TMCI May 8, 2026

Treace Medical Concepts Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Portfolio Expansion Drives Volume Growth Amid ASP Headwinds

Summary

Treace Medical Concepts reported a 10% year-over-year revenue decline to $47.2 million in Q1 2026, driven by a temporary mix shift toward lower-priced minimally invasive systems launched in late 2025. Despite the revenue dip, the company delivered mid-single-digit case volume growth and significantly reduced cash burn, reinforcing confidence in its path to cash flow breakeven. Management reaffirmed full-year 2026 revenue guidance of $202 million to $212 million and expects revenue growth to return in the seasonally strong fourth quarter as the ASP headwinds lapse and new product contributions accelerate.

The strategic pivot from a single-procedure company to a comprehensive bunion and foot-adjacency platform is gaining tangible traction. Over 35% of existing Lapiplasty surgeons have adopted at least one of the three new systems (Nanoplasty, Percuplasty 3D, and SpeedMTP), with early pull-through to Lapiplasty noted among new surgeon acquisitions. Management highlighted competitive displacement in the high-volume osteotomy segment and strong enthusiasm for the upcoming SuperBite screw and SpeedXM fusion systems, which will expand the total addressable market by approximately $300 million in Q3 2026. Gross margins held steady at 79.3%, and the balance sheet remains flexible with $51.9 million in cash, positioning the company to navigate near-term macro pressures while executing on long-term wallet share expansion.

Key Takeaways

  • Revenue declined 10% year-over-year to $47.2 million in Q1 2026, primarily due to a mix shift toward lower-average selling price minimally invasive products and lower procedure kit volumes.
  • Case volume growth remained positive with mid-single-digit momentum in Q1, signaling underlying demand resilience despite macro pressures on elective procedures.
  • Management reaffirmed full-year 2026 revenue guidance of $202 million to $212 million, representing a 5% to 0% decline from 2025, with expectations for revenue growth to return in Q4 2026.
  • Gross margins held firm at 79.3% in Q1 2026, slightly above prior-year levels, as management targets high-70% margin consistency across new product launches.
  • Cash and marketable securities increased to $51.9 million, reflecting a 50% reduction in cash usage year-over-year and progress toward cash flow breakeven.
  • Over 35% of the existing Lapiplasty surgeon base has adopted at least one of the three new bunion systems (Nanoplasty, Percuplasty 3D, and SpeedMTP), up from 25% in Q4 2025, indicating strong cross-selling momentum.
  • Approximately 30% of new surgeons acquired through the new systems have also utilized Lapiplasty, suggesting a successful pull-through dynamic and expanding wallet share.
  • The company is preparing to launch SuperBite variable pitch compression screws and the SpeedXM Fusion System in Q3 2026, which together expand the total addressable market by approximately $300 million and target higher-ASP midfoot and hindfoot procedures.
  • Adjusted EBITDA loss widened to $5.5 million in Q1 2026 from $3.8 million in the prior-year quarter, but full-year 2026 adjusted EBITDA is guided to a loss of $4 million to $6 million.
  • Management expects the ASP mix headwind to abate in Q3 2026, with Q4 growth driven by accelerating case volumes, lapping of lower-ASP product mix, and contributions from new 2026 product launches.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Treace Medical Concepts First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are on a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there’ll be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you’ll need to press star one one on your telephone. You will hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Philip Taylor. Please go ahead.

Philip Taylor, Investor Relations, Treace Medical Concepts: Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Participating from the company today will be John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, and Mark Hair, Chief Financial Officer. John and Mark will discuss our first quarter financial results in 2026 outlook. We will then host a question-and-answer session following our prepared remarks. Our press release can be found in the investor relations section of our website at investors.treace.com. This call is being recorded and will be archived in the investor section of our website. Before we begin, we would like to remind you that it is our intent that all forward-looking statements made during today’s call will be protected under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any statements that relate to expectations or predictions of future events, market trends, as well as our estimated results or performance are forward-looking statements.

All forward-looking statements are based upon our current estimates and various assumptions. These statements involve material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or events to materially differ from those anticipated or implied by these forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are based upon currently available information, and Treace Medical assumes no obligation to update these statements. Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on these statements. Please refer to our SEC filings, including our 2025 Form 10-K and our Form 10-Q for the first quarter of 2026, filed before the market opens today, May eighth, which can be found in the investor relations section of our website at investors.treace.com for a detailed presentation of risks. With that, I will now turn the call over to John.

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Thank you, Tripp. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on our first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Entering 2026, Treace Medical has evolved beyond its foundation in Lapiplasty into a comprehensive bunion solutions company. Building on the strategic progress made in 2025, we’ve expanded our portfolio with multiple new procedure innovations, which we believe position us to address a broad spectrum of surgeon and patient preferences across all bunion classes. We expect this breadth of offerings will support accelerated growth and procedure volume, increased wallet share, and a meaningfully expanded serviceable market opportunity. We are encouraged by our first quarter performance but remain focused on driving further improvement. We continue to execute on controllable levers, including continuing to strengthen our sales team, launching meaningful product innovations, and adding new accounts and surgeons.

Importantly, the sustained mid-single-digit case volume momentum to start the year reinforces our confidence in our strategy to expand market penetration and improve top-line growth as we move through 2026. At the same time, we also meaningfully reduce cash burn as we progress towards cash flow breakeven. I do wanna note the dynamics that impacted 2025, including macro pressures on procedure demand and portfolio mix shifts remain present. We reported revenue declines of approximately 10% in Q1. We believe this trend will improve over time as we annualize the launch of the new products we launched in 2025. We believe we’re well-positioned to navigate these factors and drive long-term growth.

As such, we’re reaffirming our outlook for full year 2026 revenue, which was raised when we pre-announced our results on April 9th to be in the range of $202 million-$212 million, representing a decline of 5%-0% compared to full year 2025. We expect revenue declines to improve through the rest of the year, with revenue growth returning in our seasonally strongest fourth quarter. As mentioned, we expect fourth quarter revenue growth will largely be supported by case volume growth, the lapping of the ASP mix shift dynamics, as well as the contributions from our planned 2026 product launches. I’d like to turn to our three strategic initiatives to drive top-line growth and the progress we’ve made on these initiatives in the first quarter of 2026.

First, leveraging our large existing customer base to drive adoption of the 3 new bunion systems that we commercialized in 2025. Second, continuing to build upon our leadership position with Lapiplasty by launching new technologies that can appeal to new surgeon users. Third, expanding our product offerings to grow wallet share and tap into new TAM-expanding procedural adjacencies. First, let me begin with an overview on the bunion technologies we introduced in 2025, including their strategic relevance and early market reception. We believe these 3 new systems more than double our accessible market relative to Lapiplasty alone, making their successful commercialization and deeper market penetration an important priority as we look to drive incremental growth. Our Nanoplasty and Percuplasty 3D MIS systems expand our reach into the high-volume osteotomy segment, which represents approximately 70% of the estimated 450,000 annual U.S. bunion procedures.

Today, we believe only around 15% of metatarsal osteotomies are effectively being performed using MIS approaches, largely due to steep learning curves, variability in outcomes, and limited correction of the 3rd frontal plane of the deformity, which is associated with higher recurrence rates. Our 2 3D minimally invasive osteotomy systems are designed to address these challenges with more reproducible instrumented procedures that can be easier to adopt and are designed to correct all 3 planes of the bunion deformity. We believe this position is well to expand adoption and drive greater penetration over time across the estimated 4.4 million annual U.S. bunion sufferers. Speaking to our Speed MTP Great Toe Fusion System. Speed MTP targets the roughly 20% of bunion patients who have developed an arthritic great toe or MTP joint.

Additionally, SpeedMTP addresses a separate population of non-bunion patients who suffer from an isolated arthritic MTP joint. This is a large and strategically important market segment for Treace to participate and to innovate in, given that MTP fusion is among the most common foot and ankle procedures performed. Across our growing base of over 3,300 surgeon customers, we estimate Lapiplasty currently captures about 25% of their bunion related procedure volume. These three new systems are intended to target the remaining 75%, representing a significant opportunity for continued penetration and growth. Market penetration with these three products is increasing. While just three quarters into our full launch, we continue to see a strong uptake of our new systems and a corresponding acceleration in our procedure volumes, resulting in market share gains.

As of Q1, approximately 35% of our Lapiplasty surgeon user base has incorporated at least one of these 3 new bunion systems into their practice since launch. This represents an increase over the 25% that we reported in Q4 2025. We’re also encouraged to see that approximately 30% of our new surgeons who became Treace customers by initially using one of the 3 new bunion systems have also used Lapiplasty technology, which we believe indicates a pull-through to Lapiplasty technologies. At the same time, we remain highly focused on advancing our leadership in Lapiplasty and expanding its appeal and adoption across a broader surgeon audience. Lapidus fusion represents approximately 30% of the 450,000 annual U.S. bunion procedures and is the largest segment where we are the recognized category leader.

We remain on track to commercialize our next generation Lapiplasty platform, known as Lapiplasty Lightning, later this year. This system offers next generation 3D correction instrumentation and new SpeedTMT implants. Lightning Instrumentation is designed to deliver a faster procedure by reducing procedure steps while also offering enhanced precision and enhanced control for the 3D correction. While SpeedTMT implants, as the name indicates, are designed to provide faster fixation application. Expanding surgeon interest and uptake of Lapiplasty also includes advancing our IntelliGuide PSI technology, the first patented preoperative planning and patient specific cut guide system for bunion and midfoot correction in the U.S. Together with Lapiplasty Lightning and SpeedTMT, we believe these three core innovations position us well to extend our category leadership and drive further adoption in 2026 and beyond.

Now turning to our third initiative, expanding our offerings to more broadly serve our growing customer base. In addition to our three new bunion systems, we expanded our portfolio with the addition of new SpeedPlate implants, new sterile instruments, and we introduced our first biologics offerings. These additions are designed to enable our sales force to more comprehensively support their surgeons’ needs while also increasing access to additional procedures. With this expanded portfolio, not only are we seeing growth in bunion related adjacent procedures, but our sales team is now servicing some of their customers incremental procedures outside of bunions as well. Building on this trend, in 2026, we are launching new technologies aimed at both increasing wallet share and expanding our access to incremental procedure volumes. Our SuperBite variable pitch compression screw system represents another differentiated technology from Treace.

Compression screws are a fundamental fixation technology utilized in foot and ankle surgery. Without this high volume fixation offering in our portfolio, competitive sales reps have supplied these products where needed in Treace cases. We announced initial surgeries with our SuperBite screws in April, and we’re hearing positive early responses from surgeon users and high enthusiasm from our sales reps in our early commercial experience. Not only are SuperBite screws built with an advanced features based on the latest MIS customer preferences, but they’re also designed to save OR time by reducing or eliminating altogether the need to pre-drill before implanting the screw due to their novel self-drilling design.

The strategic addition of SuperBite to our portfolio not only reduced the need for a competitor in our cases, importantly, they equip our sales force to gain access to a broader range of procedures ranging from the forefoot to the midfoot to the hindfoot and to the ankle. Complementing our expanded procedure access with SuperBite, we will target improving outcomes for challenging midfoot and hindfoot fusion procedures with our forthcoming SpeedXM Fusion System launch. SpeedXM leverages our novel SpeedPlate hybrid technology, delivering the benefits of dynamic compression and locking screw stability in a specialized anatomic design to address fusions of the larger bones of the midfoot and the hindfoot. SpeedXM plates are highly complementary with SuperBite screws and our biologics, as these technologies are often used in these larger bone fusion procedures.

Importantly, these new products are serving procedures already performed by our existing surgeon customers in the same setting of care and often on the same day as our surgeons’ bunion cases. These new offerings leverage our sales force’s presence and expertise and we believe can drive greater selling efficiency and impact. We expect full commercialization of both SuperBite and SpeedXM during Q3, collectively expanding our total addressable market by approximately $300 million and providing access to attractive high ASP midfoot and hindfoot procedures where multiple Treace technologies are often needed. Our strategy to build a comprehensive best-in-class bunion solutions platform is gaining traction, supported by encouraging early indicators across the business. We continue to expand our active surgeon base while increasing utilization as adoption of our broader portfolio grows, driving mid-single-digit procedure volume growth in the first quarter, which we believe supports our approach.

Looking ahead, we believe we have a path to accelerating procedure growth and increasing wallet share as we drive deeper penetration with our broadened product portfolio and continue to more comprehensively service our great surgeon customers’ product and procedure needs. Combined with disciplined investment, these efforts position us to deliver sustained market share gains, improved profitability, and long-term shareholder value. With that, now let me turn the call over to Mark to review our financial performance. Mark?

Mark Hair, Chief Financial Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Thank you, John. Good morning, everyone. Revenue in the first quarter was $47.2 million, a decrease of 10% compared to the prior year. The decline was mainly driven by the shift in revenue mix towards lower-priced, minimally invasive products and lower volume of bunion procedure kits sold. Gross margin was 79.3% in the first quarter of 2026, compared to 79.7% in the first quarter of 2025. Total operating expenses were $54.6 million in the first quarter of 2026, compared to total operating expenses of $57.5 million in the first quarter of 2025. First quarter net loss was $18 million or $0.28 per share, compared to a net loss of $15.9 million or $0.25 per share in the first quarter of 2025.

Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was a loss of $5.5 million, compared to a loss of $3.8 million in the first quarter of 2025. Cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities totaled $51.9 million as of March 31, 2026. This represents an increase of approximately $3.5 million from the company’s balance sheet of $48.4 million as of December 31, 2025, and compares to an increase of approximately $0.4 million in the first quarter of 2025. Turning to our outlook for full year 2026.

We are reaffirming our full-year guidance, which we raised in conjunction with the announcement of preliminary operating results on April ninth, and expect full-year 2026 revenue to be in the range of $202 million to $212 million, representing a decline of 5% to 0% compared to the full-year 2025. We expect revenue declines to continue until our seasonally strongest fourth quarter. Fourth quarter revenue growth is expected to be largely supported by accelerating case volumes, the lapping of the mix shift dynamics, as well as contributions from our planned 2026 product launches.

In addition, we are reaffirming our expectation of a loss in adjusted EBITDA in the range of $4 million-$6 million for the full year of 2026, as compared to a loss of $3.9 million in full year of 2025. We also expect a reduction in cash usage of approximately 50% for full year 2026, as compared to full year of 2025. Supported by a strong and flexible balance sheet, we believe we are well-positioned to continue executing our strategic and growth initiatives for the foreseeable future. With that, I’ll turn the call over to the operator to open the line for questions.

Operator: Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. If you have a question or a comment at this time, please press star one one on your telephone. If your question has been answered or you wish to move yourself from the queue, please press star one one again. We’ll pause for a moment while we compile our Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Ryan Zimmerman with BTIG. Your line is open.

Izzy, Analyst, BTIG: Hey, good morning. This is Izzy on for Ryan. Thank you for taking the questions. I just wanted to start on your ASP and mix shift. Mark, it sounded like you are expecting the ASP headwinds to lapse around the Q4, but I was hoping you could speak to that a little bit more, and what we can expect moving throughout the year.

Mark Hair, Chief Financial Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Yeah, this is Mark. Thanks for the question. As we began to talk about at the end of last year, and we talked about on our last call, we’re really pleased with the launch of our new products. We know that some of these products have lower ASPs, and they’ve been readily adopted by a large portion of our surgeon base. John talked about how around 35% of our current customer base has already adopted these new products at these lower ASPs. This is the dynamic that we talked about over the last couple of calls. We anticipate to continue to see that until we begin to lap or to have an anniversary of when we made these new products available. It’s really in the third quarter of this year.

Some of these dynamics, we fully anticipate to continue. This is the exact dynamics that we talked about. We feel like the strategy is working. We’re getting these new products to our surgeons. They’re utilizing them, and that’s just gonna have a temporary headwind in the first part of this year, but that will change in the back half of this year.

Izzy, Analyst, BTIG: Appreciate it. Thank you. It looks like gross margins came in a little bit higher than Street expectations. As you guys continue to launch these new products and see the benefits from the products that were launched late in 2025, how should we think about gross margins going forward? Thanks for taking the questions.

Mark Hair, Chief Financial Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Another great question. You know, we are very focused on gross margins here. Our new products, we really have a goal to launch new products that have consistent gross margins with what we’ve had historically. Some of these margins do fluctuate from quarter to quarter. We benefit in the seasonally strong fourth quarter when we have higher volumes. There are, of course, lots of.

Pieces and components that impact gross margins overall. We’re pleased with what we did in Q1. They came in strong, a little bit better than what we had anticipated, so we view that as very positive. We’ll continue to launch new products to keep in line with this range of, you know, high 70% gross margins. We believe that we can continue to do that going forward.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Ben Haynor with Lake Street Capital Markets. Your line is open.

Ben Haynor, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. You know, great to see that so many of the folks have adopted these new solutions. I guess, what are you seeing once they do? I mean, do they immediately kind of swing the pendulum to the, their ultimate adoption of, you know, the osteotomy solutions versus Lapiplasty? Do they swing too far? Do they work their way towards the ultimate mix? How has that tracked from what you’ve seen thus far?

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Hi, Ben. It’s John. Thanks for the question. You know, we’ve seen a, in general, strong adoption by our customer base, you know, with these new products. Once they, you know, get trained on them, do a couple cases, they tend to be pretty sticky. You know, we’re pleased with the way that’s going there. You know, it’s still early days, but, you know, as mentioned, we’ve got now 35% of our, you know, base Lapiplasty customers now using, you know, one of these 3 new solutions in their practice, and we’re working on getting more of them using 2 and 3 over time. We want them to be full portfolio surgeons as we move, you know, through time.

We’ve also seen, and it’s early, but some adoption of Lapiplasty technologies with surgeons that came in initially to Treace through using one of those new three products. Too early to say what the materiality of that is gonna be. We’ll maybe comment on that as we get more experience later through the year, but it is good to see that dynamic as well.

Ben Haynor, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay. Yeah, that’s helpful.

Mark Hair, Chief Financial Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Sorry, sorry. This is Mark. I think another important point to realize is that as we’ve offered these new product options, we don’t necessarily believe that they’re replacing our Lapiplasty procedures as well. We think it’s gonna be additive and allow them to have more options for the patient needs. Where that ultimately lands, what that mix ultimately is, you know, it’s still to be determined, but we don’t necessarily believe I think and your question was, is it replacing Lapiplasty? We think it’s providing additional options for the patient needs and for those surgeons to address whatever deformity that they see.

Ben Haynor, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay. I get I’m looking at it. Then, you know, as you bring out more and more solutions in the portfolio and once we folks adopt the full portfolio, of course, I guess what percentage or proportion of the foot and ankle cases that are done every year could the current and, you know, to be launched in the near future Treace products find their way into? Is it, you know, 50%, 70%, 90%? What, what does that look like?

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Yeah. Thanks, Ben. John here. It’s hard to say the exact percentage, but as we launch products like SuperBite, and now we have the broad portfolio that includes MTP fusion solutions, as well as, you know, three different ways to treat a bunion, four different ways to treat a bunion, you’re definitely getting into a large being able to cover a large percentage of the surgeon’s, you know, workhorse foot and ankle cases, I would say. You know, the sales force is pretty excited about that. The addition of SuperBite, for instance, in the early innings here, you know, they’re displacing some competitors that used to sit in the room, you know, just to use that compression screw technology, and now they have their own.

I think it’s gonna be interesting to play out over time, and we do definitely appeal to a much broader base of the surgeon’s overall caseload as we work through the year and get these products out.

Ben Haynor, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay. On the SuperBite set or kit, you know, how many SKUs are in that? You know, how does that stack up versus, you know, competitive offerings on the screw side?

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Yeah, Ben, we’ve tried to do this in a very capital efficient and inventory efficient way. As we thought about launching a compression screw system, we didn’t wanna have high capital, high inventory burden. Traditionally, these systems are have a lot of SKUs, hundreds and hundreds, maybe 1,000. So we’ve tried to design this and bring forward a system that I don’t have the exact number of SKUs, but it’s probably in the range of 100 or so sellable items in our system, and that makes it very lean and very efficient and something we can manage very well and we can, you know, provide in good volumes to the field so they can really make maximum impact as we get these out.

Ben Haynor, Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets: Okay, great. That’s all I have. Thanks for taking the questions, gentlemen.

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Thanks, Ben. Appreciate it.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Rick Wise from Stifel. Your line is open.

Rick Wise, Analyst, Stifel: Good morning to you both. I wanted to dig a little more into the sales cadence outlook for this year and with your patience talk about the setup for 2027. I mean, it seems like John, the strategy clearly is visible. It seems to be working. We’re in the early days of the strategy becoming increasingly visible. Sort of a 2-part high level, looking at the far out kind of question. You beat the first quarter, you beat and raised. As you look at the rest of the year, how do we think about the outlook and your confidence?

I know you want to stay conservative, but, if you continue this first quarter pattern in the second and the third, hopefully in the fourth quarter, is it gonna be, you’re gonna do a little better potentially because of penetration? Is it gonna happen, is it the product side? Is it something to do with your execution? Just help us understand, you know, where, you know, more of the same could happen as we go through 2026. I’ll ask Mark the tough question. Mark, I know it’s hard to talk about 2027 in precise terms, but my numbers, my current numbers, have you growing I’m being cautious, 5% next year. The consensus numbers are more like 9% or 10%.

I mean, is 5%-10% the right way to think about the potential for 2027 if you execute well and all these products roll out and you see the trends we’re seeing now? It sounds potentially very conservative. Help us think through all that. Sorry for the long-winded questions.

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Okay. Thanks. Thanks, Rick. I appreciate it. I’ll take the first one, and then Mark can handle part 2 on future consensus. You know, the way the way the year, you know, lines up is, like Mark said before, you know, we’ve got some headwinds due to these ASP-related mix shift dynamics related to the 3 new bunion systems that we launched in Q3 last year. As we get to Q3, that headwind starts to abate. Additionally, in Q3 and increasingly Q4, you know, we’re going to benefit from the introduction of our 2026 launches, some of which carry, you know, favorable ASPs relative to the 3 products we launched last year. You know, SpeedTMT, as well as cases that’ll combine our SuperBite screws, SpeedXM plates, and biologics.

Those get us into some higher dollar ASP midfoot and rearfoot cases. You know, we also have some new sales reps that are going to be ramping up in the back half of this year. That’s kind of the way we see the year, and we’re going to keep our heads down. We’re pleased with our Q1. We’re not satisfied. We got a lot of work to do, but we got a lot of good things going on with this business as we build out a more robust and diversified portfolio with some new, you know, growth channels in it with these different product lines.

Mark Hair, Chief Financial Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Hey, Rick, this is Mark. I’ll just say John is right on there. We’re gonna look at this one quarter at a time. We’re pleased with the results in Q1. They came in as expected, which is good for our progress during this year. I’ll start there that, you know, it’s one quarter at a time, and we’re gonna focus on, you know, getting this right this year. With respect to next year, you know, we have not given any formal guidance with respect to 2027. I can tell you that we are expecting to return to revenue growth in the fourth quarter this year. I think it’s gonna be a little bit early to talk about 2027.

Next year will be impacted on what is our momentum as we’re exiting this year. I think the positive story is that although we did have a decline this quarter and we may have some revenue declines, you know, in the short term here, we believe that we’ll have increased momentum with case volumes as well as the top-line revenue growth as we’re exiting the year. Before we give formal guidance to next year, you know, we wanna better understand that momentum. We do believe that we’re gonna be set up very well for next year as we fully anticipate or plan to exit this year with increased revenue growth.

Rick Wise, Analyst, Stifel: Thank you. Just one more from me. Maybe, John, you could talk about just the general environment. We didn’t hear from Stryker this quarter because of their cyber issues as clearly as we normally would. What’s your sense of the market environment? Are consumers behaving as usual? Are doctors Is the environment an okay one or as usual or stable? What are you seeing? How are you thinking about that aspect of the rest of the year? Thank you both.

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Yeah, appreciate it, Rick. You know, when we entered this year, you know, we said that we expected, you know, the macro headwind type of dynamics, consumer sentiment-related impacts on elective procedures to continue into this year. We didn’t really see a reason things were going to be, you know, dramatically shifting. You know, Q1 kind of played out within our expectations. Really didn’t see any surprises in, you know, patient flow and surgeon activity beyond what we anticipated. You know, we don’t have independent data yet to tell us what the overall market trends were for bunions or foot and ankle elective in Q1. Again, it played out as we expected pretty much.

We’re gonna continue to focus on our strategies, getting these new products out in full supply, training more doctors and gaining new customers and accounts and work our way through quarter-to-quarter.

Rick Wise, Analyst, Stifel: Makes sense. Thank you both.

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Thanks, Rick.

Operator: One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Lilia-Celine Lozada with J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.

Lilia-Celine Lozada, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Hi. Thanks so much for taking the question. The new MIS osteotomy products understandably get a lot of the attention, I’m hoping you could share some color on how Lapiplasty has trended over the last few quarters. How meaningful of a contributor has the pull through from Percuplasty, Nanoplasty been to reinvigorating growth in Lapiplasty? Do you see Lapiplasty Lightning as more of an incremental update, or is it something that could have a material impact on ASP and volumes?

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Hi, Lily. Thank you for the question. It’s John. You know, as we said in our last call, there’s been, you know, patient surgeon preference changes to more MIS options and even to more MTP fusions on some bunion patients over time, MTPs where they might have some arthritis in the great toe joint. We’ve seen a great uptick in response to our MTP fusion offering. It’s doing very well out there, and that product does carry a higher average selling price than the average price on our MIS product. You know, we like to see that. With respect to Lapidus, there continues to be strong demand for Lapiplasty, you know, where Lapiplasty is indicated in the surgeon’s algorithm at this point in time.

We have seen, you know, as alluded to, what we believe to be some pull through from surgeons that came in new to Treace through one of our 3 new bunion products, adopting Lapiplasty. Now, it’s early on, these numbers aren’t large yet, we’ll be watching that through the year. We do believe, you know, in the advancements of Lightning and SpeedTMT, more availability of IntelliGuide. These are tools that can help us appeal to more surgeons, as we bring those into more force into the market late this year.

Lilia-Celine Lozada, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Great. Just as a follow-up, could you talk a bit more about some of the competitive dynamics and your competitive positioning now that you’re sort of going more head-to-head with the other ortho players in MIS osteotomy. Are you seeing adoption of these new products primarily from existing Lapiplasty accounts? Are you seeing a good amount of competitive switches? Any color you could share on how that competitive positioning has evolved over the last few quarters would be helpful. Thanks.

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Sure, Lily. I think it’s been, you know, initially we probably had more uptake in our existing customer base, as these products have gotten out in greater supply and the sales reps have become more familiar with them, we train more surgeons on them, more surgeons are using them, they’re talking to their peer surgeons about these new MIS systems. Our instrumentation is fantastic. It really is, you know, it’s extremely helpful in allowing these surgeons to do a more reproducible, predictable MIS osteotomy procedure. As we’ve gotten more into the market over more time, we’ve definitely been seeing more competitive conversions. Our sales team’s expertise, our training, and the efficacy of these products is what’s making it happen. We’re seeing a good uptake.

We’re seeing displacement of competitors, not only in the MIS systems, but with our SpeedMTP too, and that’s a big important segment of the market. We like what we’re seeing across all fronts, both how they’re being implemented within our existing Lapiplasty user base and the adoption we’re getting from new surgeons and competitive conversions.

Lilia-Celine Lozada, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Great. Thanks for taking the questions.

John Treace, Chief Executive Officer, Treace Medical Concepts: Sure. Thank you.

Operator: I’m not showing any further questions at this time. As such, this does conclude today’s presentation. We thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect and have a wonderful day.