ACQUISTION OF SURGICAL INNOVATION ASSOCIATES (SIA), INC. DECEMBER 01, 2022 Confidential ‐ For internal use only
Legal Information 2 Forward‐Looking Statements This presentation contains forward‐looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that involve risks and uncertainties and reflect the Company's judgment as of the date of this release. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, are statements that could be deemed forward‐looking statements. Some of these forward‐looking statements may contain words like “will,” “believe,” “may,” “can,” “could,” “would,” “might,” “project,” “possible,” “should,” “expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “target,” or “continue,” the negative of these words, other terms of similar meaning or they may use future dates. Forward‐looking statements contained in this news release include, but are not limited to, statements concerning the anticipated satisfaction of the customary closing conditions of the acquisition of Surgical Innovation Associates, Inc. (“SIA”), the expected strategic and financial benefits of the SIA acquisition; the Company’s business plans, objectives, expectations, opportunities and intentions following the acquisition, the Company’s liquidity and financial position; future financial performance, including projections for revenues, expected revenue growth (both reported and organic) and GAAP and adjusted earnings per diluted share and other items. Statements of past performance, efforts, or results about which assumptions or inferences may be made can also be forward‐looking statements and are not indicative of future performance or results. Such forward‐looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from predicted or expected results. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the following: the impact of COVID‐ 19 (and any subsequent variants) and its effects on our employees, customers, patients, suppliers and distributors, including the economic impacts of the various recommendations, orders and protocols issued by governmental agencies and other regulatory bodies (including any periodic reimplementation of preventative measures in various global locations) in response to the continual evolution of the pandemic; macroeconomic conditions, including inflation, disruptions to the global supply chain, fluctuations in currency exchange rates, weakness in general economic conditions and recessions; the Company's ability to execute its operating plan effectively; the Company’s ability to execute the acquisition of SIA and successfully integrate SIA and its other acquired businesses; the Company’s ability to achieve sales growth in a timely fashion and execute on its channel reorganization in its Tissue Technologies segment; the Company's ability to manufacture and ship sufficient quantities of its products to meet its customers' demands; the ability of third‐party suppliers to supply us with raw materials and finished products; global macroeconomic and political conditions; the Company's ability to manage its direct sales channels effectively; the sales performance of third‐party distributors on whom the Company relies to generate revenue for certain products and geographic regions; the Company's ability to access and maintain relationships with customers of acquired entities and businesses; physicians' willingness to adopt and third‐party payors' willingness to provide or maintain reimbursement for the Company's recently launched, planned and existing products; initiatives launched by the Company's competitors; downward pricing pressures from customers; the Company's ability to secure regulatory approval for products in development; the Company's ability to remediate quality systems violations; fluctuations in hospitals' spending for capital equipment; the Company's ability to comply with and obtain approvals for products of human origin and comply with regulations regarding products containing materials derived from animal sources; difficulties in controlling expenses, including costs to procure and manufacture our products; the impact of changes in management or staff levels; the impact of goodwill and intangible asset impairment charges if future operating results of acquired businesses are significantly less than the results anticipated at the time of the acquisitions, the Company's ability to leverage its existing selling organizations and administrative infrastructure; the Company's ability to increase product sales and gross margins, and control non‐product costs; the Company’s ability to achieve anticipated growth rates, margins and scale and execute its strategy generally; the amount and timing of divestiture, acquisition and integration‐related costs; the geographic distribution of where the Company generates its taxable income; new U.S. and foreign government laws and regulations, and changes in existing laws, regulations and enforcement guidance, which affect areas of our operations including, but not limited to, those affecting the health care industry, including the EU Medical Devices Regulation; fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates; the amount of our bank borrowings outstanding and other factors influencing liquidity ; and the economic, competitive, governmental, technological, and other risk factors and uncertainties identified under the heading “Risk Factors” included in Item 1A of Integra's Annual Report on Form 10‐K for the year ended December 31, 2021 and information contained in subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These forward‐looking statements are made only as of the date hereof, and the Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise the forward‐looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.
Non‐GAAP Financial Measures 3 This presentation includes anticipated changes to our adjusted earnings per diluted share, which is a non‐GAAP measure, in connection with the announced transaction. The adjusted earnings per diluted share measure is calculated by dividing adjusted net income attributable to diluted shares by diluted weighted average shares outstanding. The measure of adjusted net income consists of GAAP net income, excluding: (i) structural optimization charges; (ii) divestiture, acquisition and integration‐ related charges; (iii) EU Medical Device Regulation‐related charges; (iv) intangible asset amortization expense; and (v) income tax impact from adjustments. The Company believes that the presentation of adjusted earnings per diluted share measure provides important supplemental information to management and investors regarding financial and business trends relating to the Company’s financial condition and results of operations. Management uses such non‐GAAP financial measure when evaluating operating performance because we believe that the inclusion or exclusion of the items described above, for which the amounts and/or timing may vary significantly depending upon the Company’s divestiture, acquisition, integration, and restructuring activities, for which the amounts are non‐cash in nature, or for which the amounts are not expected to recur at the same magnitude, provides a supplemental measure of our operating results that facilitates comparability of our financial condition and operating performance from period to period, against our business model objectives, and against other companies in our industry. This measure should be considered in addition to, not a substitute for, or superior to, measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. The Company provided the foregoing forward‐looking expectations regarding adjusted earnings per diluted share but has not provided a reconciliation to GAAP earnings per share, because certain GAAP expense items are highly variable and management is unable to predict them with reasonable certainty and without unreasonable effort. Specifically, the financial impact and timing of divestitures, acquisitions, integrations, structural optimization and efforts to comply with the EU Medical Device Regulation are uncertain, depend on various dynamic factors and are not reasonably ascertainable at this time. These expense items could have a material impact on GAAP results.
Confidential – For Internal Use Only Acquisition overview & strategic rationale 4 Strategic Rationale SIA Business Description • Private company headquartered in Chicago, IL, founded in 2016 by plastic surgeons and entrepreneurs • Founded to commercialize resorbable synthetic mesh for use in plastic and reconstructive surgery • DuraSorb® monofilament mesh 510k cleared for reinforcement of soft tissue; 2022E revenue ~$5M • SIA is only company with an active enrolling U.S. Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) trial for soft tissue support in implant‐based breast reconstruction (IBBR) Key Deal Terms • Acquisition structured as a merger • $50M at closing, and up to $90M in milestones • Deal expected to be accretive in Year 3 (2025); ROIC to exceed 10% in year 5 (2027) • Subject to the satisfaction of customary conditions; acquisition expected to close in December 2022 • Breast reconstruction represents an attractive growth opportunity for surgical matrix business; historically dominated by human derived surgical matrices • Today, there are no FDA‐approved surgical matrices for IBBR • Integra’s SurgiMend® PRS (a xenograft) is subject of the 1st premarket approval (PMA) application for an IBBR surgical matrix; we submitted and held a panel review meeting with FDA in 2021, and anticipate amendment submission in mid‐ 2023 with approval for sub‐pectoral IBBR in 2024 • DuraSorb (a resorbable synthetic matrix) expected to be 2nd to receive PMA, in 2025/2026, for both sub‐pectoral and pre‐pectoral IBBR • As U.S. market faces potential for disruption through shifting surgical techniques, value‐based care trends, and regulatory actions, we anticipate a shift towards xenograft and resorbable synthetic surgical matrix solutions • By offering two distinct product solutions to plastic and reconstructive surgeons, Integra can build a leading position by addressing various clinical, contracting and economic needs across different sites of care s rger t 0 in ilestones l r tiv in Year 3 (2025); ROIC to exc ed 10% in year 5 (2027) j i f ti f c sto ary conditions; acquisition expected to close in December 20 2
Global breast reconstruction market represents attractive opportunity for surgical matrix business, historically dominated by human derived surgical matrices 5 Global Addressable Market 2021 Key Market Drivers Factors Driving U.S. Disruption • Insurance coverage influences reconstructive choices • Growing patient awareness & education • Rapid adoption of pre‐pectoral technique • Continued shift to hospital outpatient driven by cost efficiency • Limited sizes, inconsistent tissue quality/supply for human matrices • U.S. regulatory requirements for expanded label market entry Source: LSI, SmarTrak 2022 *Weighted average CAGR Large, fast‐growing market ripe for disruption & innovation ~$600M 12% CAGR* U.S. Europe MEA/LAPAC U.S. Volume by Category 2021 95% 3% 2% 5% Human ADM Xenograft ADM Resorbable Synthetic Mesh Trending Trending
Anticipated disruption in U.S. breast reconstruction landscape via shifting surgical techniques, value‐based care trends, and regulatory actions 6 IBBR procedures involving use of a surgical matrix Procedural Technique Sub‐Pectoral Pre‐Pectoral Currently no surgical matrices are FDA‐approved for implant‐based breast reconstruction (IBBR) FDA requires companies to submit for pre‐market approval (PMA) for specific indication in IBBR Regulatory Landscape Human ADM Xenograft ADM Resorbable Synthetic Mesh Surgical Matrix Types Sources: IQVIA 2022; Internal Market Research For internal use only Integra well positioned to capitalize on disruption with SurgiMend PRS and DuraSorb ~80% +50% IBBR procedures now performed using pre‐pectoral technique 2x Pre‐pectoral technique uses larger matrices, increasing cost e.g., SurgiMend e.g., DuraSorb
SurgiMend PRS collagen matrix targeting expanded‐label market entry in 2024 7 With SurgiMend PRS, Integra is a leading contender today to capture opportunity in this market SurgiMend PRS Cost‐ Effective First to PMA* with Fewer Complications Strong, Flexible, Consistent Material • Acellular dermal matrix derived from fetal bovine • Currently indicated for soft tissue reinforcement where weakness exists Product • 30%more affordable than human derived surgical matrices • Higher acuity sites of care (i.e., hospital outpatient) Affordability & Site of Care • First and only manufacturer to have submitted a PMA (2021 submission and panel meeting) • Under active review for sub‐pectoral IBBR; amendment submission planned for mid‐2023, approval expected in 2024 • Leverages a real world, historic dataset from the Mastectomy Research Outcomes Consortium (MROC) study Clinical & Regulatory *Pending FDA approval
DuraSorb monofilament mesh targeting expanded‐label market entry in 2025/2026 8 DuraSorb poised to become the clinical leader in the resorbable synthetic mesh category for IBBR DuraSorb Cost‐ Effective 2nd to PMA* with Pre + Sub Procedures Strong, Trusted Resorbable Material • Soft, warp‐knit monofilament macro‐porous resorbable mesh • Indicated for reinforcement of soft tissue where weakness exists Product • First and only active, prospective, multi‐center enrolling IDE trial in the U.S. with enrollment ~70% complete • Evaluating use in two stage sub‐pectoral and pre‐pectoral IBBR to obtain PMA, expected in 2025/2026 • Additional 500 patient registry active with up to 3 years follow up Clinical & Regulatory • 60% more affordable than human derived surgical matrices • Accessible to lower acuity sites of care (i.e., ambulatory surgical center) Affordability & Site of Care *Pending FDA approval
Portfolio Advantages • Expanded sales & marketing footprint • Strengthens contracting position across categories Commercial Synergy • Clinical advantages across a broader range of procedures • Enables delivery of cost‐effective solutions to distinct segments across varied sites of care Clinical & Cost Efficacy • SurgiMend PRS PMA Expected First (Sub‐Pectoral) • DuraSorb PMA Next (Sub‐Pectoral and Pre‐Pectoral) • No other companies have submitted a PMA First Mover Advantage Two distinct solutions to address varying clinical, contracting, and economic needs across different sites of care 9 SurgiMend DuraSorb Integra poised for leadership position in IBBR with both xenograft and resorbable synthetic portfolio offerings
SIA acquisition adds resorbable synthetic technology to Integra’s strong capabilities in soft tissue reconstruction Highly strategic acquisition that advances our market leadership ambitions 10 Brings us closer to reaching our ambition of becoming a global leader in breast reconstruction with future FDA approvals, evidence generation and pipeline investments with revenue opportunity of ~$200M by 2030 for SurgiMend and DuraSorb 1 Transaction expected to be $0.06 dilutive in Year 1, and turn accretive by Year 3 (2025) • ROIC to exceed 10% by Year 5 (2027) • 2022E Sia revenue ~$5M; gross margin > 75% 2 Plans to initiate a $150M share repurchase in early 2023; Ben Benefit to adjusted EPS expected to largely offset Year 1 dilution of Sia acquisition3