LENZ May 11, 2026

LENZ Therapeutics Q1 2026 Earnings Call - VIZZ Launch Acceleration Efforts Outpace Early Script Growth

Summary

LENZ Therapeutics is in the early, high-friction phase of building a new presbyopia category with VIZZ, generating $1.9 million in Q1 revenue and 25,000 filled prescriptions. The company acknowledges that new patient adoption has not yet reached its targets, primarily due to physicians not proactively integrating the novel treatment into routine exam flows and patients facing a multi-step journey from awareness to purchase. Management is executing a targeted response: sharpening physician messaging around high-value use cases like contact lens wearers, deploying QR-based patient onboarding tools, and piloting direct-to-practice sales to reduce friction. Meanwhile, real-world safety data remains reassuring, with retinal adverse events tracking well below background rates, reinforcing the product's differentiated, pupil-selective mechanism of action. The company maintains a strong cash position and zero R&D spend, signaling a full pivot to commercial execution and global expansion.

Key takeaways from the call include: 1) Q1 net revenue of $1.9 million, driven by $1.7 million in product sales and $250,000 in license revenue. 2) Approximately 25,000 paid and filled prescriptions in Q1, a 19% increase from Q4. 3) Over 10,000 unique prescribers in just two quarters, with VIZZ generating ~70% more scripts per prescriber than VUITY at a comparable launch stage. 4) New patient adoption is slower than targeted, requiring a behavioral shift among physicians to proactively introduce VIZZ in exams. 5) Patient persistence is strengthening, with over two-thirds of ePharmacy volume now coming from 3-month prescriptions. 6) Management is refining commercial tactics, focusing on contact lens patients as a primary hook and deploying digital onboarding tools to improve conversion. 7) Direct-to-practice sales are being piloted in select states, offering physicians an inventory model with no meaningful change to net economics for LENZ. 8) Real-world safety data shows zero retinal detachments and only two retinal tears across ~46,000 boxes shipped, tracking below background rates and contrasting favorably with VUITY. 9) R&D expenses are effectively zero, reflecting the completion of clinical trials and a full shift to commercialization. 10) Cash runway remains robust at $258.4 million, with Q1 net cash burn of $34 million, supporting continued sales force expansion and global regulatory submissions.

Key Takeaways

  • Q1 net revenue reached $1.9 million, comprising $1.7 million in product sales and $250,000 in license revenue from international partnerships.
  • Approximately 25,000 paid and filled prescriptions were generated in Q1, marking a 19% sequential increase from Q4.
  • The company has onboarded over 10,000 unique prescribers in just two quarters, with VIZZ generating roughly 70% more scripts per prescriber than VUITY at a comparable stage.
  • New patient adoption is progressing slower than management's initial targets, primarily because physicians are not yet proactively integrating the novel treatment into routine exam flows.
  • Patient persistence is strengthening, with over two-thirds of ePharmacy volume now derived from 3-month prescriptions, signaling strong early commitment.
  • Management is executing targeted commercial refinements, including a sharpened focus on contact lens wearers as a high-value entry point and the deployment of QR-based digital onboarding tools.
  • A direct-to-practice sales model is being piloted in select states, allowing physicians to purchase and dispense VIZZ directly, which offers patient convenience without materially altering LENZ's net unit economics.
  • Real-world safety data remains reassuring, with zero retinal detachments and only two retinal tears reported across approximately 46,000 boxes shipped, tracking well below background incidence rates.
  • Research and development expenses are effectively zero, reflecting the completion of the CLARITY clinical trials and a full strategic pivot to commercialization and global expansion.
  • The company maintains a strong balance sheet with $258.4 million in cash equivalents, while Q1 net cash burn of $34 million supports ongoing sales force expansion and international regulatory submissions.

Full Transcript

Conference Call Moderator: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the LENZ Therapeutics’ first quarter 2026 financial results conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Following prepared remarks from management, we will conduct a question-and-answer session, and instructions will follow at that time. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Dan Chevallard, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.

Dan Chevallard, Chief Financial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thank you. Good afternoon, thank you for joining us today. My name is Dan Chevallard, Chief Financial Officer of LENZ Therapeutics. We are joined today by Eef Schimmelpennink, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Shawn Olsson, our Chief Commercial Officer, and Dr. Marc Odrich, our Chief Medical Officer. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that this call will contain forward-looking statements regarding LENZ’s future expectations, plans, prospects, corporate strategy, regulatory and commercial plans and expectations, cash runway projections and performance. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements as a result of various important factors and risks, including those discussed in our filings with the SEC, which can also be found on our website.

In addition, any forward-looking statements represent only our views as of the date of this webcast and should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any subsequent date. We specifically disclaim any obligations to update such statements. The company encourages you to consult the risk factors contained in our SEC filings for additional detail, including in our first quarter 2026 Form 10-Q, which is being filed today. With that, I’ll now turn the call over to Eef.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thank you, Dan. Good afternoon, everyone. In Q1, our performance was consistent with the expectations we outlined on our last call. We delivered approximately 25,000 paid and filled prescriptions, bringing total monthly units sold since launch to roughly 46,000 and generated $1.9 million in net revenue, including $1.7 million in product sales. New patient adoption has continued to grow, but not yet at the pace we’re aiming for. I want to address that directly. We’ve done the work to understand the dynamics. We’ve identified what needs to change, and we’re executing on those changes now. What continues to give us confidence are the strong fundamentals underlying that top-line number and the strength in the category we are building around VIZZ.

Our product clearly works in the real world, which is reinforced by consistent feedback from both doctors and patients, underscoring what real-world efficacy is living up to expectations. We’ve built a growing base of prescribing physicians with over 10,000 unique prescribers through the first quarter and new prescribers writing for the first time every day. We’re seeing a very clear proprietary signal emerge within our prescriber base. At the same approximate stage of launch, around 46,000 filled scripts, this is generating roughly 70% more scripts per prescriber than VUITY, a pattern that holds true across all our prescribing deciles. In other words, we’re reaching the same level of fill volume with fewer prescribers because physicians who adopt VIZZ are prescribing it more consistently. This is an example of the encouraging dynamics that we’re experiencing as we build a truly new category.

Early adoption builds more gradually, but as prescribing habits develop, they drive consistent uptake. In addition, we continue to see promising patient adoption and persistence. Once patients move from a sample to purchasing the product, many stay on that therapy, which we have seen reflected in early refill behavior and importantly, in purchasing patterns. For over two-thirds of our ePharmacy volume is now coming from 3-month prescriptions, a meaningful increase in our ePharmacy consumer purchasing behavior from Q4 to Q1. This ties with what we want to see from a sampling at launch. Our patients try the product first, convert after experiencing the benefit, and then continue use. Taken together, this gives us confidence that we’re building the category on a durable foundation, and we view these metrics as important early indicators which will scale over time.

At the same time, as we’ve noted during our last call, building a new category will take time, particularly as prescribing habits and patient behavior continue to evolve. Through Q1, the pace of new patient starts and routine ECP prescribing was more gradual than we expected it to be. We are laser-focused on improving that over the coming months and will hold ourselves accountable to demonstrating these upcoming quarters. As we’re now several months into our launch, we believe we have identified the key barriers to adoption. Over recent months, we’ve focused on these areas in depth, including through extensive work with advisory boards and direct engagement with both physicians and patients to better understand how to improve both the prescribing process and the patient experience. There are 2 primary areas where we see clear opportunities to drive adoption. First, on the physician side, this is well understood.

Brand awareness is extremely high among ECPs, and this is recognized as best in class. It is not yet being brought up proactively enough in the patient conversation. This requires an important behavioral shift as physicians learn to incorporate a new type of treatment into a routine exam flow. It has not historically included the integration of a novel pharmaceutical option for treatment of presbyopia. On a consumer side, the path from awareness to prescription and ultimately to purchase is naturally a multi-step one. Surveys and direct feedback have highlighted where the patient’s journey can be further improved to support conversion. Based on these insights, we’re sharpening execution and have already taken targeted actions to accelerate adoption. On the physician side, we’re refining how this is introduced in the exam room to make it simpler and more natural to bring into the conversation.

One example is a renewed focus on contact lens patients, where this provides a clear and immediate value to that practice by helping patients stay in their lenses longer. This serves as a practical entry point that corresponds to a significant part of their patient and revenue base. We’re highlighting ECP success stories from peers to illustrate how this has been integrated into practice specifically for these patients as examples of real-world wins. This helps physicians better understand and use this more consistently, drive real value, and from there expand usage more broadly across the presbyopia population. Importantly, as I’ve mentioned, these refinements are informed by direct work with advisory boards and testing panels of physicians where we have incorporated real-world feedback on what works and how to improve both the ECP conversation and patient experience.

On the patient side, we’re evolving how patients get started on therapy. We have introduced tools, including a simple QR-based getting started with this experience video that clearly explains how to use the product and what to expect, helping patients complete the initial trial and transition more confidently to ongoing use. Additional materials to support this effort are finalized and will be rolled out shortly. In addition, and where permitted, we’re enabling physicians to sell this directly to patients in their practices. This can simplify access and reduce friction in the conversion process. Early feedback on this approach has been encouraging, while we remain mindful that it is not available in all markets. Taken together, these actions are designed to increase both how often this is introduced in the exam room and a conversion from trial to ongoing use.

Shortly, Shawn Olsson will go into more detail on how we’re executing against these priorities. In parallel, as we scale the product, we are also continuing to improve the overall user experience. We are transitioning to an FDA-approved large-scale manufacturing process that will further improve our direct product custom goods. This also allows for a tighter formulation specification and enhanced vial format, which we expect will further improve both ease of use and comfort upon instillation. These are natural advancements as we move from initial launch to broader scale that are part of our ongoing focus on optimizing the patient experience. Our additional attention now is on execution against the key drivers that I highlighted today. We expect that these actions will drive meaningful and measurable progress in ECP and consumer adoption as we advance through the year.

With a product that clearly works in a large and underpenetrated market, we continue to see strong validation from both patients and physicians on the value it brings. At the same time, we’re building a new category, but both prescribing habits and patient behavior will need to evolve. Importantly, we have solid and actionable understanding on how we can influence that evolution to accelerate adoption. We’ve already begun to act on these insights and initiatives. As these actions continue to roll out across the field and the patient journey, we’re focused on demonstrating meaningful and sustained script growth over the coming months and quarters. Lastly, in parallel, we’re seeing strong momentum outside the U.S. There are recent European and U.K. submissions, as well as meaningful inbound partnering interest from key markets, including Europe and Latin America.

Combined with our existing partnerships across China, Southeast Asia, Canada, and the Middle East, we believe we’re building a strong foundation for global expansion. With that, I’ll hand it over to Shawn, who’ll go into more detail on how we’re executing against the priorities. Shawn.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thank you, Ace. Good afternoon, everyone. As Ace outlined, we are in the early stages of building a new category, and our focus is on translating strong product performance and early adoption signals into consistent and scalable growth. From a commercial perspective, we’re encouraged by what we are seeing in the field. Eye care professionals prescribing VIZZ are seeing it works in their practices, and that confidence is translating into repeat prescribing behavior. We are seeing a growing number of physicians not only prescribe VIZZ, but write it multiple times. In fact, approximately 60% of prescribing ECPs have now written VIZZ multiple times, which we view as a strong signal of confidence and early habit formation. ECP awareness and interest is high, understanding of the product is strong, and consumer interest and awareness is growing.

What we’re focused on now is how we translate that interest into consistent prescribing behavior and consumer adoption, and importantly, doing so in a way that shows tangible progress in new script growth in this early phase of launch. Focusing on our eye care professional strategy, we continue to see strong engagement adoption among physicians. Just a few months into launch, aided awareness is in the high nineties, and unaided awareness is over 80%, which tells us VIZZ is already well-known in the eye care community for the treatment of presbyopia. We’re also seeing that physicians clearly understand the product. They consistently describe VIZZ as differentiated, pupil-selective, and ciliary sparing while delivering a 10-hour duration. That level of clarity is important because it helps address the major barrier of being compared to previous products in this category. Where our focus now is translating that understanding into consistent behavior.

This is about helping physicians bring VIZZ into the patient conversation more naturally and more frequently, and integrating it into their standard eye exam flow. We’re also seeing this translate into prescribing behavior. As Eef Schimmelpennink mentioned, at a comparable stage of launch, VIZZ is generating significantly higher scripts per prescriber than what was observed with VUITY. Importantly, we see that pattern consistently across the prescriber base. What that looks like in practice is that once physicians begin to prescribe VIZZ and integrate it into their workflows, or into their workflow, they tend to prescribe it more frequently compared to what we saw with VUITY at a similar stage. This is not limited to a small group of high-volume writers, but something we’re seeing more broadly across the prescriber base. This ties directly to how we have designed the launch.

With sampling, patients experience the product first, and physician utilize these experiences to build an understanding and confidence in VIZZ. That creates a more natural fit in the practice, where prescriptions are written with greater confidence and consistency, and we see this as an early indicator of how adoption can continue to build over time. As we’ve been working through this in the field, this also helped clarify where we should focus to further accelerate adoption. One of the areas we’re seeing the strongest early traction is in contact lens patients. This is a well-known challenge for eye care professionals. The contact lens population peaks in the 30 to 39-year-old age range. As this group ages, up to 71% of patients drop out of contact lenses after the age of 50, often reluctantly, with presbyopia being a key driver.

This is not just a clinical issue, but a core contributor to practice revenue where contact lenses and related services play a significant role. What we’re hearing from physicians is that VIZZ provides a very practical solution to that problem. As one physician put it, "This is a way to keep my patients in contact lenses and improve their experience at the same time." This is a clear example of where ECPs can benefit, for their patients and in their practice through the regular adoption and prescription of VIZZ as a patient satisfaction and retention strategy. That ability to both improve patient outcomes and support the practice makes this a highly relevant and actionable use case. Importantly, this is not just anecdotal.

Our most recent consumer survey showed that approximately 50% of VIZZ users reported they used contact lenses as their primary form of distance vision correction, reinforcing that this is both a meaningful and scalable opportunity to drive adoption. Turning to our consumer strategy, we are encouraged by the early momentum we are seeing. Most importantly, this is where we see a key opportunity to improve conversion and scale adoption. Patients are interested in the product, and we are seeing strong engagement across our channels. What we are focused on now is improving how patients move from awareness to prescription and ultimately to purchase. The journey in the new category for a prescription drug is naturally more complex.

A patient sees an ad, learns about the product, schedules an appointment, receives a sample, and then decides whether to move forward with a prescription. Each step creates an opportunity to either progress or drop off, and our focus is on making that process simpler, clearer, and more intuitive. We are already seeing encouraging signals. Our direct consumer campaign is driving strong engagement with significant increases in website traffic and early indications that patients are entering the funnel. We’re also seeing that when patients convert, they’re engaging in a more committed way. In our ePharmacy channel, which represents more than half of our prescriptions, over two-thirds of the volume is now coming through 3-month prescriptions, which is a strong signal of intent and early persistence. At the same time, we’re actively refining our approach to improve conversion.

On the messaging side, we have shifted to a direct problem-solution consumer value proposition centered around tired of reading glasses, which directly connects with the everyday experience of presbyopia and physicians VIZZ as a simple alternative. We are also improving how patients get started on therapy. This includes stronger expectation setting around how the product works, clear dosing instructions, and what to expect in the first few days. We have also prepared simple onboarding tools such as QR-based resources that guide patients through the initial experience and help them transition from trial to ongoing usage. In addition, we are continuing to expand and refine our media approach. This includes testing additional channels such as linear television in select markets, while actively optimizing our creative and media mix based on real-time performance data to ensure we’re driving the most effective engagement.

We’re also seeing increased interest from physicians in directly selling VIZZ to patients from their practices where permitted. This approach is currently being implemented in select markets and structured in a way that maintains our expected economics while giving practices the additional flexibility to serve their patients. We believe this could also offer a significant benefit of convenience for the patient, where they can leave the ECP visit with products in hand, reducing the hurdle of pharmacy abandonment. These efforts are supported by the expansion of our field organization, which will be fully deployed by the end of this quarter. This increases the reach of our field sales team to approximately 15,000 targeted eye care professionals, allowing us to respond to inbound demand from physicians outside our initial target group and to build higher frequency territories.

This combination of increased reach and frequency is critical to reinforcing both physician behavior and patient conversion. Taken together, these actions are focused on increasing the number of patients who move from initial interest to trial and from trial to ongoing usage. Overall, we’re encouraged by what we are seeing in the early stages of the launch. We have strong physician engagement, clear patient interest, and a growing set of levers to drive adoption. At the same time, our focus now is on translating these actions into meaningful and sustained NRX script growth over the coming months and quarters. We believe we have the right elements in place, and our priority is executing against them with discipline to build momentum from here. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Dan to walk you through our financial results.

Dan Chevallard, Chief Financial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thank you, Shawn. As both Eef and Shawn have stated, we are encouraged by the performance of VIZZ in the hands of patients and ECPs as we build the presbyopia market. The early signs of broad ECP uptake are there, as evidenced by the over 10,000 prescribers in the 2 quarters of launch, a figure higher than any recent launch in ophthalmology at this stage. Additionally, consumers are emerging with positive real-world experiences every day as product awareness deepens and our early launch efforts begin to take hold. Our 1st quarter results were highlighted by the approximately 25,000 data-filled prescriptions of VIZZ, which was a 19% increase compared to Q4, resulting in approximately $1.7 million in net product revenues.

Our units continue to be driven by both the combination of new patient prescriptions and increasingly by monthly refilled units, including both single monthly packs and three-month orders, which are available through our ePharmacy. While it is early at this stage of launch to be declarative about projecting annual refill rates, we are encouraged by what we are seeing in the initial trends. In Q1, and consistent with last quarter, we noted blended gross to net discounts across our distribution channels of less than 10%, resulting in approximately $67 in net revenue per monthly pack of VIZZ. Additional blended costs of the respective distribution channels of approximately $7 per unit were incurred that flow into operating expenses within SG&A, resulting in a net cash per unit of $60 per pack. That is unchanged from last quarter and in line with our long-standing expectations.

Additionally, we recognized license revenue in Q1 of $250,000 from the distribution agreement signed in January with Lunatus, our ex-U.S. distribution partner in the Middle East region. As I discussed on our Q4 call, there is significant effort underway with our existing ex-U.S. commercial partnerships as we advance towards multiple additional regulatory approvals for VIZZ, and we remain focused on the continued expansion of our global network of commercial alliances. We look forward to reporting additional progress in the months and quarters ahead. Turning now to operating expenses, our cost of sales in the first quarter totaled $1.1 million and was comprised primarily of two non-recurring events, resulting in charges to cost of sales in the period that were unrelated to product sales.

The first was a period cost stemming from an out-of-specification temperature excursion of inventory while in transit from our manufacturer. We expect recovery from this product loss from our insurance provider in the second quarter. In addition, we incurred a one-time charge for packaging supplies associated with the previously mentioned FDA-approved manufacturing process improvement and transition. Direct product cost of sales related to our Q1 product sales were immaterial, and we anticipate this to trend to an approximately 90% direct product gross margin over time. Total SG&A expenses increased to $45 million in Q1 2026, or approximately $40.7 million net of non-cash stock-based compensation. This was a 13% quarter-over-quarter increase from Q4 and was driven by our planned DTC launch investment. It’s consistent with last quarter. Approximately 80% of our SG&A was driven by sales and marketing, with the remaining representing general and administrative expenses.

Of note, we anticipate that our Q1 2026 OpEx, SG&A, and the resulting cash burn is higher than our go-forward quarterly run rate over the balance of 2026. Total research and development expenses were 0 in Q1, which is consistent with last quarter. Finally, our net loss per share, both basic and diluted, was $1.32 per share in the first quarter of 2026 on a net loss of $41 and a half million. We ended Q1 2026 with approximately $258.4 million in cash equivalents, and marketable securities in our Q1 2026 net cash burn of approximately $34 million was consistent with Q4 and in line with our budget.

As we discussed on our recent year-end call, our current sales force expansion is in our 2026 operating plan, and we will continue to target an allocation of approximately 80% of our SG&A to sales and marketing. In summary, we enter the second quarter of 2026 at an important point in the launch with a clear operational plan, a strong cash position, and conviction that the actions underway will translate into meaningful growth. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Eef.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Dan. To conclude, I’m incredibly proud of the LENZ team and the progress we have made over the first 2 quarters of our launch. We’re seeing what we hope to see. The product really works, encouraging early signs of patient persistence and a growing base of prescribing physicians. At the same time, we’re under no illusions about where we need to go. While building a completely new category takes time, enacting changes in both prescribing habits and patient behavior is crucial. We have progressed from diagnosing the early adoption dynamics to actively addressing them. We’re committed to demonstrating clear and measurable progress over the coming quarters. We look forward to reporting back on that. Our focus now is on accelerating new patient adoption through disciplined execution in the field and continued investment behind the category.

We believe we are in the early stages of building what can become a significant and durable market. As we continue to execute our priorities, translating this into meaningful and sustained script growth. We look forward to updating you on that progress as we move through the year. With that, I’d like to open up the call for questions.

Conference Call Moderator: Our first question comes on the line of Stacy Ku with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

Stacy Ku, Analyst, TD Cowen: Hey, thanks for taking our questions and we appreciate the detailed VIZZ launch discussion. We have a few follow-ups. First, it’s still early days with linear TV and of course, the first steps of the sales force expansion. Just help us understand, are you able to go into additional detail on encouraging signs beyond the current prescription check rate? Are you able to identify a specific type of practice that’s prescribing VIZZ multiple times? That’s the first question. On the second question, we do appreciate that 3-month metric from the ePharmacy. It’s very interesting. We wanted to confirm, for the next earnings call, will we be getting specifics on refill dynamics? That’s the second question. Now the third, we’re just trying to understand how we should be thinking about sampling and competitive dynamics.

10 points, Qlosi, they’ve now launched. Just help us understand what type of counter detailing we might, we might be seeing in real time. Should we also expect samplings from both Qlosi and Qlosi? Last, on VIZZ safety, just maybe contextualize what we’re seeing in the FAERS database for the launch now that VIZZ has been on the market for over 6 months. What are your views on VIZZ’s safety profile? Maybe, Shawn, maybe you could share perspectives from the patients and prescribers. Thanks so much.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Stacy. Great set of questions there. Shawn will actually start kicking it off and give some insights in the signs that we’re seeing on our DTC and linear TV impact. I’ll actually. Let me address the refill one first before we then go into samples and the DTC impact. Clearly, that’s a key stat that we’ve been very clear on from the beginning we will start to share in the second half of this year. Just to repeat what we said earlier, and the reason that we’ve always focused on the second half of the year is that we really want to see those cohorts of patients that we can look at that refill stat on a mature level over time.

Again, if you know, think about Q4, so first quarter of launch patients. Well, they’ve obviously ordered that first script in Q4 and might have refilled in Q4. We’re also seeing is that, as we’ve mentioned, it was time to move over to the 3-pack. Logically, go to 3-pack, you know, you’re going to be back for a reorder in at least 3 months. We feel it’s important to see that patient behavior mature a little bit more, which is why we’ve always indicated that we’ll start sharing those refill, the refill data, in the second half of this year. I’ll hand it over to Shawn to talk about the DTC impact and samples and what we’re seeing the competition do. Then Marc will address your safety question.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Stacy, thanks for your call or sorry, for your question about the DTC. What I can say so far, the early indicators are strong. We look at, you know, the click-through rates. We look at the cost per thousand impressions, and we’re seeing the numbers that we want to see there. Our website traffic is up significantly. You know, we see peaks of up to 10 times what we used to see on our website traffic. The consumer awareness itself is building. We are hearing that VIZZ is resonating very well, and we have a broad digital reach ongoing. That being said, awareness is still early overall, so we still have more to do on driving greater consumer awareness. We’ve seen an encouraging response from that low base and more patients entering that funnel.

What we’re seeing is we’re having great success on platforms like YouTube. We’re seeing ad recall and ad awareness lifts better than benchmarks, and we’re seeing a similar ad recall lift on Pinterest as well. This category is naturally slower to convert because of all the steps required to get to the prescription. We continue to monitor this and actively optimize our campaign to ensure we have the best media mix out there and refine that creative testing if needed. As I said in the earlier opening remarks, we leaned in more to the problem/solution marketing of tired of readers, you know, here’s a solution, which is VIZZ. Our focus right now is that strong conversion improvements, and we expect to see that stronger impact over time because DTC typically takes a few quarters to mature.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Shawn.

Conference Call Moderator: Your next question is from-

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: The next question was around the, sorry.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: No, it’s all mine.

There are 4 questions in there. Hold on. The next question there was around the competitive environment. We continue to see VIZZ as a category of one product differentiated by its unique MOA. That being said, the market can definitely support multiple entrants. There’s a large unmet need. You know, other people out there speaking on the benefits of eye drops and presbyopia is an overall benefit to the category. This is a product where trials is very easy. You know, our sampling strategy wants the patient to try the product. You know, we know in head-to-head, if you were to try the different products, our product stands alone in terms of 10 hours of at 50 and that broad patient population. Efficacy ultimately determines winner, and we feel very strong about our efficacy.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: We know that the prior products didn’t really satisfy the market, and VIZZ is clearly differentiated with our long duration, broader efficacy, different MOA, and only pupil-selective miotic. That real-world experience is reinforcing that generation and competition helps build that awareness, but our focus remains execution-driven on driving this.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Shawn. Before we go to Marc, just 2 quick additions to that. Your question on is the competition, is pilocarpine and STIVARGA, are they sampling? Yes. Maybe not as broad as we are with the study samples that they’re putting in the market. Maybe the underlying part of your question is, for sure, if we were to stop sampling, which we’re not intending to do, you would see NRXs come up. I think you would also start to see what you see with Solvay with new reads. From the beginning, sample has been a core part of our strategy. Continue to do that. As I mentioned earlier, we’re actually seeing that behavior that we want to see being driven by sampling.

You sample, you like it, convert to buy and trial ups, and you’re more sticky than if your order is just basically a sample. With that, let me hand it over to Mark to talk a little bit more about the safety profile and what we’ve learned today.

Dr. Marc Odrich, Chief Medical Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thank you, Stacy, for your question, and it’s one we’re happy to get into because our data is genuinely one of the strongest parts of the VIZZ story so far. 6 months in, we’ve shipped approximately 46,000 boxes. That’s roughly 1.2 million doses, in addition to widespread sampling on top of that. We’ve created some very broad use of VIZZ. What we’re seeing in the real world is fully consistent with the label. The non-serious AEs being reported are mostly transient and in line with what we saw in the clinical program. On the retinal side, it is important to start with the natural background rate. In the total population, this is about 27 per 100,000, with risk increasing with age and level of myopia.

Considering the background incident rate and the significant use of VIZZ thus far, 0 retinal detachments and only 2 retinal tears is much lower than what you would expect. Importantly, both retinal tears occurred in patients with pre-existing retinal risk factors. Meaning they carried elevated risk independent of any treatment. Our retina experts have reviewed both cases and assessed them as likely non-causal. Honestly, again, given the number of patients now on VIZZ and the background rate of around 27 per 100,000, you would expect to see more of events than this. We believe that 2 cases at this level of exposure isn’t a signal, but really just non-causal background incidents. I know everyone is looking at what VUITY saw. Let’s talk about VUITY for a moment.

At what we believe is a comparable exposure to where we are today, VUITY had about 34 retinal events on the books. 22 of them were detachments. We believe that this shows what we have said all along. aceclidine is a different molecule than the 2 other miotics on the market with a different mechanism of action, and we’re seeing a really different safety story play out in the real world. VIZZ is the only pupil-selective miotic. It doesn’t significantly engage the ciliary body, and ciliary body engagement is the pathway most associated with retinal traction risk in this class. Across thousands of medical discussions we’ve had with eye care professionals, the ECP community clearly understands that mechanistic difference, and they consistently associate VIZZ with a lower perceived retinal risk profile than other miotics for presbyopia.

As exposure continues to grow, what matters is that the retina-related AE rate stays below background and that we don’t see a mechanistic signal. To date, that’s exactly what we’re seeing. The product is safe, the data supports it, and we’ll continue to be transparent as the real world experience builds. Thank you.

Stacy Ku, Analyst, TD Cowen: Thanks so much.

To just to add on to a little bit to the last part of that question that you had, Stacy, on what the perspective is from the ECPs and the patients. I can tell you when out in the field what I see, the doctors clearly understand that aceclidine is pupil-selective. They completely understand that because of, 1, the MOA that’s in the PI that directly states it. 2, when people use this product, we continue to hear about that benefit to distance vision, which is avoiding that ciliary muscle. That’s why they’re getting that benefit in distance vision as well. You know, the doctor ECP community completely understands and aligns to the unique nature that is only available through aceclidine. From the consumer standpoint, you know, their focus really isn’t on that.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: When I think of consumers, it’s making sure we set that right expectations to the stinging upon installation or redness that’s on installation and is transient over time. That’s where we’ve been putting a lot of work into the getting started videos and QR codes, as well as training the doctors to set that right expectation for the patients.

Conference Call Moderator: Your next question comes from the line of.

Please go ahead.

Okay, your next question comes from the line of Yigal Nochomovitz with Citi. Please go ahead.

Yigal Nochomovitz, Analyst, Citi: Hey, guys. Thanks for all the detail. Appreciate all the color as you move through the first few quarters of the launch. You mentioned that the prescribers are not proactively talking enough about VIZZ in their initial patient convos. I’m wondering if you could just sort of expand a little bit more on that. I know you mentioned Eef and Shawn that contact lens wearers was an area of focus. I’m just wondering if there are other categories or other aspects of a patient’s profile that would be good, you know, natural hooks in order to introduce the VIZZ concept in the course of an initial patient conversation.

I know earlier before the launch, you talked about, you know, average utilization somewhere in the 5 months of the year range, you know, which varies depending upon, you know, heavy users versus light users. I’m just wondering if you believe that that’s still a valid assumption or if you, if you think that needs to be adjusted. Thank you.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Yigal. Starting with the prescribers focused on how often they bring up VIZZ. We need them bringing up VIZZ more often in their standard exam. You know, their standard exam is pretty quick, right? They’ll go through an eye exam in 20 minutes, and they have a regimen that they follow. Once you get it into almost like a muscle memory, you consistently do the same thing unless the patient proactively brings up VIZZ. We need to help them change how they run through that standard process. What we did and what we’re doing to do that is, you know, we actually worked a lot on our message sharpening. We’re making it easier for the doctor to bring it up quickly. Part of that is this video and QR code.

They don’t have to spend the time, as much time walking the patient through expectation setting as well as how to use the drop, how to put in an eye drop. You know, we’ve moved that over to a digital video format. That way, the doctor can bring it up easier and quickly in their natural eye exam. This product still has broad adoption. In our research, what we’ve seen so far of consumers is 50% almost of our patients that are on VIZZ use contact lenses as their primary vision correction. That’s a natural benefit for both the patient and the practice. That’s why we’re focusing and leaning heavier into the contact lens strategy right now to create that muscle memory for the doctor.

It’s clear physician value, and it’s a clearly identifiable patient. By doing that, we can help create that cycle of I can always bring up VIZZ, and I can do it quickly. That’s really where we’re focused in terms of making sure the prescribers bring it up more often.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Sean. Two other parts of that question, you know, beyond contact lenses, like Sean mentioned, it’s an important group. It’s 10 plus million people, a very valuable one. We’re seeing, you know, the groups that we’ve mentioned before. Without too much detail, it’s the people that have had LASIK before, the people that are striving for an active lifestyle. We’re also seeing great success in emmetropes, so people that have never been to a optometrist, they come in because they’re now becoming presbyopic. All those categories play. The contact lens one is one that we can very easily help the doctor understand what the value is for a patient and for them.

On the refill rate, yes, we’ve always spoken about, you know, the 5 refills a year, and you can see our commentary on conference in light of what we said before.

Iren Amin, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Okay. Thank you.

Conference Call Moderator: Your next question comes from the line of Iren Amin with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Iren Amin, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Yeah, hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe to start, you talked about going to physician offices directly to sell this in select markets. Can you maybe just talk about how this might impact your margin? Because there would be an economic incentive to physicians. I was just wondering how the math will work for both the company and for physicians. I guess, what target markets are you expecting to reach out to, and how many of these are in your top 1,000 ECP prescribers? Thank you.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thank you. This is Shawn, and I’ll cover a key aspect to the selling direct model and explain how that functions and operates. For optometrists, generally, in about half of the markets in the U.S., half of the states, optometrists are able to sell prescription drugs out of their practice. Where it’s allowed, you know, we offer the opportunity for doctors to buy the product directly from LENZ. That product ships to the doctor’s office. From that point on, they’re able to prescribe it and sell it to the patient. From an economic standpoint, you should think of this as the same economics to LENZ as a product that flows through our ePharmacy or a product that flows through a retail channel.

Our target markets are those ones, and specifically, where this is an optional avenue, which goes back to about 25 of the 50 states.

Dan Chevallard, Chief Financial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: I think, Iren Amin, the only thing I would add to that is the RevMed transaction is when we talk about gross to nets and net kind of the net price per to the company of $60 net cash per monthly unit, you can roughly estimate that from a modeling standpoint. I wouldn’t differentiate it from a channel perspective. It’s just different kind of methods of selling direct and avoiding some of those costs of the wholesaler or the other distribution costs. Otherwise, very high-quality RevMed transaction because it’s a direct transaction between us and the doc. In short, no meaningful difference in net economics to the company.

Iren Amin, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Maybe if I could have one more question. I think at the end of March, the company stated that emerging presbyopes were identified kind of as early adopters, and you wanted to expand beyond this group. Can you maybe talk about those efforts in terms of expanding beyond, you know, the emerging presbyopes to a broader group, you know, over the last six weeks or so?

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Iren. As said, maybe you referred to it that in the last call, indeed, we said that not so much from a consumer point of view, but from a ECP point of view, their initial focus on who had this product, patient type for whom this product would work well was we saw, you know, somewhat limited to early presbyopes. That was a carryover, frankly, what we believe and what we hear from VUITY launch, because they have that limited efficacy. They really focused on this group early, emerging emmetropic patients of presbyope. We clearly work in a much broader population.

That’s part of what that sharpening and messaging is to continue for our sales force to remind the doctors that while that is a appropriate category, it’s just a fraction of, you know, the patient population that you can use this product in. Again, that’s part of where the messaging has changed.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Tactically, what that has means actually move that knowledge to the doctors. We actually developed an additional piece for the field that they’re out there using, specifically focused on that broad inclusion of our study trial, where it showed that we worked just as well in both moderate and advanced presbyopia as well. Tactically, also, what it means is we’ve updated some email campaigns and posts that are targeted at ECPs that bring in peer-to-peer statements of other doctors sharing those successes that they’ve had with VIZZ in non-early presbyopes to help bring that across from a peer-to-peer view as well as an advertising view.

Iren Amin, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Perfect. Thank you.

Conference Call Moderator: Your next question comes from the line of Marc Goodman with Leerink Partners. Please go ahead.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics0: Hi, everyone. This is Alyssa on for Marc Goodman. Thank you for all the detail on the update. Just a few questions from us. Could you give a little bit more color on the ECP direct sales initiative? I know you said they could order directly from LENZ, but would that be timed shipments, or would it be at-will ordering as they deplete their inventory? Also, could you discuss the network TV direct to consumer advertising and what markets exactly you’re launching that in the pilot period? Thank you very much.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Great. Thanks for the question, Alyssa. This is Shawn Olsson again. Just a little bit more color on the ECP direct sales initiative. These are an engagement that we enter into with the doctor. We have a contract between us and them that outlines the rules and the model itself. It is at-will ordering, so they have to order a case of product at a time, and then we ship it to them directly. At that time, you know, they’re charged, and we collect payment ahead of us shipping the products out to them. It really is a very simple model.

We enter a contract with the doctor, we send the doctor an invoice for at least one case at a time, they pay the invoice for the case, we ship it directly to that doctor. From there, they can then, you know, prescribe and sell the product to the patient in their market. It’s at will under a contract. In terms of our network TV, we’ve just started to do network TV in select key markets. There are a few different markets across the U.S. that we’re doing this in, we’re doing it to make sure we can see what the signal is in those markets. We’re running linear TV. We’re still only a few weeks into it’s too early to provide any details on that list.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics0: Great. Thank you.

Conference Call Moderator: Your next question comes from the line of Lachlan Hanbury-Brown with William Blair. Please go ahead.

Lachlan Hanbury-Brown, Analyst, William Blair: Thanks for the questions. Maybe on the direct ECP sales approach, should we read from that you are maybe seeing some abandonment obviously between writing the script and patients actually filling it and that this is, you know, obviously gonna sort of hopefully reduce that issue? Or is this maybe also, you know, obviously to get the physicians incentivized and make it top of mind for them, if they’re seeing it in their office every day? Then maybe a second one, Shawn. I know you mentioned the change in the, certainly the name of the DTC campaign. Wondering how much more of the sort of actual content of that has changed with this new sort of problem/solution approach that you’re taking.

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks a lot. I appreciate the questions. The Direct to ECP Program, that initiative was came out of just pure ECP demand as well as consumer convenience, as we wanna make sure that process is easy as possible. It didn’t come out of an abandonment issue. It truly was something that the doctors have been requesting for a while, and we now have the infrastructure in place to support. In terms of the content of the DTC. The tired of reading glasses and then the solution of VIZZ was a change to bring a direct alignment between those that are in readers and frustrated as a solution to that. It doesn’t result in an overall change of any core creative. The creative itself still stands strong. SJB continues to test well.

It’s more about creating that direct connection right off the bat when people see the ad. That’s the only reason for that change. When you think of that lean into these contact lens patients, those are the people in reading glasses. When you think of those LASIK patients, those are the ones in reading glasses. It’s just bringing a tighter connection on the value proposition of this.

Lachlan Hanbury-Brown, Analyst, William Blair: Maybe one other just on the direct ECP. Do you have, you know, clauses in those contracts to ensure that they charge a certain price or is there a sort of ceiling or floor to what they can charge in there?

Shawn Olsson, Chief Commercial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Yeah. The way that it’s structured to make sure that we’re setting up the right way, we have the price that we sell it to the doctor, you know, the doctor can set their own final price to the patient. However, with the guardrails we have in place, you know, it is very clear in our materials that for $79, you can buy it from the ePharmacy. You know, we’ve got our Rx card at $79. We have a retail structure in the background. Those now are on the actual pricing pressures. We’ll hone in that price for the ECP.

Conference Call Moderator: Our final question comes from the line of Matthew Caufield with H.C. Wainwright & Co. Please go ahead.

Matthew Caufield, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright & Co.: Hi. Thank you, guys. Regarding the refills, any further observations on switching from the 1-month to the 3-month dynamics? Is that something that could have greater clarity during second half 2026? Just additionally, with the R&D dropping to 0 for the quarter, is that drop anticipated to remain for the foreseeable future, keeping the R&D at 0 and the OpEx essentially just concentrating on the SG&A for the launch moving forward? Thanks a lot.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: On the refills, yes, we definitely see patients move. You know, classic example is somebody ordered a 1-pack first, and then because they like it, they move to 3-pack and they continue to do that. That dynamic is an important one and one that we highlighted. If you look at the ePharmacy site, which is obviously the only place where you can get a 3-pack, but that channel represents, more or less, well, the majority of our volume. You see that 3-pack now drives about two-thirds of the volume that we sell through ePharmacy. Definitely an important factor of what we’re selling.

You know, going back to what we said earlier, we do anticipate as we move into the second half of the year, we’ll be able to give a little bit more color on, you know, some actual statistics around that refill behavior. Then on the R&D, Dan?

Dan Chevallard, Chief Financial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Yeah. I will take that question on the R&D spend. I think the short answer is yes, you should expect R&D to be substantially zero. We kind of signaled over the course of 2025 a shift in the capital allocation of the company with the completion of the CLARITY studies in early last year and movement towards commercial. You would’ve seen R&D be effectively zero in Q4 and again in Q1, and that should be the expectation for the foreseeable future.

Matthew Caufield, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright & Co.: Got it. Thanks, guys. Congrats on the progress.

Dan Chevallard, Chief Financial Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thank you.

Eef Schimmelpennink, President and Chief Executive Officer, LENZ Therapeutics: Thanks, Michael.

Conference Call Moderator: That concludes our Q&A session. As I’m showing no further questions in queue, thank you for your participation, and we will now conclude today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.