Labcorp Holdings - Earnings Call - Q1 2013
April 19, 2013
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Okay, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the first quarter 2013 Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings earnings conference call. My name is Janeita, and I will be your operator for today. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. If at any time you require operator assistance, please press star followed by zero, and we will be happy to assist you. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded for replay purposes. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. David King, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Please proceed.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Thank you. Good morning and welcome to Labcorp's first quarter 2013 conference call. Joining me today from Labcorp are Brad Hayes, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Ed Dodson, Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer, and Steve Anderson, Vice President, Investor Relations. This morning, we will discuss our first quarter 2013 financial results, reaffirm our 2013 guidance, highlight our progress on our five-pillar strategy, and provide answers to several frequently asked questions. I'd now like to turn the call over to Steve Anderson, who has a few comments before we begin. Before we get started, I would like to point out that there will be a replay of this conference call available via the telephone and internet. Please refer to today's press release for replay information. This morning, the company filed a Form 8-K that included additional information on our business and operations.
This information is also available on our website. Analysts and investors are directed to this 8-K and our website to review this supplemental information. Additionally, we refer you to today's press release, which is available on our website for a reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures discussed during today's call to GAAP. These non-GAAP measures include Adjusted EPS, Adjusted EPS excluding amortization, free cash flow, and adjusted operating income. I would also like to point out that we are making forward-looking statements during this conference call. These forward-looking statements include, among others, statements about our expected financial results, the implementation of our business strategy, and the ongoing benefits from acquisitions. These statements are based upon current expectations and are subject to change based upon various factors that could affect the company's financial results. Some of these factors are set forth in detail in our 2012 10-K and subsequent filings.
The company has no obligation to provide any updates to these forward-looking statements, even if our expectations change. Now, Brad Hayes will review our financial results.
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Thank you, Steve. On today's call, I will review four key measures of our financial performance: cash flow, revenue growth, margin, and liquidity. I'll also reaffirm our 2013 guidance. First, cash flow. Our cash flow remains strong. Free cash flow for the trailing 12 months ended March 31, 2013, was $661.2 million. DSO at the end of March was 50 days, an increase of two days year over year. During the quarter, our bad debt remained 4.3%. Second, revenue growth. Revenue increased 1.2% year over year in the first quarter. On a per-day basis, revenue increased 2.9% year over year. During the quarter, total company volume increased 1.1%, or 2.7% on a per-day basis. We estimate that inclement weather reduced volume growth by approximately 50 basis points during the quarter and that excluding weather, organic volume was flat year over year.
Revenue per requisition increased 20 basis points year over year. Third, margin. For the first quarter, our adjusted operating income margin was 18.7% compared to 19.9% in the first quarter of 2012. The year-over-year margin decline was primarily due to the impact from weather, Medicare payment reductions, and the number of days in the quarter. Fourth, liquidity. We remain well-capitalized. At the end of March, we had cash of $185.8 million and $30 million of borrowings outstanding under our $1 billion credit facility. During the first quarter, we repurchased $113.9 million of stock, representing 1.3 million shares. At the end of March, $954.1 million of repurchase authorization remained under our share repurchase program. This morning, we reaffirmed our 2013 financial guidance. We expect revenue growth in the range of approximately 2-3%.
Adjusted EPS, excluding amortization, of $6.85-$7.15, which includes a negative impact of approximately $0.35 due to Medicare payment reductions and which excludes the impact of revenue share of any share repurchase activity after March 31st, 2013, operating cash flow of approximately $870 million-$900 million in capital expenditures of approximately $200 million-$220 million. Our capital expenditure guidance is higher than historical levels due to near term investments in facility consolidation and replacement of a major testing platform. I'll now turn the call over to Dave.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Thank you, Brad. We are pleased with our performance given the healthcare services utilization environment. During the first quarter of 2013, we grew revenue approximately 3% on a per-day basis, and we grew volume 2.7% on a per-day basis. We generated strong operating cash flow of $198.2 million. We generated free cash flow of $156.5 million, which we invested in the business and returned to shareholders with the repurchase of $114 million of our stock, representing 1.3 million shares. We continue to keep a tight lid on expenses. We continue to make progress on each aspect of our five-pillar strategy. The first pillar of our strategy is that we deploy capital to investments that enhance our business and return capital to shareholders. The integration of MedTox continues to go well and has exceeded our expectations.
This acquisition provides us with an excellent opportunity to diversify our payer and testing mix, and we remain excited about the opportunity to grow MedTox's specialized toxicology testing. Last quarter, we announced a target leverage ratio of 2.5 times debt to EBITDA, which, all other things being equal, we intend to achieve over time. We expect to continue to deploy our capital toward acquisitions and share repurchase. Over the last several years, we have deployed our free cash flow almost evenly between acquisitions and share repurchase. Going forward, we would expect to deploy our free cash flow similarly, and in the absence of sizable acquisition opportunities, we anticipate deploying our additional leverage toward share repurchase. The second pillar of our strategy is to enhance our IT capabilities to improve the physician and patient experience.
Our Beacon Patient Portal is now available to all patients in right-to-know states, and we continue to see accelerated growth in patient registrations, adding more than 1,000 new registrations per day. The patient portal is a valuable tool that allows patients to better manage their healthcare, and we will continue to add valuable content and information to the patient portal over time. Our electronic medical record connectivity continues to expand, and we are on pace to exceed last year's record number of new client EMR interfaces. We remain committed to our open platform strategy, allowing our customers to connect seamlessly to Labcorp directly or via the EMR of their choice. We continue to pilot a number of new population health analytics modules that provide healthcare business intelligence tools to hospitals, physician practices, and ACOs.
These tools assist customers in their compliance and reporting requirements with respect to efficient management of their productivity, quality, and patient outcome metrics. These industry-leading data-driven services position Labcorp as a trusted partner to healthcare stakeholders, providing the knowledge to optimize decision-making, improve health outcomes, and reduce treatment costs. Looking ahead, we will continue to add new analytic offerings at the point of lab order and during result delivery to enhance the physician experience and improve patient care. The third pillar of our strategy is to continue to improve efficiency to offer the most compelling value in laboratory services. During the first quarter, we continued the ramp-up of our Propel robotic technology in our primary Burlington lab. This pilot program is nearing completion, and our initial results have exceeded expectations from a throughput and quality perspective.
We expect this technology to replace much of the manual splitting and sorting process throughout our major laboratories, enhancing efficiency, turnaround time, and quality. We are finalizing our implementation plans for the balance of 2013, and we look forward to providing updates on this initiative over the next several quarters. We are constantly monitoring and evaluating our supply chain operations, and we are focused on laboratory consolidation initiatives. We will begin these projects during the second half of 2013, and we anticipate deriving ongoing savings from consolidation activity. We will also roll out a new chemistry platform later this year. This platform has enhanced software capabilities that will increase throughput capacity and lower supply costs in our chemistry testing. We expect the full implementation to take 18 months. Finally, we continue to review and rationalize all components of our cost structure.
The fourth pillar of our strategy is to continue scientific innovation at reasonable and appropriate pricing. We introduce new tests and collaborate with leading companies and academic institutions to provide our physicians and patients with the most scientifically advanced testing in our industry. Last May, we announced our collaborative relationship with Ariosa to offer the Harmony test. Harmony is an innovative non-invasive test for detection of common fetal trisomies that is based on the sequencing and bioinformatics analysis of cell-free DNA in maternal blood. The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics recently noted that this innovative technology allows patients the option of non-invasive fetal aneuploidy screening and that the analysis of cell-free fetal DNA in maternal circulation for fetal aneuploidy screening is likely the first of major steps for the eventual application of whole fetal genome, whole fetal exome sequencing.
We share this view and are pleased with our Harmony volumes, which indicate strong support from this test among physicians. Further, we are encouraged by the favorable coverage policies issued on Harmony by our key managed care partners. Monogram Biosciences, a Labcorp specialty testing company, recently began offering the GeneAssure Prime assay, the first assay to provide a comprehensive assessment of drug resistance for the most widely used antiretroviral drug classes. GeneAssure Prime specifically complies with the DHHS treatment guidelines issued last month that strongly recommend the inclusion of integrase inhibitor resistance testing in cases of treatment failure and in cases of newly identified infections where there is concern that an integrase inhibitor resistance strain may have been transmitted. During the first quarter, we also announced our expanded services for inflammatory bowel disease.
Gastrointestinal tract disorders are often presented with nonspecific symptoms and are difficult to diagnose, especially in primary care settings. We launched an expanded IBD testing profile that helps to identify IBD patients and differentiate between ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. These enhancements to Labcorp's IBD test menu are adjuncts to our broader offering of digestive disease testing that includes cost-efficient cascade testing to help physicians diagnose irritable bowel syndrome and non-celiac gluten sensitivity. The fifth pillar of our strategy is to integrate our offerings into emerging healthcare delivery models. As we have said previously, healthcare delivery systems are changing. We continue to see the industry evolve toward accountable care organizations, integrated delivery networks, patient-centered medical homes, and mega-physician practices. Managed care companies continue to promote organized ACOs and by-physician practices.
Payers and providers will increasingly move to a risk-driven model focused on and paying for cost-effective care that delivers the best possible outcomes. Labcorp is well-positioned to support this transformation in healthcare. Our strategy to become a knowledge partner has spurred the development of enhanced services and capabilities, including Beacon LBS, Litholink clinical decision support, and enhanced IT tools. We are now combining existing Beacon LBS point-of-order decision support, Litholink point-of-results decision support, and comprehensive clinical analytics to provide physicians with knowledge-based patient management tools and a comprehensive view of the patient's care and clinical history. We will use all of these capabilities to provide critical insights to support diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for the patient's clinical condition. Our highly successful kidney stone, bone assessment, cardiovascular risk assessment, and chronic kidney disease management programs are examples of many Labcorp knowledge offerings that improve the delivery outcomes and cost of healthcare.
The critical components of success in the post-reform era will be quality, cost, and a role in improving patient outcomes. Labcorp is uniquely positioned to meet these needs in the months and years to come. In summary, we are pleased with our performance and the progress we achieved on our five-pillar strategy this quarter. Now, Steve Anderson will review anticipated questions and our specific answers to those questions.
Steve Anderson (VP of Investor Relations)
Thank you, Dave. Can you describe the impact of Medicare payment cuts in 2013? The Affordable Care Act baseline for the 2013 update to the clinical lab fee schedule was negative 0.95%, and the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act rebaselined the fee schedule an additional 2% lower. These fee schedule reductions became effective on January 1, 2013.
Due to mandatory sequestration, we received an additional 2% reduction to the clinical lab fee schedule and a separate 2% reduction to the physician fee schedule effective April 1, 2013. We are also experiencing a variety of other government payment reductions, including the reduction to CPT code 88305 and the full-year impact of the TC Grandfather Clause. Summed together, we continue to estimate that these payment reductions will lower our 2013 EPS by approximately $0.35. Why are capital expenditures expected to be so high in 2013? We typically spend approximately 3% of revenue on capital expenditures. As Brad previously mentioned, our capital expenditures increase in 2013 is driven by near-term investments in facility consolidation and replacement of a major testing platform. Can you update us on the mix of your business coming from esoteric testing?
For the year, approximately 40% of our revenues were in the genomic, esoteric, and anatomic pathology categories. As we reiterated last quarter, our goal is to increase our esoteric test mix to approximately 45% of our revenue within the next three to five years. Now, I'd like to turn the call back over to Dave.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Thank you, Steve, and thank you very much for listening. We are now ready to take your questions.
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen, if you have a question, please press star followed by one on your phone. If your question has been answered or you would like to withdraw your question, press star followed by two. Please press star one to begin. Your first question comes from the line of Robert Willoughby with Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Please proceed.
Robert Willoughby (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Thanks, Dave or Brad.
It looked like the accounts receivable did rise a bit more than expected on a slightly lower revenue base. Any dynamic going on there?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Hey, Rob, this is Brad. Just some timing of payments in one of our international businesses specifically, and I think the typical in the first quarter, more going to patients in the form of copays and deductibles slowed things down a little bit.
Robert Willoughby (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Just the pace of M&A, Dave, it slowed down here a bit of late. Is this just kind of the eye before the storm, or what do you anticipate over the remainder of the year from a transaction standpoint?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Rob, I think the pace continues to be about the same in terms of opportunities that are available. We've looked at quite a few things, a number of them.
We don't like the valuations, and so we're biding our time and waiting for things to come along where we think the valuations are more reasonable for us. There's still a lot of opportunities in M&A, and we continue to be focused on doing the right deals that will be accretive, that will give us the target return on invested capital, and that will contribute to long-term growth. I would say we think of MedTox as a terrific example of doing all those things: accretive, good ROIC, long-term growth, and expanding our capabilities and further diversification of our payer mix. Anecdotally on the MedTox, Dave, what's left to accomplish there from a consolidation standpoint? There's still some integration—sorry—there's still some integration and standardization activities, particularly around platforms, reagents, and supplies. The bulk of the work has been done.
It's been a great team effort between the Labcorp team and the old MedTox team, and we're very pleased with the way that business has not only maintained the pace at which we acquired it but has grown.
Robert Willoughby (Managing Director and Equity Research Analyst)
That's great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Tom Galucci with Lazard Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Tom Gallucci (Managing Director)
Good morning. Thank you very much, guys. I guess just first on the volumes, still good compared to some, but maybe a little bit lower than what you saw in the second half of last year from an organic standpoint. Do you have any thoughts about what we're seeing in terms of overall industry trend?
Is there any sense that maybe the higher copays and deductibles that you mentioned a second ago, Brad, are they getting that much higher this year versus last year that maybe we're seeing a skewing of the seasonality a little bit in terms of when people are going to use healthcare? Or any thoughts you have about that would be interesting.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Tom it's Dave, good morning. I think you've identified a couple of the major factors here. If you look sequentially at organic volume growth last year, other than the first quarter, which was a little bit of an oddity because of the year-over-year comp and the lack of weather, basically it was 50 basis points in the third quarter, 70 basis points in the fourth quarter, and now we're back to essentially flat. I'd attribute it to a couple of things. One, there is more patient responsibility.
There's more going toward patient. We actually saw a little uptick in uninsured volume in the first quarter as well. The last thing I would say is the overall utilization environment, just what I'm seeing in terms of others reporting, whether it's hospitals, other healthcare services companies, does seem to have ticked down a little bit in the first quarter. That's what I attribute probably the bulk of the difference between the fourth quarter organic growth and the first quarter organic growth. We're doing the same things. I think we're executing well on our strategic priorities. Again, I think this is a very solid result in terms of what we see in the environment around us.
Tom Gallucci (Managing Director)
Can you just remind us, what is the sort of percent of your business that's uninsured at this point?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Tom, I think it's about 7% of our revenue, plus or minus, in that range.
Tom Gallucci (Managing Director)
That's right. 7%. Okay. And then, Dave, I think in your prepared remarks, you mentioned some of the analytics tools that you're working with out there with some of the customers. Is this something that you get paid for separately, and if so, how? Or is it something more that's an additive benefit of doing business with you, and it's ultimately more of a volume driver?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
At this point, because we're in pilots with a couple of sizable IPAs and physician groups, we are not getting paid separately for the analytics tools. What we are doing is, in my view, demonstrating our ability to integrate clinical data with lab data and then provide analytics to physicians that will support improved outcomes and better care.
I think over time, the development of the payment model around the analytics and the integration of clinical data will occur, and it remains to be seen how we will be compensated for that. I think it's a very important value-added service. It's a key component of our strategy, and I'm very pleased with where we are on it today, given how hard we've been working on it for the last year and a half.
Tom Gallucci (Managing Director)
Okay. Thanks a lot.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Gary Liberman with Wells Fargo. Please proceed.
Gary Liberman (Private Wealth Advisor)
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I guess with regards to pricing, can you talk about what you're seeing on that front? One of your competitors talked about continued pressure and expecting pressure to continue through at least the next year. Can you give your perspective on that, please?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Yeah, Gary, this is Brad.
When we look at our price and what makes it up, there are a lot of variables. One is obviously the contractual agreements with commercial payers. We have talked about the government payment reductions. We get some changes also related to our payer mix, our test mix, the number of tests per requisition, and even some of our international businesses. We look at all that and how it ends up for the quarter, and we are pleased with our price. We think it demonstrates that we have exercised some pricing discipline. Yes, to your point, pricing is always under pressure, but we are pleased with our result and cannot really speak to others.
Gary Liberman (Private Wealth Advisor)
Okay.
As you head into 2014 with reform, can you give us your thoughts maybe around any volume benefit you would expect to get or other changes that you might expect in the business because of reform?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Gary, it's Dave. Good morning. I think reform will be a net positive. I will say there are many, many moving pieces in the calculation of how we will benefit. You have to make some assumptions about how many people will actually be insured or be added to Medicaid. You have to make some assumptions about the exchanges. You have to make assumptions about Medicaid expansion. You have to make assumptions about state versus federal exchanges. You have to make some assumptions about coverage. You have to make some assumptions about pricing. You have to make some assumptions about the number of encounters per patient per year.
You have to make some assumptions about how much bad debt reduction there will be the consequence of more people being covered with insurance. When you put all of those assumptions together, as best as we can see it now, we expect that there will be a volume benefit for us, and we expect that there'll be a benefit from bad debt reduction at the end of the day. All in all, we view reform as under, I think, some fairly conservative assumptions. We view reform as a net positive. Obviously, the more people who get insured, the more utilization, particularly around preventive care from the newly insured, the more the benefit to the lab industry.
Gary Liberman (Private Wealth Advisor)
Okay. Any thoughts on trying to quantify that even very broadly in terms of the benefit?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I think there are just too many moving pieces to try to quantify it at this point.
Gary Liberman (Private Wealth Advisor)
Okay. Great. Thanks a lot, guys.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Ricky Goldwasser with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed.
Ricky Goldwasser (Senior Adviser)
Good morning, and thank you for taking my call. First question is just a clarification on the same store growth number. I mean, obviously, Dave talked about flat volumes, but can you also give us the context of volumes in light of the day count? Because I think the organic number that you are giving us does not include the benefit from today's in the quarter. Is that correct?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
No, that's incorrect, Ricky. This is Brad. We have taken the day into account when talking about our organic volume experience.
Ricky Goldwasser (Senior Adviser)
Okay. So can you just help me bridge that?
Because you're starting, if you can help us with the reporting number and what acquisitions added and were there additional acquisitions aside from MedTox in that number?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Right. So we reported the 1.1. The day is 1.6 because we reported the per-day volume also of 2.7. Add back weather, 0.5, you get to 3.2. We are saying organic was flat, which means that acquisitions were the delta. MedTox is the majority of that experience.
Ricky Goldwasser (Senior Adviser)
Okay. It is a majority of the benefit for the volume, and is it also, does it carry a lower price per acquisition? Is it a headwind to price? Okay.
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
That's exactly right.
Ricky Goldwasser (Senior Adviser)
Thank you. Then, Dave, can you just give us some color on what type of conversations you're having in Washington these days?
When do you expect to see an updated lab fee schedule and timing of any other data points that you're waiting for from Washington or CMS?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
We're having a lot of conversations in Washington these days on a number of fronts because, as you know, there are a number of fairly pressing issues. One is the suggestion in the president's budget that there be further fee schedule reductions, I believe, beginning in 2015 to our fee schedule. The pointing out to the legislative and executive branch the amount by which our fee schedule has already been reduced in the last five years and the inequity of and will be reduced in the next couple of years and the inequity of continuing to make reductions.
Second, particularly conversations with CMS about the molecular coding issues that are significantly affecting some of the clinical laboratory industry, particularly those that are innovating around the area of molecular diagnostics. Then the general discussion of the great value proposition that the laboratory industry brings and the importance of maintaining appropriate levels of payment so that not only the large players but also those who serve the niches and the smaller laboratories will continue to provide beneficiary access and critical services for Medicare and Medicaid patients. I do not think we are expecting any major updates to the fee schedule, but we continue to be very, very much engaged at both the legislative and the executive level in discussing all of these important issues for our industry and for patients and for healthcare services in general.
Ricky Goldwasser (Senior Adviser)
From time to time, we are getting asked about the lab copay.
Is that something that still comes up in your conversations, or do you think that that's more on the back burner now?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
The general topic of a copay comes up more in discussions of the idea of a unified Part A and Part B copay than it does specifically with the lab copay. I would say that's still very much a topic under discussion. Obviously, we continue to believe that a lab copay is not a saving to the government. It's a shift in cost from the government to Medicare beneficiaries, and that it will have the perverse effect of actually reducing people getting the services they need, and presenting to physicians and emergency rooms much more acutely and therefore costing the system money at the end of the day. We have those discussions.
I wouldn't say this is a front burner issue, but there is still discussion of it in Washington and particularly among the policy people.
Ricky Goldwasser (Senior Adviser)
Okay. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Lisa Gill with JP Morgan. Please proceed.
Lisa Gill (Managing Director)
Great. Thanks. Dave, you talked earlier about some improved efficiencies around lab consolidation activities, etc. Is there a way for you or Brad to quantify what those potential cost savings could be?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Lisa, it's Dave. I think it's early for us to quantify that. So we will at an appropriate time, but now is not the appropriate time.
Lisa Gill (Managing Director)
Do you expect that it would be a material number, or do you just think that this will be something that will offset inflationary kinds of costs?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I'm hesitant to put a number on it for the reasons I just stated.
I will repeat what I think I said on our last call, which is, without a lot of fanfare at Labcorp, we're consistently working on the cost structure. We're consistently taking out enough costs to make sure that we deliver great value to our shareholders, and we're going to continue to do that.
Lisa Gill (Managing Director)
Okay. Great. I heard your comments around ACA, but again, earlier in your prepared comments, you talked about the emerging healthcare models. Can you maybe just give us an idea of how you're working with IDNs and accountable care organizations? I mean, we clearly have seen this trend where hospitals are taking more and more volume in-house as they're buying physician practices, etc.
What are some of the things that you're doing to combat that and to work more closely with both IDNs, physician practices, accountable care organizations, whatever you want to call the new models?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I think the fundamental thing is to expand the range of services that we provide from just pure clinical laboratory services, which make no mistake are critical to patient care. To expand those services beyond just providing a test result to helping the physician select the proper tests, interpret the test results, combine it with the clinical data available on the patient, and help guide the physician to better outcomes. Those are really primary activities.
In terms of hospitals, in my view, the pressure on costs, the need for cost reduction, the changes in payment structure will lead hospitals ultimately to look for collaborative ways to work with people who can provide them high-quality services at a lower cost than they can provide it themselves. If you look at things that hospitals have outsourced and are outsourcing, I think this will continue to be the trend. You've seen anesthesiology, radiology, emergency room being outsourced, and I think that's going to continue. We're really focused on developing collaborative business relationships with hospitals as opposed to just buying customer lists from them. That's where we're going to continue to stay focused as we develop our capabilities inside this new care model.
Lisa Gill (Managing Director)
Just based on your comments around this new care model, do you think you get paid for not just the volume, but it sounded to me like you're almost creating a lab benefit management type company. Is that the right way to think about it? Can you get paid in addition to just doing the lab itself for all of these other services you just mentioned?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I think we can get paid for the reasons that I mentioned in answer to Gary's question. I don't think we get paid on day one. I think we have to prove that our capabilities work, but I think we get paid over time.
I would describe it not so much as a lab benefit management system as I would as a care management system focused around making sure that the patient's getting the right laboratory tests combined with the right other diagnostic and clinical interventions at the right time. Those are the capabilities that we're developing.
Lisa Gill (Managing Director)
Okay. Great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Amanda Murphy with William Blair. Please proceed.
Amanda Murphy (Senior Analyst)
Hi. Good morning. I had a few follow-ups here. I guess first to Tom's earlier question on underlying volume growth. Historically, we've talked about 2-3% volume growth, and now we're seeing it more like 0-1%.
I guess I'm just curious, is there any evidence at this point that we haven't just seen a fundamental reset there just given higher deductible plans, or do you still expect the volume growth ultimately, putting ACA aside for a minute, but the underlying volume growth to come back to sort of pre-recession levels?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Amanda it's Dave, obviously, the environment has been persistently a low-growth environment, but there are a lot of reasons for that, many of which we've talked about and you've talked about on the call already. Higher patient copays and deductibles, hospitals acquiring physician practices, generally muted utilization, even weather. All these things have an impact. I'm just not prepared to say that we're not going to return to the kind of typical 2-3% volume growth that we've seen historically.
It's certainly taken longer than I thought it would, but I still feel very optimistic over time that we are going to see organic volume growth in our business because all of the tailwinds, the aging population, the development of new and more improved laboratory testing, the opportunity for collaboration with hospitals to move testing to more efficient points of care. I just think over time, yes, we're going to see that historical growth rate that we saw in the past.
Amanda Murphy (Senior Analyst)
Okay. That's helpful. You guys have talked about leverage and a desire to increase leverage over time. Is there any update on timing there and what you ultimately might do with those funds?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I think we spoke to that in the prepared remarks that we do intend to increase the leverage to two and a half times over time and that we would expect absent sizable acquisition opportunities that the bulk of those additional funds would be directed towards share repurchase. Obviously, how and when we get there will be determined by a large number of factors, and we can't give you specifics on what the timing will be or how it will play out over time.
Amanda Murphy (Senior Analyst)
Okay. I guess last one on M&A, and you've talked a lot about that already as well, but I'm curious, what type of assets are you seeing coming to market? Has it changed at all, or is it still consistent?
In terms of your focus on specific targets, are you sort of still sticking to the core lab space, or are you considering anything moving outside of your core business?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I would say in terms of what's coming to market, as you might expect, there's been an increase in the number of pathology labs, specialty pathology labs that have come to market. There's probably an increase in the number of labs that are serving nursing homes and long-term care. I attribute these mostly to reimbursement activities by the government. There continue to be a sizable number of opportunities that we think of as kind of being right in the fairway for us, which are core clinical business, specialized esoteric business. In terms of moving outside the core laboratory business, anything that we do is going to be based on our core laboratory capabilities.
I don't see us at this point making any significant moves away from what we've always done, which is be a superior provider of high-quality, low-cost lab services. There are plenty of acquisitions in and around the lab space that are attractive to us, and those are the things that we're going to be focused on.
Amanda Murphy (Senior Analyst)
Okay. Thanks very much.
Your next question comes from the line of Kevin Ellich with Piper Jaffray. Please proceed.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Just a few things. Starting off with the issues that hit margins this quarter, I was wondering, Brad, maybe could you quantify the impacts of the weather and payment reductions in the fewer days in the quarter?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Yeah, Kevin. I'm not going to break them out each one individually, but I'll give them to you in order of impact.
First, the payment reduction was the biggest impact by far to that year-over-year comparison, followed by an equal impact of the two items of day and weather. That's kind of how we look at it. When we think about those three things, which we can quantify for ourselves, that is the primary difference between margins in the first quarter of this year compared to last year.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Understood. With the day, obviously, that has to do with leap year from last year, but was timing of holiday and the weightings of the days in the week, was that lower this quarter versus last year as well?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
We take all that into account when we compute our number of days. Any holiday impact would have been in our computation of the days.
We see about a day less this quarter compared to the first quarter of last year.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. Okay. SG&A was up a little bit as a percent of revenue this quarter. Obviously, you guys have done a great job of keeping a tight lid on expenses. Just wondering if there was anything unusual this quarter, and should we expect similar types of cost savings over the next few quarters and long term?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Yes. If I look at the SG&A as a percent of sales, Kevin, it's sequentially in line the first quarter compared to quarters two through four last year. It also was impacted by payment reductions, weather, and a day.
If I look in terms of absolute dollars on a year-over-year basis between Q1 last year and this year, MedTox is obviously an impact item there in terms of absolute dollars. In terms of going forward, tying back to Dave's comments of kind of what we do on an ongoing basis, we continue to look for ways to reduce our costs by doing things better. SG&A is definitely a focal point of a number of those activities.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. Okay. Dave, just kind of flipping over, in the wake of the Supreme Court's oral arguments for Myriad and BRCA, is there any change to your thoughts on commercialization plans?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Kevin, no, not at the moment. I think obviously everyone is very interested in what the outcome of that case is going to be.
When the decision is rendered, we'll make the decision about how we proceed in terms of new opportunities for commercialization of tests. Or there may not be opportunities. Again, it really is dependent on what the court tells us.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. Understood. Lastly, I was wondering, could you provide any more color on the Bristol-Myers Clinical Trials testing announcement that came out? Is that meaningful, and are there other big opportunities you guys are looking at with any of the other major pharma companies?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Sure. The Clinical Trials Central lab business has been a very successful business for us over the last seven years, and through a combination of acquisitions and organic growth, has basically tripled in size, which we're very pleased about.
I think being selected as a preferred partner by Bristol-Myers is a validation that the many things that we've done to grow the business, to create the bioanalytical capabilities, to expand internationally with our labs now in China, Singapore, and Japan, we are a real contender in the central lab business. We will continue to pursue these opportunities because they're great from a pricing perspective, and they allow us to do a lot of development work of innovative testing and companion diagnostics in collaboration with our pharma partners.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Got it. Okay. Thanks.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Isaac Rowe with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed.
Isaac Rowe (Analyst)
Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. First, I wanted to do with market share trends.
Just wondering if you would mind comparing and contrasting what you're seeing from your larger lab competitors versus the in-source market as we get closer to ACA implementation. I'm just curious where you see the best opportunities to pick up a little bit of share.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Isaac, it's Dave. Obviously, the great majority of testing is still in the hospital environment, and it's being performed in a high-cost environment, and it's being billed at a high cost compared to our cost and our pricing. I think the greatest opportunity for gain in share continues to be for the reasons that I've already stated in answer to the previous question. The trends are going to drive laboratory services to more efficient and higher quality sites of care. I think we're going to see the opportunity to pick up share from hospitals over time.
Isaac Rowe (Analyst)
That's great.
Maybe just to follow up there, I mean, I guess what I should have said more clearly is, do you think there's a mindset in the marketplace that as we move closer to ACA, there's more willingness to sort of reassess where testing gets done, whether it be through the payer side or with hospitals? Do you sense that conversations of that nature are starting to happen as we get closer to ACA? Thanks.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Yes, I do. I agree with that.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Darren Hewett with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed.
Darren Hewett (Senior Client Integration Manager VP)
Thanks. Good morning, everybody. Just a few things left here. Wanted to just go back to volume performance in the quarter. And I guess more specifically, can you give us some level of breakdown between the routine and the esoteric growth in Q1?
Any commentary about where you're seeing some strength or some softness in any particular areas. Dave, it'd be nice just to get your thoughts on hepatitis testing given the guidelines. We've had some time for the physician community to react. Just curious to see how that's been trending.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Sure. Esoteric volume in the quarter was up about 2% per day, driven by multiple factors going in different directions. Some nice growth in some of our new testing, offset by some decline in vitamin D and still the pressure on surgical pathology and histology. On the HCV, the year-over-year performance is very impressive in terms of the amount of HCV screening that we're requiring or, I'm sorry, that we're receiving. There has been a significant public relations campaign by the government through the CDC to get baby boomers screened for hepatitis C.
The screening test is not an expensive test, but the volumes are up nicely. Of course, for those that screen positive, it's very important that they get follow-up testing, including genotyping testing, viral load testing, and in many cases, the companion diagnostic testing for which drug the patient will respond to. I continue to think hepatitis C is a big opportunity, and we've had the leading hepatitis C franchise for years, very much strengthened by the terrific work that our Monogram specialty lab is doing. We look forward to capitalizing on that opportunity over time, Darren.
Darren Hewett (Senior Client Integration Manager VP)
Thanks. You did provide the esoteric growth per day. Sorry if I missed this, but the routine, how did that break down?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
That would be a little over 3% on a per-day basis. Okay.
Darren Hewett (Senior Client Integration Manager VP)
Dave, do you care to just maybe size the level of growth for your hepatitis franchise just to maybe give us some thoughts about how it is growing?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I do not think it is meaningful to give you percentage increases in the screening volumes because the percentages are going to be grossly disproportionate to the amount of screening that we do. Let's just say we have seen very nice year-over-year growth. As we get that testing, again, our goal always is not to win tests, but to win accounts. It gives us the opportunity to provide a more comprehensive set of services both to primary care and specialty physicians.
Darren Hewett (Senior Client Integration Manager VP)
Okay. That is great. If I could, just Brad, maybe a numbers question here. Income from JVs not terribly outside of the band of what we would expect, but definitely a little bit higher this quarter.
Can you comment on that and maybe just give us some flavor for how that might look for the balance of the year?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I don't think it was very much different than what we expected and wouldn't expect it to be that much different on the year. Nothing significant that I could point to there.
Darren Hewett (Senior Client Integration Manager VP)
Okay. And then just the last thing, any update at all about the Canadian operations? I think there was at some point some discussion that you might seek out a partner, and where are you in that? Are there opportunities to go beyond the Ontario province?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
There are a number of opportunities in Canada, and we continue to spend time there. Very pleased with our businesses that we have, and we are continually looking for opportunities to grow there.
Darren Hewett (Senior Client Integration Manager VP)
Okay. Thanks a lot.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Gary Taylor with Citigroup. Please proceed.
Gary Taylor (Managing Director)
Hi. Good morning. Just a couple of quick last few questions. The first on the fourth quarter, $49 million of acquisition spending, was that an earn-out, or was there actually something real in there that you could discuss?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Gary, this is Brad. I'm going to have to go back and look at that and get back to you on that.
Gary Taylor (Managing Director)
Okay.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
But Gary, as Dave, there was nothing sizable in the fourth quarter that would have contributed to first quarter performance, as Brad mentioned. I mean, MedTox is the driver of most of the non-organic growth.
Gary Taylor (Managing Director)
Got it. And then just my last question. We were reading about Aetna lowering pricing coming up this July in its standard lab fee schedule.
Obviously, you do not have a lot of exposure to Aetna with Quest having that national contract. Is there any way that what they would be doing on the right side, this particular payer, could have any material impact on Labcorp?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
I saw the same article that you did, I think, in one of the trade magazines. That is the first that we were made aware of it. I think we are not in a position to answer that question at this time. I do not think it would have a material impact on us given the relationship with Aetna, but I cannot give you a definitive answer.
Gary Taylor (Managing Director)
Okay. I will ask for this, but I expect I probably will not get it. Aetna's percent of revenue broadly, I mean, this is, I would imagine, a single-digit percentage of revenue?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Yeah.
We do not obviously specify how much percentage of revenue any of our customers is. I am going to make your prediction come true and not tell you the answer.
Gary Taylor (Managing Director)
Okay. Thanks for that. Thanks, guys.
Your next question comes from the line of Sandy Draper with Raymond James. Please proceed.
Sandy Draper (SVP and Head of Investor Relations)
Thanks very much. Most of my questions have been asked. I did have to drop off for a second. If this question got asked, just tell me to go back to the transcript. Dave, I was curious if you could comment a little bit. I know Lisa had brought up the hospital trend and what is going on there. Clearly, there may be some changes.
Are you seeing any change in the marketplace now with the discussions that you're having with hospitals, or is it sort of still the same in that you expect changes to happen as we get further into ACA and ACOs and further developments? Or are you already seeing more and differentiated discussions than you were seeing maybe 12, 24 months ago? Thanks.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Sandy, I did comment on that, so I'll just reiterate briefly. I mean, I think that across all of healthcare services, there are discussions going on about how we can provide the highest quality care at the most efficient point of service. I think there's a greater willingness on the part of hospitals to talk about ways that they can collaborate with us and build a sustainable model over time in which we can work together to provide the highest quality, lowest cost care with the best outcomes.
There is a lot going on in healthcare services. There is a lot of change happening. I think the tenor of the conversations has been very positive. As fast as change goes, change also goes slowly in terms of the way that large organizations do business. We are going to continue to be very persistent in pointing out that we can improve the cost structure and the quality side of the way lab services are delivered to patients.
Sandy Draper (SVP and Head of Investor Relations)
Great. Thanks. That is very helpful, Dave. Appreciate it.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Frank Morgan with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed.
Frank Morgan (Managing Director and Heathcare Services Equity Research Analyst)
Good morning. I was wondering if you could provide a number on what you expect the consolidated charges and expenses to be on the year. I mean, obviously, you reported some in the quarter for the consolidation activity.
But what do you think that number will be in aggregate for the year?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
Frank, this is Brad. That's not typically a number that we would guide to.
Frank Morgan (Managing Director and Heathcare Services Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Secondly, on the follow-up to Gary's question, are there any other major contracts that you have that are of significant size that are coming up for renewal this year?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Frank, it's Dave. As we've said, we are in discussions with both Cigna and Humana about contract status, and we expect those to be resolved during the year this year.
Frank Morgan (Managing Director and Heathcare Services Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. And then one final question, just in terms of number of tests per requisition, are you seeing any kind of pressure at all from commercial payers on that, or is that a lever that they might have to try to lower overall utilization and cost? And I'll hop off. Thanks.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
It's Dave.
I don't think we're seeing pressure on tests per requisition from commercial payers. Realistically, I think that would be a very hard lever to pull because the doctor is ordering the tests per requisition based on what he or she thinks is in the best interest of patient care. I think it'd be awfully tough to tell doctors you're only allowed to order 1.0 tests per requisition.
Frank Morgan (Managing Director and Heathcare Services Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Thanks.
Your next question comes from the line of AJ Rice with UBS. Please proceed.
AJ Rice (Managing Director)
Hi, everyone. Just a couple of quick ones, if possible. I know we've talked a lot about your discussions with hospitals and others on ACOs and, to some degree, exchanges. Any pressure or any offering on their part to ask you to take on any kind of risk-based contracts of any sort? Do you have any openness to that?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
AJ, it's Dave.
That was a pretty broad introduction covering everything from hospitals to ACOs to exchanges. Yes, certainly, there are people we talk to who are interested in risk-based contracts. In the appropriate circumstance, certainly, we would consider that. I mean, if you think about our UnitedHealthcare contract, certainly, it was a risk-based contract in that we agreed to cover some leakage as part of the initial contract. In the appropriate circumstances, with the right parameters and with us having confidence that we can execute, yeah, we would be willing to think about risk-based contracts. That would certainly be the exception rather than the rule.
AJ Rice (Managing Director)
That is not the way you sort of see this evolving. That becomes a meaningfully more significant portion of your business or anything.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Not in the near term. Absolutely.
AJ Rice (Managing Director)
Okay.
On the comment about bad debt being one of the places where you'd see some benefit, I guess one potential, at least to narrow it down, you're running 4.3% bad debt today. How much of that is copays and deductibles, and how much of that is uninsured? I'm assuming that the opportunity under ACA would largely be on the uninsured side as opposed to the copays and deductibles. Am I right in thinking that way?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
AJ, this is Brad. You're right. Most of that 4.3% is driven by our uninsured experience. So that's where we see the potential benefit as a result of ACA.
AJ Rice (Managing Director)
Okay. So you would say most of the 4.3% is uninsured? There's not a big copay?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
I'd say 70-80%.
AJ Rice (Managing Director)
Okay. All right. And then lastly, and I think you guys certainly spent some time on it last quarter.
You mentioned it again today, this upgrade that you're doing of the 10-year testing platform. It sounds like that's sort of unique to this year. Can you give us any sense? Is the cost associated with doing that, or I don't know if there's any disruption? Is that in any way impacting the numbers this year? Is it meaningful enough to do that that we should be aware that there's a cost that you're incurring for that?
Brad Hayes (EVP and CFO)
No. I mean, we've called it out as being part of the capital that we're incurring, but it's not meaningful from an expense perspective.
AJ Rice (Managing Director)
Okay. All right. Thanks a lot.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Okay. It's the top of the hour, so we have a couple more people in the queue. I'm just going to ask you, unless it's something that really has not been asked before, please let's try to wrap up the call.
Operator (participant)
Your next question comes from the line of Anthony Vendetti with Maxim Group. Please proceed.
Anthony Vendetti (Executive Managing Director)
Thanks. Just real quickly, over the last five years, can you just give an estimate of how much the clinical lab fee schedule has been cut? And do you think future cuts will be more driven by specific CPT codes?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Anthony, it's Dave. The clinical lab fee schedule over the last, I'll just tell you, this year, obviously, there was a 5% cut. I don't have the number right in front of me of what the five-year impact was, but obviously, we can provide that to you. In terms of future cuts, I think the president's budget just talks about an across-the-board fee schedule cut. I understand, though, that individual codes can be reviewed from time to time, as the 88305 was this year.
I do not think there is any way of predicting where the pressure will be. To go back to the discussion with Ricky, we are spending a lot of time through ACLA and individually in Washington explaining the value of laboratory services, how they drive physician decisions and support better patient care, and why these cuts are really detrimental to Medicare beneficiaries, Medicaid beneficiaries' access and receipt of quality care.
Anthony Vendetti (Executive Managing Director)
Okay. Esoteric volume, I know it was up 2% per day, but what was it up in total in the quarter?
David King (Chairman and CEO)
On an absolute basis, it would have been 0.2%. 0.2%.
Anthony Vendetti (Executive Managing Director)
Okay. Great. Thanks, guys.
Operator (participant)
Your next question is a follow-up from the line of Kevin Ellich with Piper Jaffray. Please proceed.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Hey, guys. Just a quick follow-up. On the uninsured, I think you said that you saw an uptick in Q1.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Was that just related to the flu, or I guess what drove this uptick?
Kevin and Dave, we do not really have any way of knowing. The patients come to the patient service centers, or the tests come from the doctor's office. We do not have any way of knowing what is causing the uptick. As we have said many times, flu is not a big driver of clinical laboratory testing. It would be surprising if that were the reason.
Kevin Ellich (Senior Research Analyst)
Okay. Thanks, Dave.
Operator (participant)
At this time, we have no further questions. I would now like to turn the call back over to Mr. David King for any closing remarks.
David King (Chairman and CEO)
Thank you. I do just want to close with a personal observation. That is that, as I think you all know, Bob Hagemann is leaving Quest. This is our opportunity to say something about Bob.
What I would say is there's a lot of respect at Labcorp for Bob. I think he's been around for more than 15 years. When he started in this industry, the industry was flat on its back with DSOs over 100 and bad debt over 10%. It's guys like Tom McMahon and Ken Freeman, Wes Ellinberg, and Bob Hagemann who really had the discipline to help put this industry back on its feet and turn it into what it is today, which is a tremendous value and a great driver of exceptional patient care. As I said, there's a lot of respect here for Bob Hagemann. The industry will miss him, and we wish him well in all of his future endeavors. With that, we wish you a good day, and thank you for listening to our call.
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's conference.
Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect. Have a great day.