Blueprint Medicines - Q4 2022
February 16, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good morning, and welcome to the Blueprint Medicines conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. Following the formal remarks, we will open the call up for your questions. Please be advised that this call is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn it over to Jenna Cohen, Head of Investor Relations at Blueprint Medicines. Please proceed.
Jenna Cohen (Head of Investor Relations)
Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Blueprint Medicines' fourth quarter and full year 2022 financial and operating results conference call. This morning, we issued a press release which outlines the topics we plan to discuss today. You can access the press release as well as the slides that we'll be reviewing today by going to the investor section of our website at www.blueprintmedicines.com. Today on our call, Kate Haviland, our Chief Executive Officer, will provide a perspective on Blueprint's 2022 accomplishments and how that positions us to continue to grow and drive value in 2023. Philina Lee, our Chief Commercial Officer, will review AYVAKIT's performance and our upcoming opportunity to expand the label and treat many more patients with SM.
Christi Rossi, Chief Operating Officer, will provide a preview of how we will further our SM leadership at AAAAI, as well as touch on portfolio milestones for the year. Mike Landsittel, our Chief Financial Officer, will review our fourth quarter 2022 financial results and 2023 guidance. Fouad Namouni, President, Research & Development, and Becker Hewes, Chief Medical Officer, are also joining our call and will be available for Q&A. Before we get started, I would like to remind everyone that the statements we make on this conference call will include forward-looking statements. Actual events or results could differ materially from those expressed or implied by any forward-looking statements as a re-result of various risks, uncertainties and other factors, including those set forth in the Risk Factors section of SEC filings.
Any forward-looking statement made on this call represents our views only as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any subsequent date. We specifically disclaim any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. I'll now hand the call over to Kate.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Thank you, Jenna. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining the call today. In 2022, we significantly advanced our business, making important progress across our AYVAKIT launch in advanced systemic mastocytosis and research and development execution on our portfolio of precision therapies. As we kick off 2023, Blueprint offers a compelling value proposition and a unique profile. I would like to highlight three of the most important components of that position that suits us or positions us well for substantial growth this year and beyond. The first is our leadership in systemic mastocytosis. In 2022, our first full year of AYVAKIT launch in advanced SM, we doubled our net product revenue year-over-year.
The U.S. accounted for the majority of these product sales, and in 2023, we will see our international launches in advanced SM gaining momentum as we work through the access and reimbursement process in key countries. Importantly, through the launch of AYVAKIT in advanced SM, we have built a strong team and a foundation of commercial capabilities and infrastructure. We are ready now to scale the impact of AYVAKIT with our potential label expansion in ISM. Philina will go into more detail on AYVAKIT's performance in 2022 and preview how we plan to build what will become a blockbuster therapeutic category through our anticipated launch in ISM mid-year. The second component is our clinical-stage pipeline focused on best-in-class investigational therapies that address serious medical problems in large patient populations. Our development efforts are focused in mast cell disorders, lung cancer, and breast cancer.
Within these areas, each of our programs has a strong mechanistic rationale and a development strategy to achieve a first or best-in-class position. In 2022, we worked to build the foundation for these programs through dose escalation and dose optimization, and we are poised this year to rapidly advance these programs into earlier lines of treatment where we have the greatest opportunity to impact significant medical needs. We also continue to broaden our discovery efforts, expanding the range of high-value targets we can pursue as we aim to increase our already impressive research productivity, most recently demonstrated by the announcement of our new research program targeting wild-type KIT for common mast cell diseases adjacent to systemic mastocytosis, including chronic urticaria. The third and last component is that we are operating from a position of financial strength.
Our strong cash position and disciplined approach to capital allocation ensures that we are well-positioned to execute on the range of opportunities we have in front of us while driving towards a sustainable financial profile. Today, we have greater than $1 billion in cash on our balance sheet. We are growing product revenue, which will continue to become a more significant portion of overall revenue this year. Mike will go into our financial performance in more depth later on in the call. At Blueprint, we have an incredible growth story right in front of us in 2023 and beyond. We call this precision at scale. This story starts with our existing commercial portfolio, which provides a certainty of value and a near-term opportunity to drive revenue acceleration.
Beyond SM, our discovery and clinical stage portfolios provide multiple opportunities for us to tackle increasingly large op-opportunities in oncology and beyond. This diversity of fundamental value drivers creates multiple avenues for growth and upside across all aspects of our business. As a fully integrated company, we have critical mass, including the expertise, the infrastructure, and most importantly, the right people to deliver on these opportunities, creating extraordinary value for patients, the medical community, and for our shareholders. Now let me turn it over to Philina to review AYVAKIT's performance and provide a perspective on the upcoming ISM launch.
Philina Lee (CCO)
Thanks, Kate. Good morning, everyone. Let's start with AYVAKIT performance. In 2022, we doubled AYVAKIT net product revenue, achieving $111 million. Fourth quarter revenues were $30.1 million, with $26.3 million in the U.S. We have established AYVAKIT as the standard of care in advanced SM in the U.S., where we continue to grow the number of patients treated with AYVAKIT year-over-year. In 2022, we exited the year with nearly 500 patients on AYVAKIT. The percentage of patients on free drug remained stable. In Q4, AYVAKIT growth was driven by several important measures. We added nearly 50 new accounts, increasing the breadth of prescribing to approximately 400 accounts with AYVAKIT experience. AYVAKIT penetration increased across all subtypes of advanced SM.
Approximately 75% of patients who start AYVAKIT are treatment naive, which is a promising lead indicator as we focus on growing the treated advanced SM market. We are confident in our guidance of $130 million-$140 million in AYVAKIT net product revenue this year across GIST and advanced SM. I want to emphasize this guidance is specific to our current indication. The midpoint of this range represents a more than 20% increase in AYVAKIT revenues year-over-year. We also expect to achieve additional revenue for AYVAKIT this year above and beyond our base guidance due to our anticipated launch in ISM. Now let's turn to ISM. Upon approval, AYVAKIT will be the first FDA-approved therapy for patients with ISM. Patients and providers have been waiting for this a long time.
With our PDUFA date in hand, our team is laser-focused on building the market to deliver on this incredible opportunity to transform patients' lives. AYVAKIT represents a blockbuster opportunity in SM with an estimated $1.5 billion global annual peak. Chances to make this kind of patient impact are rare in our industry, and this has enabled us to rapidly recruit talent as we've incrementally expanded our highly experienced field team. Our U.S. launch strategy focuses on 7,500 patients with moderate to severe ISM. These patients are actively seeking treatment, which is limited to symptom-directed polypharmacy today. We expect early adoption of AYVAKIT in patients with severe symptom burden, followed by patients with moderate symptom burden over time. To prepare for ISM launch, we're focused on three key areas. First, we're engaging a broader provider base who are managing ISM patients.
Our field team is on the ground engaging the heme oncs and allergist immunologists who are seeing the most ISM patients to understand their practices and to educate on SM. Our greatest focus is on the top 350 providers who are managing approximately 1,500 moderate to severe ISM patients today. From our field intelligence and primary market research, providers say about half of their patients are not well-controlled on current therapies, which ties well to the 7,500 patients we can see in claims. Our secondary focus is activating patients to consider a new treatment option. Our patient and caregiver campaign, It's Something, has now enrolled thousands of highly motivated prospective patients who suspect they may have SM. We know that an educated and motivated patient is a catalyst for treatment. Third, we're focused on maintaining strong and rapid patient access to therapy.
Today's favorable access environment for AYVAKIT provides a strong foundation. All doses are currently on the market today with virtually no access challenges and industry-leading time to fill. Let's talk more about expectations for our initial launch ramp in ISM, which we expect to reflect a rare disease launch trajectory. We think the HAE market is a good example for how ISM can develop into a blockbuster market. We see several similarities. First, HAE is a rare disease treated by allergists. Multiple disease-modifying therapies are approved and reimbursed today with price points above AYVAKIT's current list price. Over the past 15-years, the introduction of these therapies catalyzed development of the HAE market, enabling linear sales growth over this time frame. In 2021, global sales of prophylactic HAE therapies were approximately $1.5 billion and still growing.
There are 7,500 diagnosed and treated HAE patients in the U.S. today, which is remarkably similar to the number of diagnosed and treated patients with moderate to severe ISM. Collectively, the HAE experience gives us confidence in the commercial launch trajectory for AYVAKIT in ISM. As you see with HAE, we expect a rare disease ramp. While we don't expect an initial launch bolus, there are several factors that should accelerate the development of the SM market, including our efforts over the past several years to increase disease awareness and diagnosis rates, as well as our advanced patient identification capabilities. This will further help to catalyze treatment and market growth. As we drive towards the PDUFA date for ISM, AYVAKIT has all the harbingers of a strong launch.
High medical need, first to market with a strong product profile, and a highly motivated group of patients and providers who are waiting for an FDA-approved therapy. With our experience and our leadership in SM, we're confident in our ability to capture the significant ISM opportunity ahead. With that, I'll turn it over to Christy, who will speak to Blueprint's leadership at AAAAI.
Christina Rossi (COO)
Thanks, Philina. Good morning, everyone. Next week at AAAAI, we are proud to share data across multiple presentations that further solidify our long-standing scientific leadership and commitment to SM. The PIONEER study definitively demonstrates that AYVAKIT's potent and selective inhibition of KIT D816V reduces mast cell burden, improves symptoms, and therefore transforms the quality of life of SM patients. Since presenting the top-line data last August, we've met with a variety of healthcare providers who treat SM patients to understand what data is most meaningful to them. While the specific outcome measures that are most impactful will vary by physician, and at times by specialty, as allergists have a different reference frame for clinical trials and are much more used to PROs, for example, than hematologists are, some themes have emerged consistently. The first is that safety is key.
A clean safety profile lowers the hurdle for prescribers and patients to consider a disease-modifying therapy like AYVAKIT, shifting the conversation from why try a new therapy like AYVAKIT to why not. The second is that the totality of impact across symptoms and quality of life is paramount. Our primary endpoint of mean change in TSS captures this symptom benefit broadly. In addition, SM treaters are interested in the impact on patients' most bothersome symptoms, which can motivate a patient to want to initiate therapy, as well as the impact of treatment across the specific symptoms captured in the TSS. Finally, prescribers are looking for symptom improvement to translate into impact on a patient's quality of life, which is the ultimate goal of therapy. Third, data on measures of mast cell burden helps to explain the biological rationale for the benefit that healthcare providers are seeing in their patients.
Seeing meaningful and consistent impacts in these measures increases prescriber confidence in a therapy's potential to alter the course of disease. Finally, in a chronic, lifelong disease like SM, prescribers are very interested in understanding the impact of treatment over time. We designed Part 3 of PIONEER specifically to assess and capture the benefit of treatment over the longer term. With that feedback in mind, we are looking forward to sharing more from PIONEER in three presentations at AAAAI. An oral presentation on Sunday, February 26th will detail the statistically significant and clinically meaningful results that AYVAKIT achieved across the primary and all key secondary endpoints in PIONEER. We plan to show additional data on our primary and secondary endpoints, including information on individual symptom benefit, as well as data from the 48-week crossover portion of the study.
We will also have two additional presentations that will focus on AYVAKIT's effect on skin signs and symptoms and on quality of life. We are excited to share these important results in detail for the first time, demonstrating the disease-modifying benefits of AYVAKIT and showing how AYVAKIT empowers physicians to address the most important concerns of their ISM patients. Other presentations at the meeting will characterize the burden of disease and showcase new approaches to accelerate diagnostic rates and continue to grow the ISM market. We look forward to this important conference and to sharing more detail during our corporate call on Monday, February 27th. I'll now turn briefly to our portfolio updates for this year. In January, we guided to a variety of milestones across our portfolio as we work to expand our impact on patients globally.
We discussed two important AYVAKIT milestones already this morning, the upcoming presentation of the PIONEER data at AAAAI, as well as our anticipated approval and launch in ISM by mid-year. Today, we are also pleased to confirm that we have received EMA validation of our Type II variation for AYVAKIT in ISM, bringing us a step closer to this important indication expansion and launch in Europe. We're on track for our other corporate milestones for the year, including IND submission for BLU-525 and presentation of initial dose escalation data from both BLU-451 and BLU-222 in the first half of the year. Last week, we announced that the FDA had issued a partial clinical hold on the VELA trial due to visual adverse events observed in a limited number of patients.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Patients who are currently enrolled in the study are continuing to receive study drug, and we are working expeditiously with the FDA to resolve the partial hold and resume study enrollment. More broadly, we look forward to sharing additional data across our portfolio as we reach these milestones and make progress towards our 2027 blueprint. With that, I'll turn the call over to Mike to review our financial updates.
Mike Landsittel (CFO)
Thanks, Christy. Earlier this morning, we reported detailed financial results in our press release. For today's call, I'll touch on a few highlights. For the full year, total revenues were $204 million, including $111 million in net product revenues from sales of AYVAKIT and $93 million in collaborations and license revenues, exceeding the high end of our 2022 total revenue guidance of $200 million. Of these full year revenues, $30.1 million of AYVAKIT net product revenues and $8.7 million in collaboration revenues were recorded in the fourth quarter. As Philina Lee noted for AYVAKIT, we saw continued growth in advanced SM patient starts and product revenue.
Our total operating expenses were $723.7 million for the full year and $183.7 million for the fourth quarter. Our Q4 operating expenses showed a quarter-over-quarter decline from Q3 as we continue to leverage operating efficiencies across our businesses. In 2023, we anticipate that we will achieve $130 million-$140 million in AYVAKIT net product revenues for advanced SM and GIST. We also anticipate full year collaboration revenues of $40 million-$50 million from existing collaborations. This guidance highlights our expectations for both the continued diversity of revenue and a continued but more moderate growth of AYVAKIT product revenue in advanced SM and GIST.
I want to reemphasize that this guidance is specific to our existing AYVAKIT indications, and it does not include growth from our anticipated label expansion into ISM. We expect our operating expenses to grow moderately in the first quarter of 2023, and this will be driven by our preparations for the launch of ISM, including the impact of our incremental field force expansion, as well as planned manufacturing investments to support the continued progress of our clinical programs. We anticipate operating expense growth will flatten in the second half of the year as we recognize economies of scale across our portfolio. As we enter 2023, we are in an exceptionally strong financial position with nearly $1.1 billion in cash that will fuel our 2027 blueprint to achieve precision at scale and create transformative value for patients and shareholders.
With that, I'll now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator?
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now start today's Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one from your telephone keypad now. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. Please also be reminded that we only have time for one question per analyst. Our first question today comes from Dane Leone from Raymond James. Your line is now open.
Dane Leone (Managing Director)
Hi, thank you for taking the questions. Congratulations on all the progress. I think for the guidance that you've outlined this morning, we have a number of questions coming in that are pretty similar from investors that are kind of focused around when you look at the current prescriber base of AYVAKIT and ASM, what the overlap is at those centers with patients you identified as being ISM patients who could be eligible for treatment once you get the approval. I think the genesis of that is trying to help people of once you get the approval, where the launch could be initially focused and kind of what % of the target population would be representative of your current prescriber base. Thank you.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Thanks, Dane, for that question. Philina, can you weigh in on that?
Philina Lee (CCO)
Thanks so much for that question. As you know, our teams are in the market and on the ground today engaging with top volume prescribers of AYVAKIT as well as the top volume providers who are treating ISM patients. In fact, we do see some overlap. Within those top 350 high volume prescribers, they are treating nearly 400 moderate to severe ISM patients today who are potential candidates to start AYVAKIT rapidly upon approval.
Dane Leone (Managing Director)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question today comes from Marc Frahm from Cowen and Co. Your line is now open.
Eric Schmidt (Analyst)
Hi, guys. This is Eric Schmidt for Marc. Thanks for taking my call and congrats on the quarter. You mentioned the most bothersome symptom endpoint that will be presented with a PIONEER data later this month. This endpoint obviously focuses more on symptom with more severe impact on any given patient. Do you think that gives you a bigger range to show symptom benefit versus the overall composite? Then how do you think the threshold of clinical meaningfulness differs from the individual domains on the TSS score? Thanks.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Eric, sorry, I think you were breaking up a little bit. We appreciate the question. I believe what you're asking is, how are we thinking about the breadth of impact across various symptoms in the PIONEER data versus kind of the interaction with the most bothersome symptom? I believe that was your question. Maybe what we can... Is that, is that correct? Okay. You know, I think what Christy was great. I think what Christy was laying out is really that we have in PIONEER, we have demonstrated statistically important and clinically meaningful benefits to patients across a range of ways of looking at treatment impact.
That as includes the impact on pathological mast cells from our quantitative measures, it includes the impact on both the overall symptom burden a patient experiences as measured by the TSS, as well as impacts across all the individual symptoms and domains. We really look forward at AAAAI to be able to put that data out to show the impact that the broad and kind of impact that AYVAKIT has. I think importantly, it is that the early impacts we see as well as the deepening over time, that is gonna be important to prescribers, as we have talked about.
Christina Rossi (COO)
All right. That's helpful. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question today comes from Bradley Canino from Stifel. Your line is now open.
Bradley Canino (Equity Research Analyst)
Thanks, good morning. Maybe on the CDK2, I'd like to ask if over the past week, have any more patients completed eye exams, particularly the patient that had the grade three event, have those results been consistent with what you previously saw? If you can just quickly walk through the current thinking of why those vision events are unlikely to impede the full development of this asset and the logistical steps to reactivate this trial. Thank you.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Thanks for the question. Becker, will you kick us off?
Becker Hewes (Chief Medical Officer)
Yeah. With respect to the question on the eye exams for the patient with the grade three, this really applies to all of the patients that we have full eye exams on. There's really absolutely nothing abnormal showing up on these ophthalmologic exams, and they're very extensive ophthalmologic exams. I think this is really consistent also with the symptomatology, which are very brief episodes of either changing of the intensity of light or a bit of blurriness. Patient with a grade three also had an MRI showing that there was nothing in the central nervous system that could explain the symptoms.
It's really the really brief nature of the symptoms and the fact that they resolve so quickly, upon either briefly stopping the drug and then restarting at a lower dose. With respect to the timeline or the steps needed to get the program back on track, we've been working very closely with the FDA, who've been extremely cooperative. The main reason, as we've said, for the partial clinical hold is simply to modify the protocol to put ophthalmologic-specific dose adjustment criteria in there and grading criteria, and then to change the informed consent, so that everyone's aware that these are potential things that could occur.
In terms of how I'm thinking about this in the overall development, as we've said before, we're nearing the end of dose escalation. I think we have a range of potential doses available. We see the end of the single agent dose escalation in sight. These events, again, are very brief. They are usually grade one, and they, you know, having some ophthalmologic or visual changes in many cancer drugs, it's really not uncommon. This is so mild and so transient that I really don't see this as potentially dose limiting.
Again, with a drug that has such a clean kinome and it's so targeted to CDK2, I think we have a good range where we can see potential in the future for clinical benefit for patients. Yeah.
Bradley Canino (Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks for the color.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Eun Yang from Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Eun Yang (Analyst)
Thank you. We are waiting details on the PIONEER data at AAAAI, but I wanna just ask you for this key secondary endpoint responder rate, what's the minimum delta between the two arms needed to achieve a statistical significance? Thank you.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Yeah. Thanks for the question, Eun. I'm gonna hand over to Christy to talk more about that.
Christina Rossi (COO)
Thank you. As you know, I mean, we hit, we were highly significant across all of our primary and key secondary endpoints. You know, I think part of what's left in question is just sort of how we interpret the variety of data on these endpoints and how do clinicians interpret them in terms of being meaningful. You know, as we've engaged on this, I would say two things. One, you know, as we've said before, the totality of the data across all of these endpoints is really what is most impactful. Different healthcare providers interpret different pieces of data, you know, in different ways. What's interesting about response rate is that it's actually not an endpoint that is used in allergy frequently.
As we've engaged with allergists, they found ORR to kind of be the least interpretable of all the endpoints, but we're very eager to share it, and certainly some hematologists find it incredibly compelling. you know, we will be looking at both responder analyses, as we've indicated across the secondary endpoints. It'll be also really interesting to see how those rates evolve over time, again, kind of demonstrating the long-term impact of AYVAKIT. It's that totality of the data along with the other secondaries and the primary that, you know, we've found prescribers have found very compelling, and we're looking forward to sharing all of that data in a couple weeks.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
I think we're in such a unusual position, Yun, that the study has demonstrated significant impact across multiple ways of looking at it, right? Of everything from kind of the most fundamental biological impacts on kind of the pathologic measures of mast cells, as well as, you know, the patient impacts on symptomatology all the way through to quality of life. You know, it's very rare to have such statistically and clinical meaningful outcomes across such a broad array of measures in a study. We're really looking forward to showing that data.
Eun Yang (Analyst)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Derek Archila from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Derek Archila (Managing Director)
Hey. Good morning, thanks for taking the questions. Just two quick ones from us. First one, just on the 2023 guidance, I just wanna understand, is this more about driving new account activations, or is this more about, you know, depth at current accounts? I guess if it's the latter, you know, how much depth is really left in terms of new patients at these current practices that you're already at? I just wanna make sure I heard you correctly, I think it was Dane's question. I think on the 350 providers, I think that you're initially targeting, you said the overlap for ISM patients is about 400 out of the initial 1,500. Is it fair to assume those other 1,000 patients are being seen by allergists? Thanks.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Yeah. Derek, thanks so much for the question. I'll hand it over to Philina to answer the specifics. But to your first part of your question, I mean, I think what we're so pleased to see in this launch is that we have the dominant share of the current market of patients who are treated with advanced SM, and we're seeing that consistent demand where we continue to drive new patients, broadening the prescriber base, adding new accounts and new prescribers as we really work to expand the overall size of the SM market as well. I think we're gonna continue to see both of those dynamics, you'll play out through launch. Philina, do you wanna talk about the numbers in more depth?
Philina Lee (CCO)
Yeah. Sure, Derek. I think at the heart of your question, your first question is really about, you know, has the advanced SM opportunity peaked, or what is sort of the headroom on that? To be really clear, we see headroom significantly to continue to grow the advanced SM opportunity. We know that this is gonna happen at a more measured rate than the growth trajectory that we saw early in the launch, that growth is driven by several factors. You know, we're still early in penetrating into the overall advanced SM patient population. We are the standard of care in the treated patient population, the biggest lever of growth is truly activating the fuller breadth of advanced SM patients to be treated for their SM.
Penetration across all subtypes, significant room to continue expanding on the breadth and depth of the prescriber base as well as the durations of therapy, which are favorable. As we shift towards a more treatment-naive patient population, that is also a favorable harbinger of longer durations of therapy over extended periods of time. To your second question about the 400 patients. Just to be really clear, that is just the moderate to severe ISM patients who are treated by the top 350 of our current prescriber base. Importantly, we know that it's important to engage a broader prescriber base who are treating that 7,500 moderate to severe ISM patients who are diagnosed and actively seeking treatment today.
When we think about where early adoption of AYVAKIT could happen post ISM approval, we see it not only among those 400 patients treated by the current top volume prescribers but also among that broader group of patients who really have severe symptomatology.
Derek Archila (Managing Director)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Salveen Richter from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Anna Karakerezi (Asset and Wealth Management)
Good morning. This is Anna Madan for Salveen. Thank you for taking our question. On the ISM launch, we're just trying to understand what patients would be the early adopters. From the 400 patients that you mentioned, what proportion would not be well controlled on current treatments? Then just quickly on the CDK2 program, with your proposed actions, is the FDA aligned on the changes to the protocol? Thank you.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Thank you for that question, and maybe we'll start with the overall numbers of ISM. I think we're getting a little bit confused on the 400, so we just wanna make that really clear for people. Maybe Christi can take that, and then, Becker, if you could take the CDK2.
Christina Rossi (COO)
Yeah. Yes. Sorry. Happy to. Both of the last two questions, I think are getting a little bit to sort of where the patients are in breadth and depth. Just to be clear on the 400, we see 400 moderate to severe, not well-controlled ISM patients amongst physicians who currently have AYVAKIT experience. I think, you know, that gets to the earlier question on overlap as well. You know, I think the overall idea here is that there's a lot of potential with ISM amongst prescribers who have current AYVAKIT experience. Certainly early in the launch, you know, that is a place that we will focus to drive growth.
The 7,500 patients in total, when we throw that number out and talk about that, all of those patients are, you know, patients that we view to be moderate to severe, not well controlled, and candidates for therapy. Maybe just to close out on kind of the breadth and depth questions that are coming up, you know, we see opportunity in both places, right? If I think about advanced SM, you know, we are continuing to deepen usage at existing prescribers. What the dynamic that you see is often that they will get comfortable treating a patient, and then they will start to identify additional potential candidates. We definitely see room to deepen.
Breadth continues to be really important in a rare disease market like this, and so we're really pleased to see the number of new accounts that we added in Q4 and expect to see that continue through the year.
Becker Hewes (Chief Medical Officer)
Yeah. This is Becker. With respect to the process with the FDA, just a little bit of background about how this generally happens. The initial call that we had with them started the process.
The way it will end will be with written notification that the partial hold has been ended or been lifted. We've been working very closely with the FDA. We're rapidly modifying the informed consent and the protocol and the IB, and so far it's been going extremely smoothly. This is a collaborative action or interaction with the FDA, and we've had alignment all along the way. You know, this is really about informing people and making sure that the right grading system is in the protocol and any dose adjustments are very clear. There's been really quite a bit of alignment.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Just add, you know, so that collaborative nature of the conversations have been very constructive. We are working to submit the documents. Of course, we're not in control of the FDA timeline on the other side, you know, I think that collaboration and, you know, kind of joint sense of getting the study back on track gives us a lot of confidence that we'll resolve this in a short time frame. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Michael Schmidt from Guggenheim Securities. Your line is now open.
Paul Jeng (VP)
Hey, good morning. This is Paul on for Michael. Thanks for taking our question. Just one from us on the CDK2. Maybe you could help set some expectations for that initial clinical readout this year, specifically on the pharmacodynamic markers of activity and anything that you should highlight that we should expect, such as, you know, reduction in phospho-Rb or cyclin E protein, that'd be really helpful. Thank you.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Becker, will you take that?
Becker Hewes (Chief Medical Officer)
Yeah. Just as we said earlier, our guidance has been for dose escalation data at mid-year and then an early look at the combination. You know, we are able to start the combination before we reach a recommended phase II dose, and so we look forward to presenting that, including safety and biomarker data mid-year this year. With respect to biomarkers, we have a number of them. They are circulating biomarkers. They are tumor biomarkers. What we'll be presenting is an emerging holistic look at the activity and selectivity of BLU-222 in these multiply relapsed phase I patients.
Paul Jeng (VP)
Great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Michael Ulz from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Michael Ulz (Executive Director and Biotechnology Equity Research Analyst)
Yep. Thanks. Good morning. Maybe I can just ask another question on the ISM opportunity and how you're thinking about the early trajectory here? I know in your prepared remarks you commented you're not anticipating a bolus here, but I'm just curious what impact could presentation of the data at AAAAI next week have on those views? You know, could it drive additional interest, and could it potentially change your view on the early trajectory? Thanks.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Yeah. Thank you for the question. Let me take the first part on the bolus. I think and then Philina can weigh in on the impact of Quad AI. You know, I think from a bolus perspective, the reason why we're not saying that we don't expect it is because we designed the PIONEER study to evaluate long-term follow-up with the patients. You know, in a product launch, when you see a bolus, it's often because you're switching patients off of clinical trials into commercial drug. We believe the long-term experience of AYVAKIT treatment in these patients is critically important to the overall, you know, value as we continue to look at that impact over time. We're retaining patients within the PIONEER study for up to five years.
That is why we don't expect a bolus coming out of clinical trials into commercial therapy. Philina, do you want to talk about how you see the impact of AAAAI?
Philina Lee (CCO)
Yeah, sure. I mean, I think first and foremost, I want to also talk about the efforts that the team is doing to prepare for the launch and sort of feed towards the ultimate ramp upon approval as well. As I mentioned, we're hyper-focused on three critical areas. The broader provider engagement, both within the existing prescriber base for AYVAKIT as well as that broader prescriber base, future prescriber base, including allergists, immunologists. We're focused on activating patients and maintaining our strong patient access. Among that, when we think about, you know, the importance of AAAAI, clearly it will increase the awareness of AYVAKIT, especially among that allergist and immunologist community, awareness of AYVAKIT as well as the data.
As far as our team's focus as well, a couple of factors that we think will help with the ramp, is that for many years we have been engaging to increase disease awareness as well as diagnosis rates. Our team has been, you know, really honing and perfecting our skills with the Advanced SM launch, so we know how to leverage advanced analytics and our field acumen to find patients. We know how to identify their providers, and we know how to engage these providers, leveraging our deep disease state expertise. We are confident as we think about that overall $1.5 billion peak opportunity, that we will ultimately be able to capture this opportunity.
Michael Ulz (Executive Director and Biotechnology Equity Research Analyst)
Very helpful. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Reni Benjamin from JMP Securities. Your line is now open.
Reni Benjamin (Managing Director)
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. Congratulations on the quarter and outlook for 2023. Can you talk a little bit about, you know, how we should be thinking about the sales force and their switch to focused on allergists? Is this something that likely we're gonna have to increase as we, you know, get into the year and after approval? Do you have a sense as to how many docs are currently aware of AYVA and ISM versus, versus not as well.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Yeah. Hey, thank you, Reni, for the question, and I'll turn it over to Philina to answer the question about the sales force. I think one of the great attributes of this launch for us is that, you know, it is really an extension of what we've been doing in SM, and it is still a very. It's a specialty market. It's a market that we can certainly access with incremental growth in our field infrastructure. Maybe, Philina, talk a little bit about how you're thinking about that.
Philina Lee (CCO)
Yeah. As Kate mentioned, advanced SM provides a strong foundation, right? The primary specialty of focus historically for us has been hematology and oncology. As we prepare for the ISM launch, we know that we'll need to engage a broader provider and specialty base, including allergists. We've incrementally expanded our field force and strengthened our capabilities in allergy immunology as well as rare disease. To your question on awareness, you know, at this point, we're in a very strong position with awareness of AYVAKIT among target prescribers of over 40%.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
That's unaided awareness. I think that's unusual at this point and, you know, this early in a pre-launch phase to have that level of awareness. You know, I also think it's important, you know, as Philina had mentioned before, our data analytic capability is critical here. This is not a reach and frequency model. This is about, you know, getting to healthcare providers at a time when it's most relevant to them, meaning they've seen a patient recently. That is something again that we have really worked hard on and the team has done an incredible job through the advanced SM launch, getting that model up and running.
Reni Benjamin (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Joe Beatty from Berenberg. Your line is now open.
Joe Beatty (Analyst)
Great. Thank you. How's the current payer coverage for ISM, and are you able to help frame what approval rate you've been seeing by payers for ISM?
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Yeah. Thanks for that question. I think, you know, I'll point it to Philina, but I have to say that market access has been an incredible strength of our launches to date, and we are very well-positioned moving into this ISM launch. Do you wanna talk more about that, Philina?
Philina Lee (CCO)
To be clear, ISM is just a small fraction of our current business today, and coverage and access are strong across the full spectrum of SM patients. There's one broad SM code, payers aren't necessarily able to distinguish the difference between advanced SM and ISM today. As we've talked about previously, we have exceptionally strong payer coverage with virtually no access challenges.
Joe Beatty (Analyst)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Peter Lawson from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Peter Lawson (US Biotech Equity Analyst and Managing Director)
Thanks so much. Maybe a question for Becker just on getting to recommended phase II dose with your CDK2 inhibitor or if that's a moot point 'cause you've kind of have the ability to start the combination regimen. Just any sense whether we should see that recommended phase II dose in the first half or if we should be kind of waiting until you're off partial clinical hold?
Becker Hewes (Chief Medical Officer)
Yeah. I mean, first of all, as Kate mentioned, you know, the FDA timeline is the FDA timeline. We don't have control over that, we are encouraged by how quickly we are working with them. I think that both the recommended phase II dose and the combination dose are important because this is a potentially very broad program that involves a number of tumor types. The combination is relevant for breast cancer, CDK2 is really central to the biology of quite a few different tumor types and different biologies. With respect to... You know, we've gone really quickly through dose escalation, in terms of... It's really not just a recommended phase II dose. It's a range of activity where we have a good safety profile, I already think we have that in sight.
I think that the data that we are able to present midyear will provide a clear view of where we're going both with single agent and then very early data on the combination. They'll need more time to escalate more deeply into that ribociclib combination. It's also important to realize that we can start the chemotherapy combination as well in the near future after we come off of the partial clinical hold. I think it's important to focus not just on that one dose but also on the holistic program.
Peter Lawson (US Biotech Equity Analyst and Managing Director)
Gotcha. Is this captured under Project Optimus as well?
Becker Hewes (Chief Medical Officer)
We have the Project Optimus philosophy in mind, as we look at the doses, and we intend to have a very close relationship with the FDA with respect to making sure that we've covered the bases that they're looking at to understand the right single agent and combination dose so that as we go into bigger trials, we're not having to do a lot of dose finding beyond this initial trial. Project Optimus is really the lens that we look at all of our programs through at this point.
Peter Lawson (US Biotech Equity Analyst and Managing Director)
Great. Thank you so much.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from David Lebowitz from Citigroup. Your line is now open.
David Lebowitz (Senior Research Analyst)
Thank you very much for taking my question. I got one on ASM and one on ISM. On ASM, I guess to start, You know, we talked last quarter about specifically the adoption in the associated hematological neoplasm group. I know you had data at ASH, a lot of it focused on that specific group. I guess my thoughts are How are things looking now, and how do you think that data could help?
Kate Haviland (CEO)
David, you said you had a second question on ISM.
David Lebowitz (Senior Research Analyst)
Oh, if you want the ISM up front. On the ISM, I guess specifically, you were talking about how different doctors are going to prescribe the therapy in different ways. My question is when reporting your data at AAAAI later this month, how deeply will you go into the benefit on each specific symptom within the TSS score? Is there any thoughts as to which symptoms most doctors are emphasizing most in your view?
Kate Haviland (CEO)
All right. Thanks, David, for both those questions. I think, starting with advanced SM and SMHN, as we have talked about, you know, we are the standard of care in the patients who are treated for their advanced SM, which tend to be the patients who have MCL and aggressive SM. It's the SMHN patients where they're just a very complex clinical presentation. That's the group of patients that we have worked through that very compelling data, as you mentioned, that we saw at ASH. We're looking at monotherapy impact of AYVA, both on response rate, symptoms and overall survival. It is certainly, you know, it fueled conversations with prescribers. In that group of patients, we're changing practice, right? They're very complex clinical patients.
That's where we'll continue to see that work as we expand the overall size of the SM market, which is why the growth has moderated a bit there. As you think about the ISM presentation at PIONEER, we are going to show the totality of data, including the impact on patients across all symptoms within the TSS. In terms of, you know, as Christy was mentioning, different specialties have different contexts for clinical trial data. You know, PROs are commonly used in the allergy immunology space, not as much in hematology. Other measures are more common to hematology. What is great about this data set is that we see compelling and consistent impact across all of these measures. That is, you know, it's something that can appeal to all of our potential prescribers.
I think we're really looking forward to getting that out. In terms of the symptomatology that, you know, physicians are most focused on, it's really what impacts the patient the most. It's not, you know, it's not that they want to see one or the other. They want their patient's quality of life to improve. That is, again, why we designed the PRO to look at an array of symptoms, because one given patient may have predominantly neurocog symptoms and very, you know, not much on other domains. Another given patient may have predominant skin symptoms and not on other domains. It's a very heterogeneous disease presentation, and that's exactly why we designed the PRO as we did. We'll be showing all that data.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Zhiqiang Shu from Berenberg. Your line is now open.
Zhiqiang Shu (Head of Healthcare Research and Senior Biotech Analyst)
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I want to ask a question related to market access. Do you anticipate a separate code for ISM and when the product is going to launch? Related to that, what's your expectation for growth to net? Thanks very much.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
All right. Yeah, thank you for that question. I'll hand over the question on the codes to Philina, Mike can take the growth to net.
Philina Lee (CCO)
Yeah. I mean, I think at the heart of your question is what kind of access we anticipate as ISM comes to market. You know, just to answer that head on, we expect and are highly focused on maintaining strong patient access to ISM. You know, today we have virtually unencumbered payer coverage, and we expect based on the payer market research that we've done, that's not expected to change or limit the target patients that should adopt. To your specific question about the code, no, at this point, we don't expect a new code for SM.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Just to be really clear, there's just one code for SM. You can't distinguish between subtypes within it. That's what we'd expect to continue. Mike, do you want to take the growth to net?
Mike Landsittel (CFO)
For growth to net, currently with AYVAKIT, we see a gross to net range in about the mid-80% range as per gross margin. In the near term, we expect that to continue once we announce pricing for ISM and get further into that launch. You know, we've said there will be some flexibility on how we think about contracting going forward. If we need to do that could lead to some erosion, but the mid-80s is a good starting point.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
I think on the ISM market, it's also important to remember there's going to be puts and takes here, right? In the ISM market, we have a larger percentage of our patients are covered by commercial insurance. There, that will give us some tailwinds. Then we have that room, as Mike mentioned, that if we need to do any type of contracting to ensure that seamless market access, which we may or may not, but we have some space there as well. It's, it is. There's a slightly different payer mix in this group than we've seen in advanced SM.
Zhiqiang Shu (Head of Healthcare Research and Senior Biotech Analyst)
Thank you very much.
Operator (participant)
Our next question today comes from Ami Fadia from Needham. Your line is now open.
Ami Fadia (Senior Analyst)
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. Just ahead of the AAAAI data presentation, I wanted to just sort of understand how to interpret some of the data that will be presented there. I mean, it's clear that there's a huge heterogeneity in the patient population base, you know, with each patient having a very different symptom domain that bothers them. So how do we take the change in TSS score across each of the domains that you will be presenting at the meeting and think about how clinically meaningful it may be for an individual patient and how will physicians really interpret that data? Thank you.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Christy Rossi, do you wanna pick it up?
Christina Rossi (COO)
Sure. Thanks, Ami. You know, as you said before, what physicians are looking at is the consistency and totality of the data. When we look at sort of change in individual symptoms, again, the TSS is a new endpoint. It's not used in clinical practice. The lens that I think physicians are interpreting this data through is to say, one, you know, whatever symptoms my patient is suffering from, do I have confidence that AYVAKIT will improve their quality of life and improve those symptoms? You know, I think what we've heard is that what physicians are looking for is consistency of improvement across individual symptoms. I think looking at that longitudinally over time is gonna be interesting as well.
importantly, you know, addressing a patient's most bothersome symptom because we know that these patients are heterogeneous, as you say, and what specific symptom may be most impactful to a patient is gonna be different from patient to patient. I think what is compelling about AYVAKIT is that we do see, you know, consistent impacts, and we know that regardless of the specific presentation of a patient's symptomatology, we're confident that patient will benefit. I think that's the lens that the prescribers will be looking at this data set through as well.
Ami Fadia (Senior Analyst)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our next question today comes from Jay Olson from Oppenheimer. Your line is now open.
Jay Olson (Research Analyst)
Oh, hey, guys. Thanks for squeezing me in. I wanted to ask about median duration on therapy in SM. If you can comment on that, is it getting longer or shorter? I guess that would be indicative of the severity of patients you're treating and whether you're making inroads into that HN component. Thanks.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Yeah. Thanks so much for the question. Philina, do you wanna take that?
Philina Lee (CCO)
Yep. Our median duration of therapy is trending towards 18-months. We're highly encouraged that this is standing up well in clinical practice. Certainly as we shift towards a mix of more treatment-naive patients, we expect that over time to increase.
Jay Olson (Research Analyst)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Our final question comes from Christopher Raymond from Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.
Nicole Gabreski (VP of Equity Research and Biotechnology)
Good morning. This is Nicole Gabreski for Chris. Thanks for squeezing us in. I guess we were just wondering, of those 400 moderate-to-severe ISM patients that you had referenced, just given the experience of AYVA with those providers, are any of those patients currently receiving drug off-label? Also sorry if I missed it, but would you be in a position to provide updated 2023 AYVAKIT guidance that includes ISM revenues potentially later this year post-approval?
Kate Haviland (CEO)
That's Yeah. Thank you, thank you very much for that question. Starting with, I, you know, I'll just answer knowing that we're coming up against time here. The 400 patients are really not being treated today with AYVA. You know, we see a small number of patients with ISM who are being treated, but it's not substantial relative to our overall number of patients being treated. As we talk about guidance, I mean, I think our goal today is to align on where our current business stands with our approved indications of advanced SM and GIST, and to really set that foundation for all of us as we move towards this anticipated launch.
You know, in any given launch, there are uncertainties, including what our label will look like as we go through the FDA negotiation process and how the first few months will play out. You know, we look forward to working with all of you as we move into this really exciting launch. Thank you very much for that.
Nicole Gabreski (VP of Equity Research and Biotechnology)
Yeah. That's all. Thanks.
Operator (participant)
That concludes the Q&A portion of today's call. I'll now hand back over to Kate Haviland for closing remarks.
Kate Haviland (CEO)
Thank you, operator. Really as we kinda come out of the Q&A and taking a step back, I mean, today we have highlighted the significant opportunities that we have as Blueprint right in front of us to create value for patients and for our shareholders, including our continued commercial execution, our anticipated launch in ISM, as well as the ambitious and achievable goals we have for our pipeline. We are confident in our ability to deliver on these opportunities this year and beyond. We thank you all for taking the time and joining us today and your continued support of Blueprint Medicines. We look forward to talking to you again soon, this time from San Antonio in the AAAAI conference. So, looking forward to it.
Operator (participant)
That concludes today's Blueprint Medicines's 4Q and FY 2022 earnings call. You may now disconnect your line.