iRhythm - Earnings Call - Q3 2018
October 30, 2018
Transcript
Speaker 0
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the iRhythm Technologies Q3 twenty eighteen Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session and instructions will follow at that time. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I I would now like to turn the call over to your host, Ms.
Leigh Salvo of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Speaker 1
Thank you, Sarah, and thank you all for participating in today's call. Joining me are Kevin King, President and CEO and Matt Garrett, Chief Financial Officer. Earlier today, iRhythm released financial results for the quarter ended September 3038. A copy of the press release is available on the company's website. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that management will make statements during this call that include forward looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws, which are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Any statements contained in this call that are not statements of historical fact should be deemed to be forward looking statements. All forward looking statements, including without limitation, our examination of operating trends and our future expectations, which includes expectations for hiring, growth in our organization and reimbursement, guidance for revenue, gross margins and operating expenses in 2018 are based upon our current estimates and various assumptions. These statements involve material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to materially differ from those anticipated or implied by these forward looking statements. Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on these statements. For a list and description of the risks and uncertainties associated with our business, please refer to the Risk Factors section of our most recent quarterly report on Form 10 ks with the SEC.
IRhythm disclaims any intention or obligation, except as required by law, to update or revise any financial projections, forward looking statements, whether because of new information, future events or otherwise. This conference call contains time sensitive information and is accurate only as of the live broadcast today, October 3038. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Kevin.
Speaker 2
Thanks, Leigh. Good afternoon, and thanks for joining us. Our third quarter results demonstrated continued strong sales execution and market penetration. Revenue for the quarter was $38,100,000 up 55% as adjusted for Topic six zero six over prior year and gross margins increased by two points to 73.9%. Zio XT and Zio AT continue to drive improved account penetration and new account expansion, particularly in targeted large hospital networks.
As a result of the growing market acceptance of our systems, combined with the improving productivity of our expanded sales organization, we expect revenues for 2018 will now be $142,000,000 to $144,000,000 up from 138,000,000 to $144,000,000 which represents growth of 49% to 52% over prior year. I'll take the next few minutes to discuss some of our recent business highlights and turn the call over to Matt for a detailed financial review of the quarter and additional annual guidance. Key to our short and long term growth strategy are three primary components: sales team expansion and productivity increased market penetration with Zio XT and Zio AT and expanding our addressable market into new indications. Starting with the sales team expansion and productivity, As noted in the last quarter, we achieved our initial hiring goal of 110 reps in the first half of the year. We also mentioned on our last call that our focus for the remainder of the year would be on training and development of the recent new hires and ramping their overall productivity.
We're not anticipating any material hires before the end of the year, and our target of 130 to 150 remains unchanged, and we will provide an update for 2019 goals on our next call. As we've indicated in the past, it typically takes three to six months for a new sales hire to become productive and on average several years to reach peak productivity. Importantly, our ramp rates and peak productivity levels have both increased as a result of greater brand awareness, the evidence that we've generated, the payer contracts that we've completed and the strategy of selling to large integrated delivery systems as opposed to smaller independent physician practices. Market penetration is the key component of our growth strategy as we are merged to become the standard of care in long term continuous cardiac monitoring. Our ability to now offer both Zio XT and Zio AT on one platform is driving improved account penetration with an increasing number of accounts now migrating from legacy monitoring options to the full range of Zio applications.
Momentum in both new and existing accounts continued throughout the quarter, driven in large part from in network contracting and our focus on sales to larger, but more complex integrated delivery networks. The rollout of Zio AT provides another meaningful opportunity to gain share by enabling us to offer a full portfolio of ambulatory cardiac monitoring services on a single platform to our customers. As expected, we did see usual seasonality of the third quarter. However, the improved productivity of our sales organization coupled with a broader product line minimized much of the seasonal impact. I'm delighted to see the strength of our platform based approach to delivering a complete solution being realized in the field.
Turning to our markets, I thought it'd be helpful to revisit our current view of iRhythm's total addressable market both now and in the future. We view our U. S. Addressable market as a funnel of patients who progress through the detection, diagnosis and management of their cardiac arrhythmias. Today, the legacy ambulatory monitoring market is primarily focused on the initial diagnosis of symptomatic patients and amounts to over 4,500,000 tests per year.
We estimate that our share of this existing market is now double digits as we have broadened our presence and displaced legacy Holter events and mobile telemetries with our XT and AT services. Our accelerating share gains are not coming are coming not only from clinical utility of our diagnostic, but also from the completeness of our service that improves practice workflow, enable us to emerge as the standard of care in long term continuous monitoring. Moving down the funnel, there is also a growing population of patients who have already been diagnosed, but require ongoing monitoring and characterization of the arrhythmias to manage their conditions. Examples include patients who are undergoing procedures such as cardioversion or ablation to treat their arrhythmias or patients suffering from intermittent AF who need to be optimized on their medications. We estimate this market to be over one million patients and it is fully reimbursed and addressable to us today.
Results from our KP RHYTHM study have opened up this market to us by demonstrating the value of true AF burden measured by Zio and helping to drive clinical decision making for this population of patients. As such, the total reimbursed addressable market available to eye rhythm today exceeds five point five million patients in The U. S. Alone. Sitting above our currently addressable market in the funnel lies the opportunity for detection asymptomatic atrial fibrillation in patients with risk factors such as age, hypertension, diabetes or prior stroke.
Following the publication of our mSToPS study in JAMA, we've spent considerable time with clinical thought leaders, payers and the pharma community to understand this market. And we've grown even more excited about its potential. Based on the inclusion criteria of mSToPS, we now estimate a market of greater than ten million high risk patients who could be potentially benefit from screening for AF. In order to fully access this market, we will need to show positive data on clinical outcomes and we expect such data to be available from mSToPS and other studies over the next few years. We continue to build evidence around the utility for Zio for the detection of asymptomatic AF, with our most recent contribution being a study from the MESA trial, which was published online in the Journal of Electrocardiology in late July.
MESA is a large multiethnic population health study that enrolled 6,800 participants over the age of 45, who were free of any cardiovascular disease in order to study the progression and pathogenesis of subsequent cardiovascular disease over subset of eleven hundred patients were monitored at least once with our Zio service with a mean wear time of fourteen days. Among patients with no prior history of atrial fibrillation, four percent newly diagnosed AF or AF flutter was found in this population. Results from this study further demonstrate the clinical utility of Zio in driving population health management through the detection of silent atrial fibrillation. Finally, sitting at the very top of the funnel is the general population of hundreds of millions of individuals in whom there is likely to be a one percent to two percent prevalence of atrial fibrillation. It is in this general population that we believe consumer wearable technologies may offer some promise in channeling the appropriate patients to be diagnosed with an ambulatory ECG monitoring technology such as Zio.
While we're very excited about the potential for recent developments in the consumer space to drive greater awareness of AF and utilization of our Zio service, we believe there are many unknowns such as the high rate of false positives. That will need to be worked out in order to provide a complete solution that will ultimately drive benefit to our health system. One final comment on our markets and growing awareness of our Zio service is the recent support of the National AFib Awareness Month in September. A high priority for our team is reaching out to the community and building awareness. During the month, we were especially active securing TV and radio news spots in multiple cities involving interviews with clinicians who are passionate about Zio.
This resulted in about 5,000,000 audience impressions with more opportunities opening during the quarter. Our goal is to draw public attention to prevalence of Afib in The US, while also highlighting the superior monitoring capabilities of Zio as an enabler of better patient care. Interview clips can be found on our website. Before I turn the call over to Matt, I want to take a few minutes to acknowledge the many employees at Algorithm who've been instrumental in our growing momentum and success. The third quarter marks our eighth quarter as a public company and I'm pleased with our growing track record of sustained top line growth and operational performance.
Our strategic approach to driving market penetration and expansion is rooted in our proven clinical superiority and scaling at a high level with a single platform. With that and then looking at our current trajectory and our fundamentals of our business, we are stronger than ever before. We're combining healthcare and technology to make a tremendous impact in the lives of patients, and we're deeply committed to this endeavor and remain steadfast. With that, I'd like to turn it over to Matt, our CFO, for a review of our financial results and guidance for 2018.
Speaker 3
Thanks, Kevin. Given the annual challenge we faced with summer seasonality in the third quarter, we are very pleased with our overall financial performance and particularly in our top line revenue growth. Our focus during the quarter on sales force productivity, large integrated system penetration and infrastructure support of the sales operation continues to drive our growth story. Financial and qualitative highlights for the third quarter as adjusted for Topic six zero six include revenue growth of 55% year over year and sequential growth of 7%, gross margins of 73.9%, an increase of two full percentage points over prior year. Successful launches of AT in key pilot accounts, which subsequently lead to adoption of iRhythm as a full solution in those accounts and an increase in sales force productivity through the development and onboarding of new reps as well as continued impact of penetrating large integrated systems with our operational infrastructure set up to support those accounts.
Taking a more detailed look at third quarter results as adjusted for 06/2006, revenue for the three months ended September 3038 was $38,100,000 an increase of 55% year over year and 7% sequentially. Sales force productivity levels continued to rise as we penetrate these large integrated systems and as reps hired over the last nine months start to achieve meaningful productivity levels. As we did in the prior quarter, we think it's valuable to spend some time going into more detail on the positive trends we are seeing in our business that support our ongoing confidence in the business and related revenue guidance. These trends include volume to price mix revenue growth remained near an eightytwenty ratio indicating a continued positive mix shift in our pricing inclusive of albeit on a minimum scale 80 unit volume. New store same store unit growth continues to trend around a fifty-fifty ratio with a slightly higher mix towards same store due to summer seasonality with new account activation and our own internal focus on adoption in these large systems.
Continued improvement of sales force productivity levels that support both our near term and long term hypothesis around economy of scale in our business. And finally, for both new and existing accounts piloting AT, we continue to see significant higher XT volume growth rates versus the core business. All of these trends continue to speak to our ability to scale this high volume business in a meaningful way around our strategic approach to opening and penetrating large volume accounts. Turning our attention to the rest of the P and L, gross margin for the third quarter twenty eighteen was 73.9% compared to 71.9%, a two percentage point improvement over the same period in 2017. Margin expansion for the quarter was driven in large part by our higher mix of contracted revenue and improved operational efforts in collections of patient owed deductibles and contracted payments from health plans.
Operating expenses for the third quarter twenty eighteen were $37,900,000 an increase of 60% compared to $23,700,000 for the same period of the prior year. As in the past few quarters, a significant amount of this incremental spend can be directly attributed to our continued focus on sales force expansion and sales support hiring needs out in front of our guidance and internal expectations for the year. In addition to these drivers, incremental spend includes commissions, additional bonus adjustments and bad debt expense associated with our over delivery on top line expectations. Finally, we continue to run stock comp expense at a rate higher than planned or external guidance given stock price appreciation. Net loss for the third quarter twenty eighteen was $10,200,000 or a loss of $0.43 per share compared with a net loss of $6,500,000 or a loss of $0.29 per share for the same period of the prior year.
Turning to our guidance for the remainder of 2018. Based on the aforementioned positive trends in our business and as Kevin noted earlier, we are again raising our 2018 revenue guidance range to $142,000,000 to $144,000,000 from $138,000,000 to $141,000,000 representing annual growth of 49% to 52%. Gross margins exiting 2018 is expected to range from 73.5% to 74.5%, up zero five percentage point from the prior quarter guidance. We are also raising operating expense projection slightly to a range of $147,000,000 to $149,000,000 including 18,000,000 to $19,000,000 for research and development and 129,000,000 to $130,000,000 for SG and A. Finally, I am pleased to announce the refinancing of our debt facility with Silicon Valley Bank with an attractive interest rate adding more confidence to our balance sheet.
Thank you all for listening and we'd now like to take this opportunity to answer questions. Joining me for Q and A today is Kevin King, President and CEO and Derek Sung, our Executive Vice President of Strategy and Corporate Development. Operator, I'll turn it back over to you.
Speaker 0
And your first question comes from the line of David Lewis from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Speaker 4
Good afternoon. Kevin, I want to start with you. I had maybe a few quick questions here. But first of all, obviously, you're maintaining 55% growth in the quarter. It's actually a better quarter on quarter growth number than you put up in the year ago period.
So help us understand the single largest driver of the business growth today between new accounts, same store sales, the rep ads. What is the bigger driver? And to what extent is the KP study or other data sets starting to drive the market? And I have a couple of follow ups.
Speaker 2
Hi, David, Kevin. Biggest driver between rep ads accounts and what was the third one? I'm sorry, could you repeat that?
Speaker 4
Just same store, new accounts, the disty accounts or the rep ads. I'm just trying get a sense of what is the definitive driver of the business right now?
Speaker 2
David, I don't know if I have that clearly in my head, but I'd say most likely equal contributions, maybe a third, a third and a third, right? We've got sequential productivity in the quarter and equal to the growth rates, the sequential growth rate because the rep adds were essentially flat quarter over quarter. The same store new store growths are roughly fifty-fifty. So I think it's across the board in its entirety. KP Rhythm is a contributing it's contributing in awareness of the brand, whether or not we're actually seeing prescribing patterns for patients that are previously diagnosed with Afib now being monitored for burden.
I don't know if we can collect that data yet. It's probably a little bit early. But certainly the physician population, the folks that I speak to and we hear from our commercial teams are, well aware and the benefits of true AF burden by Zio are understood increasingly understood by the medical community. Still got a long ways to go, but very important.
Speaker 4
Thanks, Kevin. Let me stick with this financial trend, and then I have a quick follow-up strategically for Kevin. But your guidance for the year basically implies revenue per rep based on your rep guidance or my implied rep guidance. Revenue per rep will grow for the first time here in the first quarter. Is that how you see the fourth quarter from a rev rep perspective?
And then for next year, should we be thinking about the type of rep additions in 2019 that are similar to 2018 or a bigger or smaller number? And then one more quick one for Kevin.
Speaker 3
Let me start with the second question first. I'm not quite sure I understand the first. We haven't obviously provided guidance yet as it relates to rep additions in 2019. We have in the past stated at scale that we would be adding at scale somewhere between one hundred and thirty and one hundred and fifty. But I think at this point, we see no reason why we would not want to add incremental reps much like we have this year.
So again, speculative at this point, but in that 25 to 30 range is probably what we are contemplating. But we'll be able to provide better guidance obviously with Q4 earnings. What was the first question David? I'm not quite sure I understood.
Speaker 4
Yes. Sorry, Matt. Just I'm inferring from your commentary that you're going to be adding very few reps in the third and the fourth quarter. So you actually had revenue per rep growth that's been negative throughout the year because you've added so many reps. So the guidance sort of implies to me that for the first time all year revenue per rep growth will be in the positive territory in the fourth quarter.
And I just want to get your sense if that's how you see the fourth quarter playing out?
Speaker 3
Yes, that's exactly how we see it playing out, David. Sorry, I didn't understand the question at first. I think that when you look at the new reps and their ability to gain traction much earlier in the sales cycle than again when we gave guidance two point five years ago, As well as this we talk about this pull through within existing high potential targets. It allows us to get more confidence around these productivity levels that we're putting out. So there's no question that without a significant increase in reps in Q4, we'll see some significant uptick in that productivity level for Q4.
Speaker 4
Okay. And just Kevin, last one for me. Oops, sorry. Go ahead, sorry.
Speaker 5
I was going
Speaker 2
to say the headcount from Q2 to Q3 for sales was essentially the same. So we did see 7% sequential revenue growth and therefore roughly 7% sequential productivity growth per
Speaker 5
month. Correct.
Speaker 2
We're not expecting adding material numbers here in the fourth quarter. So whatever is built into the fourth quarter number here, I don't have that number off the top of my head, but that too was sequential growth. Would say that we've gotten good at doing waves of hiring. And as Matt said, too early to say what we'll do
Speaker 6
in 2019,
Speaker 2
but it could be a big number. I think we're increasingly confident about our ability to recruit on board and bring people up to speed quickly now that we've done this two or three times, Three times, It's becoming more mechanical for us. And it could very well be that we'll bring a lot of people on board in the beginning of the year.
Speaker 4
Okay. That's very helpful for next year. And just sorry, real quickly, Arifil, you indulge me. I'm getting a lot of questions, obviously, from clients on AT. And I wonder, Kevin, are investors thinking about this the right way?
There's a lot of focus on AT in terms of penetrating the MCOB market. But I wonder if the opportunity, frankly, for XT or more specifically extended Holter providing dramatically more value than primary Holter begins to sort of cannibalize or eat into the MCOB market. So are investors thinking about this the right way? Should they be more enthusiastic about AT going after the MCOB market or frankly XT's expanded capabilities being an attractive alternative to the MCOB market? Thanks so much.
Speaker 2
Well, the Holter market, David, in volume is several fold larger in size than is MCT. The MCT volume, I think we estimate to be about 400,000 procedures a year. And on the Holter side, and Holter and event combined is about $3,600,000 $3,700,000 So the whole displacement opportunity with Zio XT is to displace both Holter and Event. That's the bigger play for the company. What we're finding is that being a full line service provider offering a wider range of capabilities, even though it's a small market share small market, it's relatively important to customers to deal with one vendor.
And that's the attractiveness I think of AT, in that it allows us to be the full line provider on a common platform of wearable sensor, common analytical platform, common reporting platform, and it really improves the clinician and their staff's workflow and time and obviously produces great results from a patient decision making standpoint. So I would probably answer it with that way that XT displacing Holter and Event is a larger opportunity than as MCT, but AT rounds out the product offering in a very important way and that it allows us to be a single supplier and we're increasingly seeing ourselves in many accounts as that single supplier.
Speaker 4
Great. Thanks guys.
Speaker 7
You bet.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of Jason Mills from Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Speaker 5
Hi, thanks for taking the question. Kevin, I want to start with a more 20,000 foot question and specifically the concept of AF burden. In your mind, how important is that clinical endpoint to your business is the first part of that question. Secondly, how universally recognized do you think the clinical community who treat these not treat these patients, but see these patients and potentially our Zio customers, how universally recognized is AF burden? And if not so much, what can iRhythm do besides obviously marketing the KP RHYTHM study and others to raise the awareness of and stress the importance of AF burden across the country.
Just generally speaking AF burden is the question. Thanks.
Speaker 2
Thanks. Hi, Jason, it's Kevin. Yeah, 20,000 foot level, look, the prevalence of atrial fibrillation is high. And the importance of diagnosing it or the importance of it being diagnosed relative to being left untreated is incredibly important as well. So what's been happening over time is the clinical community's understanding of the significance of atrial fibrillation.
There wasn't so long ago that just a few minutes of atrial fibrillation was considered to be important, clinically significant in a way that people needed to be managed. But the reality is that anticoagulation therapy is not without risk. Anticoagulation therapy is not without cost. And atrial fibrillation burden now gives the clinical community a more definitive measure inclusive of all of the risk factors associated with age and diabetes and other types of comorbidities, whether or not the significance of your atrial fibrillation is important. And that study showed and demonstrated that a combined atrial fibrillation burden of greater than eleven percent confers a threefold increase in stroke risk in patients that are not taking anticoagulation therapy.
That's a very, very important marker for physicians who are trying to decide do they give anticoagulation therapy to their patients of all ages. That said, I don't think that a paper that was published in June is broadly known and disseminated to the medical community. It's just information doesn't flow that quickly, right? It's incumbent upon us, the medical societies and other organizations to continue to promote and make aware the importance here. I think it's an important differentiator in that only iRhythm has been proven to be able to measure true atrial fibrillation burden in a large population of patients in a major medical journal, if you will.
So I think it's a differentiating factor for us. It's addressing an important and prevalent condition. It's changing how physicians treat their patients in a meaningful, improving way. That said, it's still early days for us.
Speaker 5
That's helpful. And Kevin, I guess bringing it down a few thousand feet, maybe a 5,000 foot question. Specific to integrated networks, you mentioned it and talked a little bit about what's going on there and how important that part of the hospital network market is to iRhythm. Can you talk about now that AT is out there and launched to some degree, what is going on with integrated networks and what sort of growth potential still lies within that realm of the end market?
Speaker 2
Yes. Importance of integrated networks is the result of market consolidation trends, Jason. So right now, we estimate 80% to 85% of physician practices have been acquired or now leased to a large delivery system. We also know that shift in delivery systems has gone from volume to value, right? No longer are people allowed to or incented to drive increased volume as a way of remuneration.
They're measured more on the quality of the output. So all of these physician practices that are now part of large networks and their value their volume to value propositions have changed, creates an opportunity for us in these large organizations, these large delivery systems in The U. S, of which there are thousands of them. I would say we're underpenetrated in these accounts, right? We're talking about having double digit market share.
My guess is these large integrated delivery systems probably comprise 60% to 75% of total market. We're here in Northern California and there are four or five delivery systems in Northern California. There are probably 45 to 75 hospitals, but they're basically all part of one network. Kaiser, Dignity Health, Stanford Medical System, the UC system, etcetera. These are the organizations that we're selling to in our sales channel and trying to bring our value to help them both clinically and from an operational standpoint.
Net, I think we're underrepresented in that population.
Speaker 5
Underrepresented under penetrated overall and even more underrepresented in that population. Okay. And then lastly for me, perhaps one for Derek. Could you make sure that we have the dates in mind or timelines in mind as it relates to both end stops and further readout from that data set as well as any others you'd like to put on our radar screens? And also Matt one for you.
Would you raise your guidance for gross margins? I'm sorry if I missed it, but did you say anything about the long term targets that you've talked about in the past, whether those have changed at all or if you would like to reiterate those? Thanks guys and great quarter. Yes.
Speaker 3
Thanks Jason. This is Matt. I'll answer the second question and then Derek can answer your first. The answer is at this point, we holding to our long term guidance again for those who are not aware of the question is about what do we guide long term around gross margin and that at IPO and continued since then was 75% to 80%. Obviously, we are approaching the low end of that range in two short years, which we're very, very excited about.
And we can continue to see deep learning algorithms and machine learning algorithms as well as price mix to really help drive additional gross margin improvement in the foreseeable future. So obviously we're very excited there, but at the present time we're still holding to that 75% to 80% gross margin range. Derek, you want to take the other question?
Speaker 6
Sure. Thanks, Jason. So I think your other question was around end stops. And I will tell you that since we published end stops, we've really had the opportunity to spend some significant time with key stakeholders around the silent AF market, whether it be key opinion leaders, big pharma, payers. And I think our conversations there have gotten us even more excited about the opportunity.
You heard Kevin mention on his prepared remarks that we now think that that market is easily 10,000,000 or more patients. What we've also learned about that market through our discussions is that we do feel that in order to fully open up that market to us, we will need to demonstrate clinical outcomes. And the good news, as you know, is that we will be showing that from our MSToPS data. That data is a three year endpoint. So it should be coming out sometime in the 2020, maybe 2021 timeframe.
So that's the next endpoint of MSToPS that will be coming out. There are other studies that are also underway that should be coming out with additional clinical outcome data that we are encouraged around and think will also help to develop that market. So that's the kind of timeframe that we're looking at for the full development of the silent AF market.
Speaker 5
Thank you all. I'll get back in queue.
Speaker 4
Thanks, Jason.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of Robbie Marcus from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Speaker 7
Great and congrats on the quarter guys. Hey, Robbie. Matt, maybe I'll start. I know you're not giving formal 2019 guidance today. But as I look at Street numbers, Street's modeling around 35% growth for next year, down from the current 50 plus percent you're doing this year.
You have on one hand some strong sales rep productivity, some improvements in the payer mix. But at the other hand, there's just a lot of large numbers. So maybe as we sit here, are there any comments you could give on how you view current Street growth forecast for next year? And any plus or minuses you think we should be thinking about?
Speaker 3
Robbie. Again, that's really hard to answer without going into specifics around our expectations for growth next year. I guess if I could provide some optimism to the growth numbers, it would simply be around what we tried to accomplish on this call, which was discussion around significant improvement of sales rep productivity even out in front of additional sales rep hires as well as deeper penetration within these very large integrated systems that offer thousands of units versus the smaller mom and pops that may have been in our life cycle two to three years ago and a vital part of our growth at that point. So again, I think that we are cautiously optimistic, but we're going to withhold from any sort of specific commentary on revenue guidance until the Q4 call in some point in late February or late January, early February. Kevin, I don't know if you have any.
Speaker 2
Yes. Maybe to add to Matt's comment here, sales force productivity and contracting and things of that nature are sort of the end. The means here is that the demand for Zio that's proven, that is reimbursable, that meets the needs of clinicians and administrative staff and so forth is growing. And our share is small. I don't want to say that the demand is insatiable, but it's the demand is overwhelming from the standpoint of how much value Zio has created for customers and their continued adoption.
If you think about the metrics we've been describing here quarter after quarter, we're talking about 50% of our growth coming from same store sales, right? This is quarter after quarter after quarter. This is the demand of Zio penetrating inside of large organizations. And granted these large organizations are getting larger through acquisition themselves, but nonetheless, the demand for the product is not diminishing in any way. And our share is still relatively small, right?
It's low double digits. So I'm even more optimistic, and this is why I made the comment on the prepared remarks. I'm even more optimistic and more bullish about our future than I ever have. This is the eighth quarter of being a public company, and we're feeling really strong and really confident about where we are. That I think is and that's all due to the hundreds and hundreds of employees here at iRhythm.
But nonetheless, there's a lot of value to be created here, Robbie, for us and we're very confident about it.
Speaker 7
Very clear. Maybe just a quick follow-up. One of the things I hear from a lot of investors is yours around competition. So maybe you could give us, maybe your thoughts on when you go into accounts. Are you seeing any competitive devices there?
Are you ever losing competitive accounts when you go in? And if you help us understand what's the biggest roadblock that you see right now? Is it just feet on the street? Is it reluctant from hospitals to switch over from HolterStill reimbursement? Maybe give us just the latest thoughts on that.
Appreciate the questions.
Speaker 2
Robbie, we've talked about this in the past, and I don't think my view has changed much on this. And that is we're competing with what we call status quo. So the market for ambulatory cardiac monitoring service is essentially fully penetrated, right? Every hospital, every provider has some ambulatory monitoring solution in play. And every hospital and every provider faces the same issues day in and day out.
They have too much to do, they have too little time to do it, and they know that the tools are inefficient that they're working with. But yet they don't have a way to pivot from the old to the new. And that's what takes us the time is to go through a, I don't know, call it a discovery process with our customers to help them to understand how much better their operation could be, how much better their patient care could be if they were using Zio. And once we do that, I think they flip quite quickly. From a competitive standpoint, the competition is legacy technology.
As I said earlier, about 2,800,000 Holter monitors, one point three one point four million event monitors and less than 500,000 MCT products. That's how we think of the competition is legacy. I don't really think of it as a sales process with two companies standing toe to toe as much as I see it as the status quo of what's already penetrated. I'm sure companies in maybe the robotic surgical space might think of it that way as well that, hey, how do I convince surgeons to not use their hands but to use a machine? That's their competition.
For us, it's how do we get people to migrate from old to new.
Speaker 0
And your next question comes from the line of Glenn Novarro from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Speaker 8
Hi, good afternoon guys. Two questions. First, I just want to address 2018 revenue guidance. You had another really strong quarter put up $38,000,000 for 3Q and the implied guidance for 4Q is 38,000,000 to $40,000,000 So that's really not a big sequential step up after having a nice step up from 2Q to 3Q and then last year from 3Q to 4Q, you also had a nice step up. So is this just conservatism?
I just want to make sure I'm not missing anything. That's my first question.
Speaker 2
Don't think you're missing anything. Glenn, it's Kevin. I don't think you're missing anything there. Give guidance, everybody goes to the upper range automatically. So I think you have to think about the $40,000,000,000 number.
And I think you have to look in the total year, right? We're looking at 52% growth year over year. And we've increased our guidance sequentially here by 15 points throughout the year. So you can call it conservatism if you want. I think we're very confident in our numbers and we're very confident in our ability to meet or exceed them.
And I think most people tend to look at the high range, the low to high or the mid. They immediately go to the high number.
Speaker 8
Okay. Good. My follow-up is on the asymptomatic AF number you gave us of ten million patients. Previously you talked about that market being three million patients. So you've expanded the opportunity here on this call.
Help us understand how you've gone from three million potential patients to ten million? Thanks.
Speaker 6
Yes, that's a good question Glenn and this is Derek. So you know as I mentioned to Jason, you know following our publication of mSToPS really that's really put us in the limelight and we have kind of been in the center of discussions around the asymptomatic AF market with a variety of stakeholders, including some of the professional societies and KOLs as well as payers. And I think a couple of things that we've learned from that, right? One, there's a huge sort of groundswell of excitement and interest and expectation around this market that's developing around kind of all of the stakeholders. And secondly, as we really kind of dive into this market, we've had a chance to revisit our view of the size of the market.
And to get to that $10,000,000 number, very simply, if you simply look at the inclusion criteria of our mSToPS study that we published, right? And that inclusion criteria was any patient over the age of 75 or any patient younger than 75, age 65 or 55 with one or more risk factors including hypertension and diabetes, right? That in itself is a huge population. Age 75 in The US alone is twenty million people, right? So we can argue, you know, is it ten million?
Is it twenty million? Is it bigger than twenty million? But I think given kind of where our discussions have been in looking at the inclusion criteria of ours and other studies, we feel pretty confident that, know, it's at least $10,000,000 if not more.
Speaker 8
Okay. And then just Derek as a follow-up because I know mStopps is going to get at that $10,000,000 with the longer term data. Are there any other studies planned that will get done over the next couple of years or longer that gets to this study in a bigger way? Thanks.
Speaker 6
Yes, there are. Certainly studies that we're participating in include Screen AF which is another study that is an international study that's currently enrolling. It's being conducted by PHRI up in Canada as well as there's a German site. That study we expect to see kind of top line readout probably in the next year or so. And then there are some other studies that are being run by pharma companies and other companies that are looking at this sort of silent or asymptomatic AF population through other modalities including implanted pacemakers or ICDs that I think will also provide additional data points to help grow and develop this market.
So all of those studies kind of tend to read out over the next couple of years, next two, three years. So I think over the next two to three years, we really expect potentially the momentum to increase in this to develop into a real market.
Speaker 8
And I guess just for you, Kevin, this is what's getting you so excited about the outlook, just the size of the TAM continuing to grow? Thanks.
Speaker 2
Yes, exactly, Glenn. Nothing like a big denominator when you're thinking about needing to grow a business at high rates for a long period of time. Yes, it's a large market with big demand and a great service. We feel pretty good about it.
Speaker 8
Great. Congratulations on another great quarter, guys.
Speaker 5
Ben. Thanks, Ben.
Speaker 0
Next question comes from the line of Joanne Wuensch Please go ahead.
Speaker 9
Good afternoon, everybody. And may I add my congratulations on a great quarter to everybody else's. A couple of thoughts on this one. How do we think about AT becoming a material part of the business? Or do we just think of AT as being part of the package with XT?
Speaker 2
Shywena, are you asking whether or not we'll break it out? Or do you think you have
Speaker 9
that Yes. That's where I'm going with that one.
Speaker 10
What's that?
Speaker 9
Is where I'm going with that one.
Speaker 2
It's early days for us. So small numbers tend not to be very helpful in directional in giving direction to people, right? If we went from 1% to two and I said we grew 100%, what would that mean? So I think for us material is when this thing gets to be on the order of maybe 10% or 15% of our total business and we're not there yet. I think your earlier comment is an important one, which is the pull through factor.
And we've mentioned this a few times that when we become the sort of full line supplier in account, we see not only XT growth, but AT growth, but we also see increased XT growth. And that's helpful. So the complete package is as important as the individual increment.
Speaker 0
Is there a way to quantify what percentage of
Speaker 9
the hospitals are buying complete package at this stage?
Speaker 2
Well, I would say back to my earlier comment that Ravi was asking about, the market is fully penetrated. So most accounts have Holter monitors, event monitors and to some degree some usage of MCT. They may have it in different mix configurations, 90% Holter and 10% MCT, could be forty-forty-ten, it could be ninety-ten-zero. It really depends upon the physician preference. The important thing here is that Zio now has the ability to replace everything that's there.
And that's what we're increasingly doing. Prior to AT, we were taking share, if you will, from the legacy markets of Holter and Event and to some extent MCT, where the patients were getting prescribed MCT for the purposes of longer duration, but not necessarily the life critical nature of the arrhythmias that they may have underlying.
Speaker 9
And then my last question, all of this great growth is coming from The United States. I would assume at some stage you would enter the international market. What are your thoughts on that? Thank you.
Speaker 2
Joanne, we've had an initiative in The UK going on for a couple of years now. I think this might be the third year, second or third year. The issue in international markets is that they are public health systems with single payers. So the work that gets done on market access is very different from what we do in The U. S.
Where we have 15,000 to 2,000 different health plans that we can negotiate with and you can have contracts with 20% of them and get a business started. In The United Kingdom or in Germany or France or these other places, you essentially have no business until you get that marketing access complete. And we have investments ongoing to help understand how to navigate through those systems and secure payments. We're making very good progress in The UK. We don't break out those dollars, but I think we've got a good read on how to do that.
Our remuneration rates are strong and our growth rates are strong, but we still have a long way to go there. And there's a sequence of countries that we're going after. We've not gotten into a whole lot of details with people, but the applicability of Zio is global. There's nothing specific about The U. S.
About the Zio service here.
Speaker 9
Thank you.
Speaker 2
You bet.
Speaker 0
Your next question comes from the line of Suraj Kalia from Northland Securities. Please go ahead.
Speaker 10
Good afternoon, everyone. Kevin, two questions. First, did you all give the contribution from IDNs in the quarter? I'd love to get that reconciled with the SG and A expense. And the second thing, the KP RHYTHM study, Kevin, forgive me if my memory fails me here.
I thought this was a retrospective study and this was primarily for patients who were not taking Coumadin or warfarin. I'm curious if there was any inclusion for any of the new novel oral anticoagulants. And part of the reason, as we all know in Afib, the biggest thing is lack of compliance from Coumadin. Coumadin usage in Afib has gone down. So I was hoping if you could thread the needle for me and help me understand how the KP RHYTHM study fits into your marketing message given all these factors?
Any color would be great. Thank you for taking my questions.
Speaker 2
Sure. I'll have you repeat the first question in a minute, but while the second one is top of mind. So the KP RHYTHM study was a retrospective study of about 3,000 patients, I think, that had Zio, were diagnosed with atrial fibrillation, who were not on anticoagulation therapy, so they were at risk. So the question of warfarin or novel anticoagulation therapy really was not the primary question here. That said, my understanding is Kaiser has a very strong warfarin clinic with high compliance and so on and so forth.
But that's a separate issue from here. These were patients who are at risk of having Afib and not on anticoagulation therapy. And therefore with the detection of atrial fibrillation was present and the burden is what we measured. So we wanted to figure out what percent of patients had strokes that were off anticoagulation therapy that had AF and what was the burden. And it turned out that if you had a burden measurement of greater than eleven percent, which I think was about twenty two thousand minutes or something of AF burden over fourteen days, you're at an increased risk of stroke by a factor of three.
Hopefully that hopefully I said that right. Think I did and hopefully that helps. What was your question Suraj on the IDN? Didn't I'm sorry, I didn't grab that.
Speaker 10
I was just curious and maybe I missed it. If you mentioned larger IDNs are becoming a target for you guys. And I wasn't sure if you had mentioned any contribution from the large IDNs specifically in the quarter.
Speaker 2
From a revenue perspective, no, we don't split out revenue by customer segment, location, geography or anything like that, no. And then it's not just this year, the IDNs have been our large networks have been a focus of ours for the last two point five years or so.
Speaker 0
I'm showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the conference back to Mr. Kevin King.
Speaker 2
Great. Thank you, operator. Thanks, everyone, for joining our third quarter twenty eighteen conference call. We look forward to updating you at the end of the year, both on the fourth quarter and our outlook for 2013. Wish you all a great holiday season coming forward here.
Take care.
Speaker 0
Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's conference. Thank you for your participation, and have a wonderful day. You may all disconnect.