Stocks/ORGO

ORGO

Organogenesis Holdings Inc.
Healthcare·Drug Manufacturers - Specialty & Generic
$2.57
$331M market cap
Claude Rating
3/10SELL
Revenue
$514.5M
Free Cash Flow
$17.1M
Rev Growth
-57.1%
FCF Margin
3.3%
P/FCF
19.4x
EV/FCF
18.1x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
--
Fair Value
$1.50
Upside
-41.6%

Organogenesis Holdings Inc., a regenerative medicine company develops, manufactures, and commercializes solutions for the advanced wound care, and surgical and sports medicine markets in the United States. The company's advanced wound care products include Affinity, an amniotic membrane wound covering in which viable cells growth factors/cytokines, and ECM proteins in the native tissue are preserved; Apligraf, a bioengineered living cell therapy that produce spectrum of cytokines and growth fact

2-Year Price History

$2.66-3.3%
$3.0$4.0$5.0$6.0volMay 24Sep 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q180.0-4.0---8.0---9.6-2.846.2----------
Est2027-Q4120.014.4--6.0--9.6-3.055.8----------
Est2027-Q395.04.8--0.5--1.9-2.946.2----------
Est2027-Q285.0-1.7---6.8---6.8-3.044.3----------
Est2027-Q170.0-10.5---15.4---14.0-2.851.1----------
Est2026-Q4115.011.5--3.5--5.8-3.565.1----------
Est2026-Q372.0-14.4---20.2---10.8-2.959.3----------
Est2026-Q255.0-30.3---35.8---22.0-2.870.1----------
Act2026-Q137.2-52.7-65.0-56.221.118.0-3.292.170.9127.8-82.2%--7.3x
Act2025-Q4225.669.763.343.739.434.8-4.793.7145.6132.265.3%295.4x7.9x
Act2025-Q3150.927.320.721.63.10.8-2.264.440.8130.934.2%65.7x23.0x
Act2025-Q2100.8-6.3-12.6-9.4-32.9-36.5-3.673.140.8126.9-18.8%--163.8x
Act2025-Q186.7-15.9-26.8-18.8-19.9-23.6-3.6110.042.6126.3-34.9%----
Act2024-Q4126.714.610.27.710.97.6-3.4135.643.3132.212.3%240.0x17.9x
Act2024-Q3115.210.76.212.38.76.1-2.694.3107.7133.912.0%22.7x30.5x
Act2024-Q2130.2-9.7-13.9-17.04.72.9-1.989.9112.9132.6-27.9%-15.7x25.4x
Act2024-Q1110.00.1-3.9-2.1-10.2-12.4-2.288.6118.7131.9-4.5%0.3x14.7x
Act2023-Q499.711.0-1.3-0.610.67.3-3.3104.3119.4131.9-1.5%21.9x10.6x
Act2023-Q3108.513.98.13.216.710.8-6.098.2125.0133.49.1%31.4x11.6x
Act2023-Q2117.313.29.75.38.71.2-7.588.9124.8133.111.3%22.3x10.3x
Act2023-Q1107.6-0.1-4.0-3.0-5.1-12.6-7.688.7124.3131.1-4.8%-0.1x11.7x
Act2022-Q4115.513.38.77.57.8-2.9-10.7102.5123.8131.913.5%--12.9x
Act2022-Q3116.94.51.80.25.5-5.0-10.4107.3130.7132.22.1%7.8x--
Act2022-Q2121.414.711.98.710.24.0-6.2112.3131.6132.617.2%20.1x--
Act2022-Q197.12.4-0.1-0.91.4-5.3-6.7107.9130.2132.8-0.2%3.3x--

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude3/10SELLFV: $1.50

Organogenesis is a deeply distressed regenerative medicine company facing an existential regulatory reset. The CMS policy changes have collapsed the company's core Advanced Wound Care business by 63%, with no clear timeline for recovery. While management claims market share gains relative to the industry, the absolute revenue destruction is catastrophic. The $92M cash buffer and zero debt provide survival runway, but the 38M+ convertible preferred shares create massive dilution risk that could effectively wipe out common equity value if the recovery takes longer than expected. Executive enrichment during restructuring, class-action lawsuits, impairment triggers, and 22.6% short interest all signal a business in crisis. Even in a recovery scenario, structural ASP compression and a more competitive landscape mean margins will remain well below historical peaks. The risk/reward is severely skewed to the downside for common shareholders.

Catalyst CMS clarification on wastage/discarded product policies could unlock clinician adoption and rapid revenue recovery; ReNu BLA approval would open a new $1B+ knee OA market; successful PuraPly AM commercialization could offset skin substitute declines
Risk CMS regulatory uncertainty persists beyond 2026, causing permanent destruction of the Advanced Wound Care market and forcing the company to raise capital at highly dilutive terms, potentially through conversion of the 38M preferred shares
Trend
DETERIORATING
Mgmt
4/10
Quarter
2/10
Exp. Move
-15.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Organogenesis Holdings Inc. faced a tumultuous Q1 2026, with revenue falling 58% year-over-year to $36.3 million. This decline was driven by a 63% drop in Advanced Wound Care sales following CMS policy changes and commentary on product wastage that caused widespread clinician confusion. In response, the company lowered its full-year 2026 revenue guidance to $270M–$310M and executed a restructuring plan to save $14 million annually. Despite these challenges, management reported gaining market share relative to a 63% industry contraction and highlighted the completion of the BLA submission for ReNu and positive trial results for PuraPly AM. The company ended the quarter with $92.1 million in cash and no debt, though it realized a substantial adjusted EBITDA loss of $48.2 million. Executives expect the operating environment to remain difficult through the first nine months of the year, with a projected return to profitability in Q4 2026. The primary lingering concern remains the lack of clarity from CMS regarding 'discarded product' policies, which has specifically hampered the utilization of the company's high-end PMA-approved skin substitutes.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$2.57
Market Cap$331M
Enterprise Value$309M
P/S Ratio0.6x
P/FCF19.4x
EV/FCF18.1x
FCF Margin (TTM)3.3%
FCF Yield5.2%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution1.2%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$514.5M
Net Income$-0.3M
Free Cash Flow$17.1M

Revenue Growth (YoY)-57.1%
EBITDA Margin7.4%
Net Margin-0.1%
FCF Margin3.3%
CapEx % of Revenue2.7%
SBC % of Revenue1.3%
ROIC-0.4%
WC Change % Rev-1.7%
Interest Coverage58.5x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$-0.06
-102.5% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$-82M
− Net Debt$-21M
= Fair Equity$-8M
Revenue Growth21.8% → 2.0%
FCF Margin3.3% → 6.0%
Discount Rate17.0%
Terminal EV/FCF8.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float27.6%
Short Shares15.9M
Days to Cover14.3
Change (vs Prior)+21.0%
Short % Float History
27.60%+7.10pp
16.0%18.0%20.0%22.0%24.0%26.0%28.0%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)96%
Put IV (ATM)--
ATM Spread28.2%
Call $OI (near money)$21K
Put $OI (near money)$14K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$2.5
Major Expirations3
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$2.50$0.10/$0.8539--/$0.75200
$5.00--/$0.75307$0.10/$2.902
$7.50--/$0.7535$4.30/$5.501
$10.00--/$0.7550$6.70/$8.200
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth-39.4%
Forward FCF Margin-13.2%
Forward EBITDA Margin-14.0%
Forward P/FCF--
Forward EV/FCF--
Forward Int. Coverage-139.9x
Model Risk Score9/10
Bankruptcy Odds12%
Est. Borrow Rate14.0%
Terminal EV/FCF8.0x
LT Growth2.0%
LT FCF Margin6.0%

Employees

Headcount869
Revenue / Employee$592,035
Gross Profit / Employee$417,623
2022: 1,030 → 2023: 862 → 2024: 869 → 2025: 854 (-6% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET SELLING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net sellers — bought 7.7% of float, sold 12.6%. 2 filers moved >1% of shares (0 buying, 2 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
-5.0% of float (net)
Bought 7.7% · Sold 12.6%
120 filers reported (last quarter: 147)

Ownership composition

Active
30.6%(-29.2% YoY)
104 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
8.1%(-13.3% YoY)
5 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.7%(-0.2% YoY)
5 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
100.0%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
MORGAN STANLEY$27.5M$4.02−$52K−$1.2M-0.3%$1.65T
Soleus Capital Management, L.P.$23.9M$3.41+$237K−$5.7M-0.7%$2.47B
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$11.6M$2.92+$329K−$608K-0.2%$5.69T
First Light Asset Management, LLC$8.3M$3.71−$863K+$8.3M-10.1%$1.12B
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$6.9M$3.60+$379K−$496K-0.4%$480.92B
D. E. Shaw & Co., Inc.$5.4M$3.79+$734K+$3.4M+0.1%$118.02B
Assenagon Asset Management S.A.$4.7M$3.76−$8.5M+$3.9M+0.1%$62.57B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$4.2M$5.09−$7K+$190K+2.3%$1.61T
DEUTSCHE BANK AG\$4.0M$3.52−$3.8M−$1.7M-0.3%$302.17B
ACADIAN ASSET MANAGEMENT LLC$3.7M$3.03+$276K−$1.8M-0.5%$70.48B
STATE STREET CORPPassive$3.6M$4.32+$14K−$985K-0.2%$2.89T
RENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGIES LLC$2.5M$3.79+$592K+$59K+1.2%$63.91B
AQR CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC$2.1M$2.89+$569K−$29K-0.2%$218.19B
CHARLES SCHWAB INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT INC$2.1M$3.01+$410K+$106K+1.0%$645.81B
SG Americas Securities, LLCMM$1.9M$4.18+$534K+$629K-0.1%$90.20B
NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive$1.3M$4.95+$48K−$92K-0.2%$755.34B
SPHERA FUNDS MANAGEMENT LTD.$1.3M$2.37+$1.3M+$1.3M-9.9%$575M
BANK OF AMERICA CORP /DE/$1.3M$3.49+$53K+$112K-0.1%$1.36T
CITADEL ADVISORS LLC$1.3M$3.64−$59K+$729K-0.4%$138.22B
GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC$1.2M$4.05+$242K+$233K-0.2%$760.93B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)BEARISH
Holders
-1.17%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-1.12%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-5.72%
18 buyers · $0.00B in
Sellers (this Q)
-1.26%
48 sellers · $0.11B out
alpha coverage: 100% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-3.6%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
-2.0%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-21.0%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+3.4%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+1.9%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-2.4%
Holder mid (any stock)
-6.5%
Holder rally (any stock)
-7.7%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

09.9M19.9M29.8M39.8M$2.13$3.50$4.88$6.25$7.622021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
DEERFIELD MANAGEMENT COMPANY, L.P. (SERIES C)MORGAN STANLEY11.6MSoleus Capital Management, L.P.10.1MGRANAHAN INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT INC/MAFirst Light Asset Management, LLC3.5MAssenagon Asset Management S.A.2.0MPURA VIDA INVESTMENTS, LLCMACQUARIE GROUP LTDGOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC520KDEUTSCHE BANK AG\1.7M

Analyst Coverage

Analyst Coverage
Price Targets
Last Year (1 analysts)$9.0025020.0%
Current Price$2.57

Corporate

Executive Compensation (2023-2025)

Direct Pay$52.5M
Incentive & Other$35.2M
Total Compensation$87.7M
% of Revenue6.2%

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$765K
5 txns · 3 insiders · 267,264 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$1.03M
1 txn · 1 insider · 200,000 sh
Major holders (≥10% beneficial owners)
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$1.67M
5 txns · 1 insider · 322,776 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2026-03-09BUYDriscoll Michael Josephdirector10,000$2.67$27K$602K
2026-03-09BUYLeibowitz Arthur Sdirector5,000$2.68$13K$780K
2025-12-16SELLNUSSDORF GLENN Hdirector200,000$5.14$1.03M$13.18M
2025-11-26SELLNUSSDORF GLENN Hdirector, 10 percent owner: 187,957$5.29$994K$14.63M
2025-11-25SELLNUSSDORF GLENN Hdirector, 10 percent owner: 12,043$5.30$64K$15.65M
2025-11-24SELLNUSSDORF GLENN Hdirector, 10 percent owner: 100,000$5.34$534K$15.84M
2025-06-10SELLNUSSDORF GLENN Hdirector, 10 percent owner: 18,620$3.56$66K$1.19M
2025-06-09SELLNUSSDORF GLENN Hdirector, 10 percent owner: 4,156$3.50$15K$1.24M
2025-06-06BUYFreedman Loriofficer: Chief Admin. and Legal Officer9,022$2.99$27K$2.53M
2025-06-05BUYFreedman Loriofficer: Chief Admin. and Legal Officer142,379$2.91$414K$2.43M
2025-06-04BUYFreedman Loriofficer: Chief Admin. and Legal Officer100,863$2.82$285K$1.96M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

32.4%retail+1.2pp
20.3%dark+2.4pp
week of 2026-04-13
0%20%40%60%80%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2026-Q1)
Product$36.3MNEW
Grant$1.0MNEW

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

ORGANOGENESIS HOLDINGS INC.: A Balance Sheet Liquidation in the Face of Operational Collapse

Overall Risk
8/10
Fraud
5/10
Dilution
9/10
Insolvency
6/10
Earnings Overstated
6/10
Hidden Liabilities
4/10
Legal
3/10
Audit Warnings
7/10
Hidden Upside
2/10
Contextually Acceptable
3/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

In May 2026, Organogenesis reported a significant Q1 2026 earnings miss, posting an EPS of -$0.44 (well below the -$0.29 expected) and revenue of $37.2 million against the $43.3 million forecast. Consequently, BTIG downgraded the stock from 'Buy' to 'Neutral' on May 8, 2026, removing its price target and citing 'untouchable' market conditions until reimbursement clarity is achieved. The stock has plummeted approximately 55% over the last six months (Investing.com, May 2026).

🐻 Bear Case

The core bear case centers on a massive projected revenue contraction of 25-38% for the full year 2026. This decline is driven by catastrophic shifts in the regulatory landscape, specifically the CMS withdrawal of final Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs) and the introduction of the preliminary WISeR model. These changes have removed the protective barriers that previously favored Organogenesis, exposing the company to a fragmented market while simultaneously creating 'reimbursement clawback' fears that are stalling product utilization (BTIG, Investing.com).

🚩 Red Flags

Multiple law firms, including Pomerantz LLP and Levi & Korsinsky, are investigating or have filed class-action lawsuits following a 10% stock drop in late 2025. These legal actions allege securities fraud and concern the failure of a Phase 3 trial for 'ReNu,' which missed its primary endpoint for pain reduction in September 2025. Additionally, the stock's 'Very Weak' momentum score of 8/100 and a 29% expected annual sales contraction signal a distressed business model (AAII, PR Newswire).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

The withdrawal of LCDs in late 2025 effectively leveled the playing field, forcing Organogenesis to compete with over 300 other market participants in the skin substitute category. Previously, regulatory hurdles limited the competition; now, the market is oversaturated, and the lack of clinical differentiation for some legacy products makes defending market share increasingly expensive and difficult (Pomerantz LLP, Seeking Alpha).

💬 Customer Sentiment

Customer sentiment among healthcare providers is increasingly risk-averse. Reports indicate that physicians are shifting away from advanced skin substitutes toward cheaper, basic wound dressings. This shift is not necessarily due to product efficacy but stems from a fear of CMS audits, wastage policy changes, and the high risk of reimbursement denials, which makes ORGO's premium-priced products a liability for clinical practices (BTIG Analyst Report).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-05-08

Operator: Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to the First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call for Organogenesis Holdings, Inc. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference call is being recorded, and the recording will be available on the company's website for replay shortly. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that our remarks today may contain forward-looking statements that are based on current expectations of management and involve inherent risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated, including the risks and uncertainties described in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including Item 1A, Risk Factors of the company's most recent annual report and its subsequently filed quarterly reports. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance upon any forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date made. Although it may voluntarily do so from time to time, the company undertakes no commitment to update or revise the forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by applicable securities laws. This call will also include references to certain financial measures that are not calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles or GAAP. We generally refer to these as non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of those non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable measures calculated and presented in accordance with GAAP are available in the earnings press release on the Investor Relations portion of our website. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Gary S. Gillheeney, Sr., Organogenesis Holdings President, Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the Board. Please go ahead, sir.
Gary Gillheeney: Thank you, operator, and welcome, everyone, to Organogenesis Holdings First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. I'm joined on the call today by Dave Francisco, our Chief Financial Officer. Let me start with a brief agenda of what we'll cover during our prepared remarks. I'll begin with an overview of our first quarter revenue results and provide an update on key developments in recent months. Dave will then provide you with an in-depth review of our first quarter financial results, our balance sheet and financial condition at quarter end as well as our financial outlook for 2026, which we updated in our press release this afternoon. Then I will provide you with some closing comments before we open the call up for questions. Beginning with a review of our revenue results for Q1, our revenue results reflect the significant challenges in the operating environment outlined on our fourth quarter call in February. Net revenue declined 58% year-over-year, driven by a 63% decline in sales of our Advanced Wound Care products. Sales of our Surgical & Sports Medicine products were flat year-over-year. And as expected, the withdrawal of the LCD coverage policies for skin substitutes announced on December 24 and comments regarding discarded products on December 30, resulted in clinicians' confusion and material disruption in the market during the first quarter. Our team performed well during this period of unprecedented disruption in the skin substitute market. As a leader in the industry, we expect to gain share in this new environment as we leverage the largest, most comprehensive portfolio across multiple FDA classifications. Despite the significant decline in our product revenue in the first quarter, we believe we enhanced our market share position as our unit volume outperformed the declines that have been reported across the industry. This is encouraging in isolation, but it's even more impressive when viewed in light of the significant impact on utilization of our PMA-approved product over the first 4 months of 2026 as a result of CMS' commentary on December 30. As discussed on our fourth quarter call, we believe the comments on December 30 regarding product wastage were intended to proactively address activity from certain competitors in the market that were attempting to exploit the new payment policies by focusing on larger sized skin substitute products, specifically amniotic products. The initial market response to these comments was significant clinician confusion and uncertainty. Unfortunately, these market headwinds have not abated. Rather, in some cases, it has resulted in clinicians moving away from skin substitutes entirely. While CMS' December 30 commentary represents what we believe to be a material but transient impact on 2026 revenue trends, the harm to patients is both more severe and enduring. The impact on utilization of our clinically superior PMA-approved skin substitutes doesn't just delay healing, it exposes our most vulnerable patients to preventable complications, infections, amputations and potentially fatal outcomes. This market disruption requires urgent correction. We believe the significant clinician confusion impacting utilization of our PMA-approved products as a result of the agency's comment on December 30 will be less of a headwind as we progress through 2026. We continue to believe CMS' efforts to overhaul coverage and payment for our market represents meaningful steps towards reform. We believe that CMS should clarify the comments on discarded products to stem the unintended impact on patient access to clinically validated skin substitute products, particularly PMA products like Apligraf. While we will continue to engage with CMS on this issue, our level of uncertainty as to the timing of a resolution has unfortunately increased since the fourth quarter earnings call in February. Accordingly, we have updated our expectations for total revenue in 2026 in this afternoon's press release. Our 2026 total revenue guidance now reflects the expectation that we see more measured improvement in clinician confusion and the overall operating environment as we move through the year. While we continue to expect improvement in our revenue results on a sequential basis over the balance of the year, our overall revenue outlook reflects a more measured recovery this year. The prolonged recovery is now expected to impact our financial results over the first 9 months of 2026 with a return to more normalized profitability now expected in the fourth quarter. Given the impact on our revenue expectations as a result of the prolonged recovery, we completed a restructuring in March. The restructuring included a workforce reduction of 88 employees and the closing of operations in our St. Petersburg, Florida facility and is expected to result in cost reductions of approximately $14 million on an annualized basis. While our 2026 is off to a difficult start, I want to make it clear that I am very optimistic about our future. We continue to expect to drive significant market share gains in the second half of 2026, and we remain confident in the long-term opportunity for Organogenesis. Our overall position is very strong, and it is from this strong position that we are making capital investments that will support our company's future growth and continued leadership. Before I turn the call over to David, I wanted to provide updates on some key regulatory and clinical developments in recent months, beginning with an update of our ReNu program. On April 28, we announced the completion of our BLA submission to the FDA. This represents a significant milestone in our effort to bring a new regenerative therapy intended to treat a large and growing unmet need in symptomatic knee osteoarthritis, a serious condition affecting more than 30 million Americans. We believe ReNu has the potential to meaningfully change the treatment paradigm by offering a nonsurgical biologic option designed to address pain and improve functionality, particularly for patients with severe disease who lack an approved nonsurgical option. We initiated a rolling BLA submission in December of 2025 with nonclinical modules and have now completed the application with the submission of the clinical and chemistry manufacturing and control modules. We are confident in the progress of our regulatory engagement, and we look forward to continuing our productive discussions with the FDA during the review process. We believe gathering robust and comprehensive clinical and real-world evidence is an essential component of developing a competitive product portfolio and driving further penetration in the markets where we compete. Science and evidence have always been core to our foundation. And as coverage policies evolve, evidence will be the currency of credibility, and we intend to remain a leader in these markets. On April 6, we announced the completion of a randomized controlled trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of PuraPly AM plus standard of care versus standard of care alone in the management of non-healing diabetic foot ulcers. This was a prospective multicenter randomized controlled trial of 170 patients. The trial achieved its primary endpoint, demonstrating statistically significant wound closure at 12 weeks compared to standard of care alone with a p-value of less than 0.0477. This strong performance is an important study, which underscores the clinical efficacy of PuraPly AM in the management of non-healing DFUs. These wounds pose a significant burden to patients and are extremely costly to our health care system. We believe publication of these impactful results will strongly support PuraPly AM's inclusion in future coverage policies, underscoring its critical role in the wound healing algorithm. Further demonstrating the clinical effectiveness of our PuraPly antimicrobial technology and advancing ReNu represents further validation of our long-term strategy to invest in expanding the body of clinical evidence supporting our technology and developing regenerative medicine solutions that address significant unmet medical needs as we expand our mission to include transformative new markets for Organogenesis. With more than 40 years in regenerative medicine and a diverse evidence-based portfolio of technologies in each FDA category, we believe we are best positioned in the skin substitute market and will continue to be a leader in the space with highly innovative, highly efficacious products that deliver on our mission of advancing healing and recovery beyond our customers' expectations. With that, let me turn the call over to David.
David Francisco: Thanks, Gary. I'll begin with a review of our first quarter financial results. Unless otherwise specified, all growth rates referenced during my prepared remarks are on a year-over-year basis. Net product revenue for the first quarter was $36.3 million, down 58% year-over-year. As Gary mentioned, these results came in below the expectations we provided on our Q4 call, which called for total revenue decline of approximately 50% year-over-year. Our Advanced Wound Care net product revenue for the first quarter was $29.5 million, down 63%. Net product revenue from Surgical & Sports Medicine products for the first quarter was $6.8 million, flat year-over-year. Our total revenue results for the first quarter include $1 million of income related to the grant issued from the Rhode Island Life Sciences Hub, offsetting the employee-related costs in our Smithfield facility. This compares to no impact in the prior year period. Gross profit for the first quarter was $10.5 million or 29% of net product revenue compared to 73% last year. First quarter cost of goods included $4.3 million of inventory write-down adjustments for excess and obsolete inventory resulting from a facility closure and LTD regulatory changes of $1 million and $3.3 million, respectively. Excluding inventory write-down adjustments, non-GAAP gross profit was $14.8 million or 41% of net product revenue. Operating expenses for the first quarter were $106.1 million compared to $113.4 million last year, a decrease of $7.3 million or 6%. Excluding cost of goods sold of $25.8 million for the first quarter and $23.7 million last year, our non-GAAP operating expenses were $80.3 million compared to $89.7 million last year, a decrease of $9.4 million or 10%. The year-over-year change in operating expenses, excluding cost of goods sold was driven by a $7.3 million or 10% decrease in SG&A expenses and a $6.6 million write-down of certain nonrecurring expenses, which impacted the first quarter of 2025, offset partially by a $4.5 million or 42% increase in research and development expenses. Operating loss for the first quarter was $68.9 million compared to an operating loss of $26.7 million last year, an increase of $42.1 million. Excluding noncash amortization and certain nonrecurring costs in both periods, our non-GAAP operating loss was $56 million compared to $19.3 million last year, an increase of $36.7 million year-over-year. GAAP net loss for the first quarter was $53.2 million compared to a net loss of $18.8 million last year, an increase in net loss of $34.3 million. Net loss to common stockholders for the first quarter was $56.2 million compared to a net loss of $21.6 million last year. Net loss to common stockholders includes the impact of the cumulative dividend and the noncash accretion to redemption value of our convertible preferred stock. Adjusted net loss for the first quarter was $43.7 million compared to $13.4 million last year. Adjusted net loss excludes after-tax impacts of intangible amortization, write-down of assets held for sale, employee severance and benefits as well as other exit costs associated with the company's restructuring activities and nonrecurring inventory write-down adjustments for excess and obsolete inventory. We've included a detailed reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP adjusted loss in our press release this afternoon. Adjusted EBITDA loss for the first quarter was $48.2 million compared to adjusted EBITDA loss of $12.5 million last year. Turning to the balance sheet. As of March 31, 2026, the company had $92.1 million in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash and no outstanding debt obligations compared to $94.3 million in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash and no outstanding debt obligations as of December 31, 2025. We believe we are well capitalized with our cash on hand and other components of working capital, availability under our revolving facility of up to $75 million and net cash flows from product sales. Turning to our 2026 outlook, which we updated this afternoon's press release. As Gary outlined earlier, our 2026 total revenue guidance now reflects the expectation that we see a more measured improvement in clinician confusion and overall operating environment as we move through the year. As a result, we now expect total revenue -- net revenue for the full year 2026 of $270 million to $310 million, representing a decline in the range of 45% to 52% year-over-year and compared to our prior guidance range, which assumed a decline in the range of 25% to 38% year-over-year. Note the change in our total revenue expectations is a result of revised assumptions regarding sales of our advanced wound care products. Our updated total revenue guidance continues to reflect the expectations we see sequential improvement in our revenue trends in the second quarter, however, at a more measured rate versus what our prior guidance assumed, resulting in first half revenue decline in the range of approximately 52% to 49% year-over-year. We continue to expect strong sequential revenue growth in both the third and fourth quarters of 2026. However, the low end of our guidance range now assumes a more prolonged recovery in market-related headwinds, resulting in a second half revenue decline similar to the first half of 2026. With respect to our profitability expectations, our updated guidance continues to assume improved quarterly adjusted EBITDA performance on a sequential basis and positive adjusted EBITDA generation in the second half of 2026. Given the lower revenue expectations for 2026 and the related impact on gross profit, we have adjusted our assumptions for operating expenses, excluding cost of goods sold to reduce the impact on our profitability and cash flow this year. Specifically, we now expect to reduce our operating expenses, excluding cost of goods sold, approximately 25% year-over-year in 2026, including more than 30% year-over-year in the second half of 2026. Note these updated assumptions are inclusive of estimated cost savings in the third and fourth quarters related to our recently announced restructuring of approximately $7 million. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Gary for closing remarks.
Gary Gillheeney: Thanks, Dave. In closing, the first quarter was a challenging start to the year as expected. I want to thank our team for their performance and resilience during a period of unprecedented market disruption. But despite the headwinds, we believe we've enhanced our market share position, met a significant milestone by completing our renewed BLA submission and generated strong clinical evidence supporting PuraPly AM, further validating our long-term strategy. We expect the operating environment will remain difficult through the first 9 months of 2026 with sequential revenue improvement over the balance of the year and a return to more normalized profitability in the fourth quarter. We remain confident in our position as a leader in regenerative medicine with a diverse and evidence-based portfolio and more than 40 years of innovation in service of our mission to advance healing and recovery for the patients who depend on us most. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator to open the call up for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Ryan Zimmerman with BTIG.
Iseult McMahon: This is Iseult on for Ryan. I was hoping to start with spending some time on the first quarter performance. Could you unpack a little bit what you guys saw throughout the quarter and particularly what changed between the fourth quarter call in February and today in terms of volumes? I mean what was better or worse than expected?
Gary Gillheeney: Sure. I'll start. Well, we've certainly seen a lot of disruption as we expected you normally would see with a change in reimbursement. But the level of complexity of that change was more than we've seen in the past. So you had 2 sites of care with complete changes in the reimbursement model in addition to changing the actual reimbursement for each product. We also had the issue in the first quarter around WISeR. So WISeR really did have an impact in the first quarter. We didn't expect some of the challenges that they've had technology-wise in the states in which pre-authorization is required. There was also an issue with a large MAC that was struggling to process claims the entire first quarter. In fact, we just recently started to process claims for March. And unfortunately, customers have to rebuild for claims in January and February. So all of that disruption on top of what you normally see when there's a reimbursement change. So we've typically guided to a 3-month impact of a reimbursement change. But with the additional complexity that we're seeing now and the issue of wastage, which came out in December 30, has created enormous confusion in the market, which is why this prolonged delay in market recovery. So what we've seen is a contraction of the market by about 63%. That's an enormous contraction in the market. We're certainly down less than that. We believe we've taken share. In fact, our core brands, excluding our Apligraf brand are down about 22%. So we're definitely seeing some share gain from our perspective, but just contraction in the market, the issues around wastage and the technology challenges with the MAC and WISeR are things that we didn't see when we had our call in February. Dave, anything to add?
David Francisco: No, no, that's absolutely right. Let them all.
Iseult McMahon: I appreciate that. And what, if anything -- or do you have any line of sight as to when we might get an update from CMS clarifying some of their comments around these wastage policies?
Gary Gillheeney: We don't have any direct clarity on when they would do that. We're still engaged with them. Our objective is to either get them to exempt PMAs because of all of the confusion around the handling and the billing and usage of a biologic like our product Apligraf or to come out with an indication for use. There's been no instructions or clarity on exactly what their wastage policy is. So we don't have clarity on when they will change or when they'll bring clarity, but we're certainly bringing clarity to our customers, and we're seeing more and more comfort in utilizing the product Apligraf appropriately for patients that need it.
Iseult McMahon: Got it. And then last one for me, kind of dovetails into guidance for the year. I was just curious what gives you confidence in that back half recovery? I understand this updated range accounts for more moderation through the remainder of the year. But have you seen anything through April and May that gives you more confidence?
David Francisco: Yes. We did see improvement month-over-month in the first quarter, and that's continued into April. So that's one part of it. And what we've always expected here, as Gary mentioned, we're going to continue to gain share. But there's 2 things. One is the customer confusion should abate as we move through the year. And then in addition to that, we think the competition dynamics will be quite a bit different at that point as well. So that's how we've built up our forecast with sequential growth quarter-over-quarter as we move through the year.
Operator: We are currently showing no remaining questions in the queue at this time. This does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation.