Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Health Care

AngioDynamics Inc (ANGO) Q3 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

ANGO Earnings Call - Final Transcript

AngioDynamics Inc. (NASDAQ: ANGO) Q3 2021 earnings call dated Mar. 30, 2021.

Corporate Participants:

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Matthew Mishan — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Presentation:

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the AngioDynamics’ Fiscal Year 2021 Third Quarter Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions]. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions].

The news release detailing the fiscal 2021 third quarter results crossed the wire earlier this morning and is available on the Company’s website. This conference call is also being broadcast live over the Internet at the Investors section of the Company’s website at www.angiodynamics.com, and the webcast replay of the call will be available at the same site approximately one hour after the end of today’s call.

Before we begin, I would like to caution listeners that during the course of this conference call, the Company will make projections or forward-looking statements regarding future events, including statements about expected revenue, adjusted earnings and gross margins for fiscal year 2021 as well as trends that may continue. Management encourages you to review the Company’s past and future filings with the SEC, including without limitation, the Company’s Forms 10-Q and 10-K, which identify specific factors that may cause actual results or events to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements.

The Company will also discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures during this call. Management uses these measures to establish operational goals and review operational performance and believes that these measures may assist investors in analyzing the underlying trends in the Company’s business over time.

Investors should consider these non-GAAP measures in addition to, not as a substitute for or as superior to financial reporting measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. A slide package offering insight into the Company’s financial results is also available on the Investors section of the Company’s website under Events and Presentations. This presentation should be read in conjunction with the press release discussing the Company’s operational results and financial performance during this morning’s conference call.

I’d now like to turn the call over to Jim Clemmer, AngioDynamics’ President and Chief Executive Officer. Mr. Clemmer?

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Melissa. Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us for AngioDynamics’ fiscal 2021 third quarter earnings call. Joining me on today’s call is Steve Trowbridge, AngioDynamics’ Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Steve will provide a detailed analysis of our third quarter financial performance.

In line with commentary on our previous calls this fiscal year, both Steve and I will be providing slightly more intra-quarter detail than we would during a normal operating environment. I am very pleased with our performance during our third quarter, which continued to face challenges from the COVID-19 global pandemic. Third quarter revenue was $71.2 million, representing growth of 2% over our third quarter last year.

I am particularly encouraged with our performance, especially in the face of the clear impacts of COVID-19 on procedure volumes across our entire business in January and in the first half of February. In addition, our third quarter year-over-year revenue growth last year was 9% which of course did not include any COVID-19 impact, so our third quarter of ’21 was already facing a challenging comp.

Our revenue growth was driven by strong performances from key technology platforms, particularly Auryon and AngioVac. We also generated adjusted EPS of $0.02 during the quarter. As we continue to balance near-term cash and expense management with strategic investments in our key platforms. Our adjusted EPS did see a $0.04 benefit during the quarter related to certain expense reimbursement provided by the CARES Act. Steve will provide some additional detail on this later in the call.

Consistent with what many businesses have discussed, January and the first part of February experienced more acute impacts from COVID than what we experienced during the October through December. That said, we began to see improving trends towards the end of the quarter, and during the month of March.

In the face of these challenges, I am especially proud of the way our team continues to navigate the ongoing global health crisis, while investing in and delivering on key growth initiatives and building upon the momentum we’ve generated through the first half of our fiscal year. We will continue to prioritize driving top line growth while taking a disciplined financial approach to managing our business.

Diving deeper into our performance in the quarter, the positive trend within our Auryon business continued into the third quarter. We reported Auryon revenue of $3.3 million in the quarter, bringing our total FY’21 year-to-date revenue to $6.5 million. As we stand here today, given the continued sequential growth, Auryon is trending towards the high end of our previously provided range of $7 million to $10 million.

Third quarter procedure volumes remained robust for our AngioVac platform with revenue growing 27% year-over-year. Additionally, as I mentioned during last quarter’s call, we are thrilled about the upcoming planned launch of our new multi-purpose, mechanical thrombectomy device later this calendar year.

This device will expand the breadth of our AngioVac platform, allowing us to serve a much larger segment of the venous thromboembolism market than we currently serve. We also believe that our current on circuit AngioVac system will continue to be a growth leader in the complex, right atrium focused market. And we expect the new multi-purpose mechanical thrombectomy device will provide meaningful incremental growth as we have the opportunity to participate in more cases in this larger, fast growing market.

NanoKnife probe sales were strong in the United States, particularly offsetting softness in international markets and a year-over-year decline in capital sales.

We did anticipate this decline in capital sales even prior to the added headwinds from COVID-19. The continued positive momentum in the U.S. is a direct result of two main drivers. First, our increased capital base that we developed last year, and second, increased awareness fostered by the DIRECT study.

We remained focused on investing in the NanoKnife [Technical Issues] as we progress toward expanding indications and an improving OUS environment in the future. On the internal R&D investment front, our growth investments continued in the third quarter as we supported our key platforms already in the market as well as products in our development pipeline.

We will continue to invest in internal R&D and sales and marketing resources to further advance our current portfolio and expand into larger, faster growing addressable markets. M&A remained on the back burner during the third quarter as we continue to focus on balancing growth and profitability in the face of COVID related challenges.

However, strategic opportunistic M&A remains a key piece of our long-term growth strategy, and we continuously monitor the landscape for these opportunities. In the near-term, we anticipate maintaining our disciplined approach to capital allocation and expense management. Turning to clinical and regulatory, we are excited about our progress with the PATHFINDER 1 study as we completed enrollment and surpassed 100 enrolled patients during the third quarter.

This milestone allows us to collect a valuable, scientifically backed data via assessments at six, 12 and 24-month intervals following the patients procedure in which we believe we’ll further drive Auryon and AngioDynamics in the large and fast growing atherectomy market. Turning to our DIRECT study, as of today, we have 22 sites that have secured IRB approval which you’ll note is down from the 26 that we reported on our second quarter earnings call. We remain pleased with the number of leading hospitals that we have operating today.

We had several lower volume sites that we elected to decommission, but we don’t expect this to have a direct impact on our execution. Moving forward, we continue to anticipate shifting efforts from clinic — from additional site initiation to patient screening and enrollment. As can be expected, screening activity has remained challenged in the current environment due to COVID-related protocols at many hospitals.

Before I turn the call over to Steve, I would like to thank our team for their continued hard work and dedication to the AngioDynamics’ mission. These last 12 months have been difficult for everyone, but throughout this unexpected journey, our team has remained diligently focused on driving success for our customers, our patients and our shareholders.

With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Steve Trowbridge, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer to review the quarter in more detail.

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Jim and good morning everyone. Before I begin, I’d like to point you to the presentation on our Investor Relations website summarizing the key items associated with our quarterly results. Our net sales for the third quarter of fiscal 2021 increased 2% year-over-year to $71.2 million. As Jim mentioned earlier, we’re very pleased with this performance given the continued COVID-19 headwinds and the strong performance during last year’s third quarter, prior to any COVID impacts.

During our last earnings call, we indicated that we might see a more pronounced impact from COVID-19 during our third quarter than we had seen during the second quarter, and that’s exactly what happened. While December trends remained largely positive, January and the first part of February exhibited clear slowdowns. We are pleased to see reversal of this negative trend during the back half of February and this positive trend has continued through March.

While we are not back to pre-COVID levels yet, we are encouraged by the current trends coupled with accelerating vaccine administration as we drive toward our fiscal year-end. Turning to our results for the quarter, our total VIT business increased 8.8% year-over-year, and the continued strength highlights the success we are having with two important growth products: AngioVac which grew 27% year-over-year; and Auryon. Auryon contributed $3.3 million in revenue during the third quarter, building upon the momentum we saw following the product’s official commercial launch in the second quarter.

We continue to see Auryon as an important growth driver in our VIT business as we invest in further building out our commercial presence and supporting the PATHFINDER study. This growth in AngioVac and Auryon was partially offset by a decline of 16% from the prior year in our Venous portfolio. This weakness continues to be driven by lower procedure volumes largely tied to COVID impacts.

We have seen this softness in our Venous portfolio throughout the course of this fiscal year and we expect it to continue through the fourth quarter. Although, we note that comparisons during our fourth quarter for most of our products across all of our businesses will be muddied by the acute impacts from COVID that we experienced during that quarter last year.

Vascular Access revenue increased 0.7% during the quarter, driven by growth in mid lines for the third straight quarter, as well as growth in dialysis. While revenue from our Oncology business declined 10.1% during the quarter, NanoKnife disposable sales in the U.S. grew 12% year-over-year. This growth was offset by a decline in NanoKnife probe sales in the rest of the world, resulting in an overall decline in probe sales of 7%.

International NanoKnife probe sales and the broader oncology business were impacted by market pressures in EMEA and APAC, lower capital sales and a 9.8% decline in sales of our microwave and RF ablation products. Our Oncology business was clearly impacted by the increased pressure on procedure volumes experienced during January and the first half of February. In spite of this, we have continued to benefit from the larger installed base of NanoKnife units and we anticipate that we will continue to see positive probe sales growth in the U.S. and ultimately in international geographies as market pressures abate and procedure volumes rebound.

Moving down the income statement, our gross margin for the third quarter of fiscal 2021 was 54.1%, a decrease of 370 basis points compared to a year ago, and a decrease of 110 basis points sequentially from our second fiscal quarter. The decline was largely tied to continued staffing pressures, sales mix and COVID-related costs.

We are seeing impacts from customer mix in our Auryon business versus our prior expectations. To provide a bit more detail on this, during this fiscal year, we have experienced a much more robust sales cadence for Auryon in office based labs than in hospitals. This is not at all surprising given the ongoing COVID pandemic.

However, as we have discussed in the past, pricing in the hospital environment is more favorable than it is in OBLs due to the differing sales and used models. This shift from hospital-based placements to OBLs has impacted our gross margin and we anticipate that this customer mix trend will continue and have an increasing impact on margins into FY’22.

Additionally, and as anticipated, we incurred a number of start-up costs related to the ongoing launch of our Auryon platform during the quarter. As we discussed in the past, the majority of the year-over-year gross margin decline was anticipated given the ongoing focus on employee safety and manufacturing predictability. We also continued to reduce inventory during the third quarter ending at $49 million.

During our first quarter call, we stated that we expected to see a step function up from Q1 to Q2, Q3 to be in line with Q2 and then another step function up to Q4 exiting the fiscal year closer to pre-COVID gross margin levels. We do expect to return to pre-COVID gross margin levels, but it is likely to take a bit more time before this occurs. Our research and development expenses during the third quarter of fiscal 2021 were $8.6 million or 12% of sales compared to $8.4 million or 12% of sales a year ago.

We continue our strategy of disciplined investment in R&D to drive our key technology platforms, particularly in the COVID environment, and we do expect investment during our fourth quarter to increase sequentially from the third quarter due to the timing of certain investments in our growth platforms.

We are investing in anticipation of the launch of our new multi-purpose mechanical aspiration thrombectomy device in calendar 2021. This elevated investment during the fiscal fourth quarter is reflected in our R&D guidance which we still anticipate will come in within our previously provided range of between $35 million and $40 million.

SG&A expense for the third quarter of fiscal 2021 decreased from the previous year to $28.6 million, representing 40.2% of sales compared to $31.1 million, representing 44.6% of sales a year ago.

We are pleased with our ability to control SG&A spending in the COVID environment and remain committed to disciplined expense management and managing our cash, while investing in our key technology platforms. Accordingly, we now anticipate that our full year SG&A spending will come in below our previously provided range of between $123 million and $127 million. There is no doubt that SG&A spend has been positively impacted by reduced travel associated with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

We expect travel costs along with our ongoing investments in the sales organization to increase into FY’22 as the global environment improves, which will drive incremental expenses in ’22. Our adjusted net income for the third quarter of fiscal 2021 was $0.7 million or earnings of $0.02 per share compared to adjusted net income of $0.4 million or $0.01 per share in the third quarter of last year.

It’s worth noting that we had a $1.9 million benefit to net income or roughly a $0.04 tailwind to EPS related to the CARES Act this quarter. This reflects reimbursement of expenses we actually incurred related to sales employees, manufacturing and R&D, providing a $700,000 benefit to gross margin and a $1.2 million benefit to operating expense. Since the beginning of the COVID-19 disruption, we have not reduced head count or cut back on R&D investments and this CARES Act benefit reflects reimbursements of these types of expenses for companies that did not lay off employees or take PPP loans.

Adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter of fiscal 2021 was $5.4 million compared to $3.8 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2020. Turning to our balance sheet, we began the quarter with roughly $58 million in cash and cash equivalents and we generated $5.9 million of cash from operating activities. During the third quarter, we had capital expenditures of $1.4 million. At February 28th, 2021, we had $54.5 million in cash and cash equivalents and $30 million in debt outstanding, having repaid $10 million of our outstanding debt during the fiscal third quarter.

In March, we also paid down an additional $10 million on our revolver, leaving us with $20 million in debt outstanding and a net cash position. Turning now to guidance. Based upon our strong third quarter results, and our observations in the marketplace, we now anticipate our fiscal year 2021 net sales to be in the range of $285 million to $288 million, compared to our previous range of $278 million to $284 million.

We now expect full year adjusted earnings per share to be in the range of $0.04 to $0.06 compared to our previous range of $0.00 to $0.05. We’re proud of our ability to drive year-over-year revenue growth this quarter, despite COVID headwinds and our strong performance in the period one year ago, which occurred prior to the onset of COVID-19. We continue to build on this positive momentum of our key technology platforms coming out of the third quarter and we will continue to drive targeted, meaningful investments into these platforms to drive future top line growth.

With that, I’ll turn it back to Jim.

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Steve. I would like to say thank you again to all of the members of the AngioDynamics team for their hard work and particularly for the strong finish while facing the resurgence in COVID headwinds during the quarter.

Our team has successfully maintained our balanced approach to managing expenses in cash while continuing to invest strategically in our three key technology platforms: AngioVac, Auryon and NanoKnife. I continue to have the utmost confidence that this strategy is the right one to drive long-term profitable growth in our business and create value for our shareholders.

With regard to one key product in development, we remain on track to deliver our off circuit, mechanical thrombectomy device later in calendar year 2021 which we anticipate will accelerate further growth in our VIT business. As a reminder, this is the first step in our market expansion strategy as we continue to make focused investments in the thrombectomy space with the goal of delivering additional product line extensions over the next three years.

This first step is instrumental to the success of the ongoing transformation of AngioDynamics. We are not the same Company that we were five years ago, and we won’t be the same Company two years from now, that we are today. We’ve exited businesses where we were not the best owners, and we are looking to invest in and acquire technologies that position us to take share in larger and faster growing segments of the market, where innovative and differentiated technology drives measurable outcomes and those outcomes can change physician behavior.

As we look ahead, we are encouraged by the recently improved market trends as the threat posed by the pandemic recedes and broader vaccine distribution takes place. Our team remains laser focused on long-term growth through our investments in internal R&D, targeted M&A, and the expansion of clinical and regulatory pathways for our key technology platforms.

With that, I’d like to turn the call back to the operator to open up for questions. Melissa?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. At this time, we’ll be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from the line of Jayson Bedford with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Thanks, and good morning. Just a few questions. On the intra-quarter trends, did the harsh weather in Texas and the Southeast have much of an impact in the quarter?

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Jayson. This is Jim, thanks for joining today. Jayson, it did have a temporary effect, we definitely saw that. I guess, I didn’t want to comment on it because we expect that hopefully those patients will get treatment that they deserve at some point. But we did see a temporary effect to be fully transparent.

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Okay. But it’s tough to quantify, I assume.

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

It is. It’s really hard, I didn’t want to put it out there, Jayson. But there was an effect on our salespeople as you [Phonetic] well mentioned.

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Okay. You alluded to better conditions in the second half of February and into March, but it looks like the lower end of the implied fourth quarter guide is kind of flat to down slightly. I’m just wondering why would that be the case?

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. It’s a fair point, Jayson. We still have increased uncertainty and limited visibility with COVID. As we mentioned, we did see the increased COVID impact in Q3 that we were expecting coming off of our Q2. We do see improving trends. We are hoping that those trends will continue, and we’ve got reason to be optimistic that those trends will continue — excuse me, with the increased vaccine availability and the increased opening.

That being said, there is still limited visibility in this COVID environment, and I think our guidance is looking to be cognizant of that fact.

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Okay. Okay. On AngioVac you mentioned the 27% growth, can we assume that volume growth roughly matched dollar growth?

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

You can. We are seeing the — the revenue growth, the dollar growth that we’re seeing go coincide with increasing procedure volume. We are tracking that. And so, it was a very good quarter for us in terms of procedure volumes on AngioVac and those two things are moving relatively in lockstep.

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Okay. And just on the new thrombectomy device, have you filed the 510(k)?

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

So Jayson, we haven’t filed yet, we’re in final validations of the work that you do prior to filing. We’ll probably let folks know when we file. As I said earlier, we anticipate filing in the first half of the calendar year, and expect the 510(k) approval second half. But we’ve not yet filed.

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Okay. And just, couple of quick ones on NanoKnife, and then I’ll jump back in queue. You mentioned that you’re looking to expand indications. I’m just wondering, it — was that more of a near-term comment or longer-term comment? And just a little bit more on kind of where you are with prostate, and then I’ll ask the second one upfront here. When do you lap or anniversary the tough NanoKnife capital comps?

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

So a couple of quick points, Jayson. So your question about the expanded indications, it’s actually short-term and long-term. I hate to give you that, but the truth is, this is a platform technology and our Company now has a really good grasp on what to do with it. For years I don’t know if the Company did the right things.

But the DIRECT study was important to us, getting the pancreatic IDE started, because the pancreas is so difficult to treat as we know. Now that we’ve gotten the study going in momentum, we’ve highlighted that prostate is our next interest. And for different reasons the pancreas due to the acute nature of the disease, differing [Phonetic], but also the FDA has new guidance documents about how to treat the focal therapy regulatory process.

We’re following that carefully. We also think improved guidance and improved visibility that physicians have with the prostate will help treatments like NanoKnife. So we’re excited. We’ll give you more details soon on our prostate indication aspirations. And then beyond that, Jayson, again, we think this is a foundational technology that the science works, the mechanism of action works well to treat other organs.

So it should be a long-term opportunity to grow this. And Steve, would you like to comment?

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. And Jayson on the question around the comps. Really it is at the end of our FY’21 when we anniversary the comps. We headed into our fourth quarter last year and as we mentioned on the call, we did see the largest impact of COVID hit us in our fourth quarter. That being said, there were still some capital sales that occurred in the fourth quarter, a little bit less of a — a little slower pace than we saw earlier in our FY ’20. But for the most part, we’re going to anniversary that big capital year once we get through ’21.

Jayson Bedford — Raymond James — Analyst

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions]. Our next question comes from the line of Matt Mishan with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Matthew Mishan — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Hey, good morning guys. The first question on Auryon. Do you have a good sense of where the procedures are coming from, and what it’s been used for?

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Matt. Good morning. We do. As you know, we have a dedicated team that we hired to just work in Auryon. We now have over 40 people dedicated to this business unit. And Matt they track almost every case. So what’s encouraging, we’ve seen an increasing ratio of the cases that we’re treating have been below the knee.

Early on, I think, physicians treated above the knee, it’s a brand new technology, people are getting used to it. But as you know, we’re very encouraged on how it works, because it has the ability to treat above and below and treat hard and soft calcification. We’re watching it and watching the ratios change. We’ll look forward to communicating that with you as we grow that business.

Matthew Mishan — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Okay, excellent. And you mentioned the recent improvements in your end markets. Can you go into a little bit more detail into what you’ve seen in March so far?

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

We mentioned in March — Stephen and I can both comment, but you know, we’re seeing a little bit more just slow steady case procedures, ORs are being booked again. I just spoke to a physician last week, Matt, he was a kind of a good and bad analogy for all of us to watch what’s happening in our industry. But a physician I spoke to last week told me, he did a surgery on a patient and he had to remove a tumor. He said normally it was a complex procedure, may have taken two hours in a normal environment. Well, it took nearly six, because the patient have progressed and the tumor had gotten worse.

So I think what we’re going to see Matt is situations like that all of us in the healthcare space, we’re — now we’re getting back in treating people that need to be treated, but the acuity maybe a little higher than before. So we’re being cautious Matt, and we’re letting our customers guide us and they’re telling us that they trying to rebook ORs so we can get people treated at a little faster pace.

Matthew Mishan — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

But that’s kind of unfortunate. And then just on the expense reimbursement from the CARES Act. Is that a one-time reimbursement or is that something you expect over the course of the next 12 months?

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

It’s a one-time hit. So this was based upon the law that was passed previously that we were able to take — we were able to fit into and make our application. As it sits today, it’s a one-time. We’re keeping in our eye on the current law that was passed to see if there is any other benefits. As of right now, we don’t think there are. We’ll continue to monitor that and we’ll continue to assess the situation. But you should think of it right now as a one-time.

Matthew Mishan — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Okay. And that actually helped the gross margins, the underlying gross margin was a little bit worse. Just can you go back to the dynamic that you — that you were talking about with office based labs and versus hospitals in that mix and the impact to gross margin of that?

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. So, I think to tell the gross margin story, what we are focusing on to drive topline growth in the immediate timeframe as well as in the long term is going to be those three growth platforms that Jim has talked about; Auryon, AngioVac and NanoKnife. All three of those will be accretive to corporate margins and that will drive our margin profile over time. Certainly AngioVac and NanoKnife today, we talked about some Auryon start-up costs, but that we expect that to as we get through the initial phase is going to be accretive to corporate margins.

One of the things that we’ve talked about in looking forward is Auryon and that mix between hospital sales and OBLs. As we’ve said in the past, pricing in the hospital environment is usually higher, and it’s noticeably higher than what you see in the OBLs based upon their sales and use model.

In the COVID environment, what we’ve seen is a little bit of a shift in the mix from where we initially expected when we bought the product from the hospital-based placements to the OBLs. It’s not surprising, right? The OBLs have been open, they’ve had less restrictions, they don’t have to follow some of the same protocols that a general hospital does.

And so you’ve seen a lot of those procedures continue to be done in the OBLs or maybe hospitals have been cutting back as they’ve been getting — preparing for COVID opportunities. Honestly, we expect that mix shift to probably be sticky and continue as you move forward.

So what you’ll see is — our expectations are you’re going to have a shift to more OBLs doing procedures. So when we thought it was maybe 50-50 or 60-40, it may end up being 70-30 or higher in terms of 70% of atherectomy procedures being done in the OBLs as opposed to the hospitals.

So as you look out into ’20 — the end of our FY’21 and ’22 and beyond, that mix shift is going to have an impact because of that pricing differential that we talked about, not necessarily pricing pressures, it’s just more of a customer mix shift. And so we think that, that will impact the — that accretive margin benefit that you’re going to see from the increasing Auryon [Indecipherable] over time.

Matthew Mishan — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Okay. That’s — I get that. And last question on assuming that as we get out to next quarter, you guys are thinking about FY’22 guidance. Just what are some of the moving pieces you like us to consider at this point?

Stephen A. Trowbridge — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

So, we will come out with guidance when appropriate, hopefully that will be at the time that you normally see. And we’re going to keep our eye on COVID and the continuing impact that we see there. I think a lot of the things that we’ve been talking to you throughout FY ’21 are going to be the moving pieces. I think first and foremost, we’ve got a line of sight to top line growth through our growth platforms in Auryon, AngioVac and what you’re seeing clearly in the U.S. in terms of nano probes. That focus of course will continue as we head into FY’22.

We’ve talked about our plans on continuing to invest in R&D, as well as continuing to invest in the sales force to drive that top line growth, and we’re going to look to be as transparent as we can about those investments. But I think the expectation is we will be investing to support that top line growth that we think is going to be important to our long-term strategy.

And then beyond that is the gross margin, which is what we’ve talked a little bit about this quarter in terms of our expectations. Again, the big point being we expect our margin profile to be positively impacted by our growth platforms over time.

As we sit here today, a large part of our revenue base is coming from those more mature businesses and we’ve got one plant, it’s in upstate New York, it’s in an area where there is a tough job market in the sense that there aren’t too many openings and a lot of people are hiring.

And so some of the things, some of the headwinds that we’re facing currently. But I think those are the major drivers that you should expect very similar to what we saw in ’21 as you head into ’22.

Matthew Mishan — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

All right, excellent. And really a nice quarter. Thanks guys.

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Matt.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our question-and-answer session. I will turn the floor back to Mr. Clemmer for any final comments.

Jim Clemmer — President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Melissa. And again, I’d like to thank the AngioDynamics team for working through this COVID environment, the period of uncertainty.

We focused on the health and safety of our employees first, and continuing to ensure a robust supply chain for our customers who need our products and our team has done a really great job. I thank you for paying attention to our results today. And we look forward to growing our strategic initiatives: Investing on our key platforms and; investing on our people. Thank you again. Have a great day.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks].

Disclaimer

This transcript is produced by AlphaStreet, Inc. While we strive to produce the best transcripts, it may contain misspellings and other inaccuracies. This transcript is provided as is without express or implied warranties of any kind. As with all our articles, AlphaStreet, Inc. does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company’s SEC filings. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed in this transcript constitutes a solicitation of the purchase or sale of securities or commodities. Any opinion expressed in the transcript does not necessarily reflect the views of AlphaStreet, Inc.

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