUS? - Rohin Kirit Patel (JPMorgan)

2025Q2: We are considering regulatory pathways, including potential for a PMA supplement, or a 510(k) submission, which would seek regulatory clearance based on demonstrating substantial equivalence to a predicate device. - Joel D. Becker(CEO)

Contradiction Point 2

Growth and Market Expansion

It involves the company's expectations for growth and market expansion, which are crucial for investor expectations and strategic planning.

好的,我现在需要处理用户提供的这个任务。用户希望我作为专业的金融文章作者,将美股上市公司财报电话会议中的问题进行简化,使其更简洁、精准,同时保留原意,并符合美式英语习惯。输出只能是简化后的问题,且以问号结尾。首先,我需要仔细阅读用户提供的原始问题:“As we look ahead to 2026, how are you thinking about growth prospects given DIXI revenues will be coming off? Can you provide some key assumptions for new indication launches and the AI applications driving utilization?”用户的要求是去掉冗长和装饰词,同时不改变原意。我需要分析每个部分,看看哪些可以简化。第一个问题部分:“As we look ahead to 2026, how are you thinking about growth prospects given DIXI revenues will be coming off?” 这里,“As we look ahead to 2026”可以简化为“How do you view 2026 growth prospects”,因为“as we look ahead”是多余的,直接问如何看2026的增长前景更简洁。“given DIXI revenues will be coming off”中的“will be coming off”可能指的是DIXI收入会下降或减少,可以简化为“with DIXI revenue declining”或者“as DIXI revenue declines”。第二个问题部分:“Can you provide some key assumptions for new indication launches and the AI applications driving utilization?” 这里,“provide some key assumptions”可以简化为“what key assumptions underlie”或者“what are the key assumptions for”,这样更直接。“driving utilization”可以简化为“driving utilization”可能已经足够,但需要确保准确。可能需要调整结构,比如“for new indication launches and AI applications driving utilization”。接下来要确保整个问题符合美式英语习惯,比如使用正确的介词和结构。例如,“given”在第一个问题中可以替换为“as”或“with”来连接原因。同时,合并两个问题,可能需要将它们组合成一个更连贯的问题,但用户可能希望保持两个独立的问题,但根据用户示例,可能合并成一个更简洁的问题。现在尝试简化:原问题1:“As we look ahead to 2026, how are you thinking about growth prospects given DIXI revenues will be coming off?”简化后:“How do you view 2026 growth prospects as DIXI revenue declines?”这里去掉了冗长的开头,用“as DIXI revenue declines”替代“given DIXI revenues will be coming off”,更简洁。原问题2:“Can you provide some key assumptions for new indication launches and the AI applications driving utilization?”简化后:“What key assumptions underlie new indication launches and AI applications driving utilization?”这里将“provide some key assumptions”改为“underlie”,更正式且简洁,符合金融报告中的常用表达。然后检查是否符合所有要求:是否保留原意,是否简洁,是否美式英语,结尾是否有问号。合并后的两个问题是否应该分开?用户可能希望每个问题独立,所以可能需要分开处理。但用户提供的例子中,用户可能希望合并成一个更连贯的问题,但原问题有两个问题。因此可能需要保留两个问题,但用户示例中的输出可能合并了。需要确认用户是否希望将两个问题合并还是分开。根据用户提供的例子,他们可能希望合并成一个更简洁的问题,所以可能需要整合两个问题。例如,合并后的版本可能是:“How do you view 2026 growth prospects as DIXI revenue declines, and what key assumptions underlie new indication launches and AI applications driving utilization?”但用户可能希望每个问题单独处理,所以可能需要分开。但用户示例中的输出可能合并了。需要仔细分析用户的需求。用户给出的示例中,可能合并了两个问题,所以可能需要将两个问题合并为一个更简洁的问题。最终简化后的问题应该是两个独立的句子,但用户可能希望合并。根据用户提供的原始问题,可能需要分开处理,但用户可能希望更简洁,所以可能合并。需要根据用户提供的示例来判断。用户提供的示例输出是:“What key assumptions underlie new indication launches and AI applications driving utilization? How do you view 2026 growth prospects as DIXI revenue declines?”但用户可能希望每个问题单独,所以可能需要分开。或者合并为一个更长的问题。根据用户的要求,可能需要保持两个问题,但更简洁。例如:“How do you view 2026 growth prospects as DIXI revenue declines, and what key assumptions underlie new indication launches and AI applications driving utilization?”但用户可能希望每个问题独立,所以分开处理更合适。例如:1. How do you view 2026 growth prospects as DIXI revenue declines?2. What key assumptions underlie new indication launches and AI applications - Rohin Patel (JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division)

2025Q3: We are guiding for 2025 but not providing formal guidance for 2026. We are confident in the core of our focal epilepsy indicated business growing at 20% plus. - Joel Becker(CEO)

Has NAUTILUS data impacted commercial momentum, and has focal growth been affected? - Vikramjeet Singh Chopra (Wells Fargo)

2025Q2: Our long-term strategy rests on a core RNS business growth of 20% CAGR for each of the next 3 years without expansion of our indications. - Joel D. Becker(CEO)

Contradiction Point 3

Gross Margin Expectations

It involves changes in financial forecasts, specifically regarding gross margin expectations, which are critical indicators for investors.

How does the Q4 gross margin guidance step-down reconcile with RNS strength? - Michael Kratky(Leerink Partners LLC, Research Division)

2025Q3: RNS is expected to be 80% or above in Q4. The guidance is more of a mix issue with DIXI, which could impact overall gross margin. In 2026, we expect RNS gross margin to be above 80%. - Patrick Williams(CFO)

Will you project the gross margin decline for the rest of the year considering RNS growth and declining DIXI revenue? - Priya Sachdev(UBS Investment Bank, Research Division)

2025Q1: Gross margins for Q3 are expected around 75%, with full-year guidance in the mid-70s. - Rebecca Kuhn(CFO)

Contradiction Point 4

Impact of Project CARE on Market Expansion

It involves differing views on the effectiveness of Project CARE in impacting referral volumes and market expansion, which is crucial for company growth strategy.

How is Project CARE impacting market expansion goals? - Paige Chamberlain(Wolfe Research, LLC)

2025Q3: Project CARE has been successful in increasing prescriber numbers and utilization, complementing primary growth in Level 4 centers. We are on track to meet our 2025 goals. - Joel Becker(CEO)

How has Project CARE affected referral volumes and implant numbers in Level 4 centers and regions? - Nelson Cox(Lake Street Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division)

2025Q1: Project CARE has increased referral volumes and implants. Referrals from Level 3 and community centers have grown, and centers are more connected to RNS technology, which helps patients access RNS therapy. - Joel Becker(CEO)

Contradiction Point 5

Project CARE Impact on Market Expansion

It involves the expectations and impact of Project CARE on market expansion, which is a key growth strategy for the company.

How is Project CARE affecting market expansion goals? - Paige Chamberlain(Wolfe Research, LLC)

2025Q3: Project CARE has been successful in increasing prescriber numbers and utilization, complementing primary growth in Level 4 centers. We are on track to meet our 2025 goals. - Joel Becker(CEO)

What are the details of Project CARE’s 2025 market expansion? - Vik Chopra (Wells Fargo)

2024Q4: We aim to double implants and referrals from CARE accounts in 2025. We are expanding educational and awareness programs for clinicians, targeting centers for referrals and implants, and increasing programming centers. The focus is on increasing center numbers and program execution. - Joel Becker(CEO)

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