Synairgen
plc
('Synairgen' or the 'Company')
Results for the year ended 31 December 2023
Southampton, UK - 27 June 2024:
Synairgen plc (LSE: SNG), the respiratory company developing
SNG001, an investigational formulation for inhalation containing
the broad-spectrum antiviral protein interferon beta, today
announces its preliminary statement of audited results for the year
ended 31 December 2023.
Highlights (including post period-end)
Operational
·
Completed a full assessment of the underpinning
science, clinical trial data, clinical need and commercial
opportunity to determine next steps for SNG001
·
Commenced preparatory work in 2023 to deliver a
trial focusing on mechanically ventilated patients who we believe
are the most attractive near-term patient group with respect to the
extent of the unmet need, the commercial potential in a clearly
identifiable population and the clinical development route for
SNG001
·
Recognised that opportunities for potential future
assessment of SNG001 in platform trials and/or academic trials may
materialise in the event of an emerging virus
threat
·
Continued collaboration with the University of
Southampton's UNIVERSAL trial aimed at better characterising
patients hospitalised with respiratory viral infections with over
500 patients recruited to date
Financial
1. Prudent cost control
applied across all operations
2. Loss from operations
for the year ended 31 December 2023 was £10.3 million (2022: £20.3
million loss)
3. Cash and cash
equivalents, and bank deposits of £12.0 million at 31 December 2023
(31 December 2022: £19.7 million)
Richard Marsden, CEO of Synairgen, said:
"We are pleased to have selected an exciting path
forward for SNG001, which is to conduct a Phase 2 trial in
mechanically ventilated patients where there is a substantial unmet
medical need with 25% to 45% mortality and few antiviral
therapeutic options. Alongside this, we have continued our work as
part of the UK-wide UNIVERSAL trial and remain open to other
collaborations and platform trials in the future. We will keep all
stakeholders up to date on developments, including financing, as we
prepare to start the trial this winter."
Annual Report and AGM update
Synairgen has published its Annual
Report and Accounts for the year ended 31 December 2023 on its
website, www.synairgen.com.
The date of the upcoming AGM will be published in due course, with
the Annual Report and Accounts and AGM notice posted to
shareholders ahead of this.
The information contained within this announcement is deemed
to constitute inside information as stipulated under the retained
EU law version of the Market Abuse Regulation (EU) No. 596/2014
(the "UK MAR") which is part of UK law by virtue of the European
Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018. The information is disclosed in
accordance with the Company's obligations under Article 17 of the
UK MAR. Upon the publication of this announcement, this inside
information is now considered to be in the public
domain.
For further enquiries, please
contact:
Synairgen plc
Media@synairgen.com
Tel: + 44 (0) 23 8051
2800
Cavendish Capital Markets Limited
(NOMAD and Joint Broker)
Geoff Nash, Charlie Beeson
(Corporate Finance)
Sunila de Silva
(ECM)
Tel: + 44 (0) 20 7220
0500
Deutsche Numis (Joint
Broker)
Freddie Barnfield, Duncan Monteith,
Euan Brown
Tel: + 44 (0) 20 7260
1000
ICR Consilium (Financial Media and
Investor Relations)
Mary-Jane Elliott, Namrata Taak,
Lucy Featherstone
Synairgen@consilium-comms.com
Tel: +44 (0) 20 3709
5700
Notes for Editors
About Synairgen
Synairgen is a UK-based respiratory
company focused on drug discovery and the development of SNG001
(inhaled interferon beta) as potentially the first host-targeted,
broad-spectrum antiviral treatment delivered directly into the
lungs for severe viral lung infections.
Millions of people globally are
hospitalised every year due to viral lung infections and there are
currently no approved antiviral therapies for the majority of these
patients. Synairgen is developing SNG001 to address this
need.
Synairgen is quoted on AIM (LSE:
SNG). For more information about Synairgen, please see
www.synairgen.com
CHAIRMAN'S STATEMENT
There remains a significant unmet
medical need for new treatments for respiratory viral infections
which are caused by a wide range of viruses (influenza, RSV,
SARS-CoV-2, rhinovirus, metapneumovirus and others). Antiviral
therapeutic options are limited for the majority of hospitalised
adult patients with severe viral lung infections, which remain a
leading cause of death globally. Approximately 2.5 million people
in the US are hospitalised each year due these respiratory
viruses.
Synairgen's relentless focus in the
year has been on applying the insights gained from 2020/21 to
determine the best path forward for clinical development of its
investigational drug, SNG001, for severe viral lung infections.
This was conducted amidst the backdrop of a challenging year for
the biotech sector; we have regained momentum and stand on the
verge of embarking on a Phase 2 trial in patients who are
mechanically ventilated as a result of a respiratory viral
infection, subject to finalising the trial financing plan. We have
selected this population because it has a high unmet need,
represents a significant commercial opportunity, patients are
readily identifiable, and the clinical path is clear. We look
forward to communicating the trial design and associated financing
plan.
Since the results of SPRINTER and
ACTIV-2 trials were announced, our team has focussed on using the
findings from these studies, the literature and clinical experts to
determine which patients stand to potentially benefit most from
SNG001 and developing the clinical network and trial protocol which
carries an appropriate level of risk and reward for Synairgen
shareholders. The considerable research work that was required to
critically evaluate all potential options has ultimately led us to
eliminate a number of potentially promising avenues for further
clinical development. We have made a strategic decision to
focus on mechanically ventilated patients in the hospital setting
enabling clinical development with smaller, easier to deliver
clinical trials in an area of high unmet medical and
pharmacoeconomic need. We have determined that it is inappropriate
at this stage for the Company to conduct clinical trials in the
non-hospitalised setting, although we believe that SNG001 continues
to be an attractive asset in this setting, and we are open for
inclusion of SNG001 in platform trials and/or collaborations as and
when viral threats emerge.
I would like to take this opportunity
to thank the entire team for their unwavering commitment to finding
a path forward for SNG001 and express my appreciation to our
shareholders for their continued support. I look forward to
updating the market with greater detail on our development
plans.
Simon Shaw
Chairman
OPERATIONAL REVIEW
Overview
During the past year the Group
thoroughly assessed a wide range of options to identify the best
route forward for its broad-spectrum host-directed antiviral drug,
SNG001 (inhaled interferon beta), for the treatment of severe viral
lung infections. Respiratory viral infections are the most common
cause of infectious disease and when they affect the lungs, they
can cause significant morbidity and mortality. Interferon beta is a
naturally occurring protein, produced in response to viral
infections, that drives the body's antiviral responses. People who
make less interferon beta, for example due to their genetic
profile, age or disease, are at greater risk of developing severe
viral lung infections. Respiratory viruses themselves also supress
interferon beta production to evade host antiviral responses.
Together these factors provide the rationale to deliver SNG001
directly into the lungs as an aerosol to boost/restore the lungs'
antiviral responses to clear the virus. During the year, Synairgen
completed a review of potential development opportunities for
SNG001 through careful assessment of the underpinning science,
strength of clinical data, trial feasibility, clinical need and
commercial opportunity. This included options in both hospitalised
and non-hospitalised patients, and those with critical illness due
to any respiratory virus.
As a result of this analysis, it has
become clear that the hospitalised patient setting provides the
greatest opportunity for SNG001 to provide assessable benefit in a
group of patients in whom there is considerable unmet clinical
need. Synairgen has focused its efforts on projects designed to
enable identification of hospitalised patients at the highest risk
of poor outcomes, which would make clinical trials more targeted
whilst maximising the chance of success clinically and
commercially.
The Company has developed a new
trial plan focussed on mechanically ventilated patients that takes
into account a range of important factors including learnings from
trials of SNG001 in hospitalised patients, the high unmet need, and
the clear commercial strategy for this group of very expensive to
treat patients. It is intended to commence the trial this winter
and will be supported by data from various projects, including the
UNIVERSAL trial, a UK-wide observational trial in patients
hospitalised with respiratory viral infections, led by Prof. Tom
Wilkinson and colleagues from the University of Southampton, in
conjunction with pharmaceutical industry partners. Recruitment has
continued at pace into UNIVERSAL and the important insights will
help the Company develop criteria to select
populations most likely to respond to SNG001 for inclusion in
future clinical trials.
Our
strategy and plans
Mechanically ventilated
patients
Respiratory viral infections are a
significant burden on the global healthcare system, and are
associated with high morbidity and mortality. Approximately 2.5
million12 people in the US continue to be hospitalised
each year due to respiratory symptoms associated with a respiratory
virus. Prior to the pandemic, influenza was often singled out as
the main driver of the winter virus season accounting for
~0.5m1 hospitalisations each year, however it is
estimated that the so called 'common cold viruses' such as
rhinovirus, coronavirus, RSV, parainfluenza, HMPV and adenovirus
collectively account for an additional 2 million
hospitalisations2, and SARS-CoV-2 persists as a
problematic pathogen.
Patients on ventilators with viral
pneumonia have a 25-45%34 chance of dying. There are few
approved antiviral options for these patients and, for most
respiratory viruses, no specific antiviral treatments. The
literature also indicates that patients who develop severe viral
lung disease have higher viral loads and shed virus for longer
pointing to a compromised immune/antiviral
response.
Analyses of several trials conducted
by Synairgen to date reveal that, across different patient
populations and care settings, those with more severe disease at
the start of treatment responded best to treatment with SNG001.
This includes prevention of hospitalisation in patients treated in
the community as well as progression to severe disease or death in
patients hospitalised due to their viral infection. These
observations underpin our strategy of targeting patients at the
highest risk of poor outcomes.
As a broad-spectrum antiviral drug,
SNG001 has shown in vitro
effects against multiple respiratory viruses and in vivo has uncovered its potential to
treat and/or prevent severe viral lung infection. Preparatory work
for a trial commenced in 2023 and has continued into 2024. The
company is currently finalising potential trial structures and a
potential financing plan to enable it to pursue an enhanced trial
structure. If this comes about, details will be communicated in due
course.
UNIVERSAL
trial
During the year the Group has
continued its work with Prof. Tom Wilkinson from the University of
Southampton to progress UNIVERSAL, a multi-centre observational
study in patients recently hospitalised due to respiratory viruses.
UNIVERSAL is supported by Synairgen, AstraZeneca, and Janssen. A
key objective is to develop methods to identify patients at higher
risk of poor outcomes due to respiratory
viruses.
UNIVERSAL is progressing well with
more than 500 patients recruited to date. Data and samples are
being analysed as they are collected, and will continue through
2024. Results from UNIVERSAL will provide more insight for the
Company to help inform the design of future trials with SNG001,
allowing Synairgen to identify patients at
the highest risk of disease progression whilst avoiding patients
who are more likely to recover rapidly without the need for an
antiviral intervention.
Key
learnings from other patient populations
Non-hospitalised: During the
pandemic the Company generated encouraging data in non-hospitalised
patients from both its own 'SG016 home trial' and through
collaboration with the US Government's ACTIV-2 trial team, which
was ultimately halted due to declining rates of infection.
This COVID-19 data sits well alongside earlier data from trials in
asthma and COPD.
Neither the SG016 home nor ACTIV-2
studies were powered to demonstrate statistical significance on
hospital admission as an endpoint, however pooling the data from
all 330 COVID-19 patients from the two studies showed that 1 out of
165 patients on SNG001 (<1%) were hospitalised compared to 10
out of 165 (6%) placebo patients56. This represents a
~90% relative risk reduction, a comparable reduction to that seen
with Paxlovid in Phase 3 trials. The encouraging signals coincided
with the less pathogenic Omicron becoming the dominant circulating
variant. As a result, hospitalisation rates with COVID-19
significantly dropped, meaning that clinical trial sizes needed to
confirm the efficacy of SNG001 in the outpatient setting would
exceed thousands of patients and therefore became commercially
unfeasible for a Company of Synairgen's
size.
Despite this, Synairgen believes
that SNG001 continues to be an attractive asset for inclusion in
platform trials, a position the Company was not in prior to the
pandemic.
Long term viral shedders:
Beyond pandemic preparedness, Synairgen has explored various
non-hospitalised patient groups who are particularly vulnerable to
viral lung infections, with a particular focus on patients who
struggle to clear the virus and become long term shedders of virus,
many of whom are immunocompromised patients (e.g. through
undertaking cancer treatments). After careful consideration, the
Company elected not to fund its own trials in these very high-risk
patients at this point in time. This decision was primarily based
on the large size of trial required to demonstrate a reduction in
the rate that patients are hospitalised, and the logistical
complexity of patient identification. The Company will, however,
continue to be open to trial collaborations in this
area.
Summary
After conducting a rigorous
evaluation of the clinical need, supporting scientific literature,
trial feasibility, and commercial viability, Synairgen's strategic
decision is to determine an appropriately sized trial in
mechanically ventilated patients who it believes are most likely to
benefit from SNG001 as a result of infection from a wide range of
respiratory viruses causing appreciable morbidity, mortality and a
strain on health care infrastructure.
The Company continues to be
extremely excited by the potential for SNG001 to be the first
inhaled broad-spectrum antiviral targeting the lungs. The Synairgen
team is ever grateful for the support of its loyal investors,
partners and staff in a crucial year where it has researched the
rationale for, and is gearing up to execute on, the most
appropriate strategy for the development of SNG001. The Company is
currently finalising its assessment of the best combination of
trial structure/locations and associated financing requirement and
aim to communicate the outcome of this soon with a view to
commencing the next Phase II trial this winter.
FINANCIAL REVIEW
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income
The loss from operations for the
year ended 31 December 2023 was £10.3 million (2022: £20.3 million
loss) with research and development expenditure amounting to £6.5
million (2022: £14.9 million) and other administrative expenses of
£3.8 million (2022: £5.4 million).
Expenditure on research and
development activity decreased in 2023, continuing the trend from
the prior year, as the Group focussed on refining plans for future
clinical trials.
Clinical trial expenditure was
limited to the cost of closing out the SPRINTER, SG015 and SG016
trials, in conjunction with preparatory work to design future
clinical trial activity, such as participation in the UNIVERSAL
trial.
Manufacturing activities also
reduced significantly in the year, with spend focussed on the
manufacture of a new batch of drug product and placebo (pre-filled
syringes), and third-party laboratory testing (incorporating
stability, comparison and release testing of drug product,
qualification of new reference standards). All manufacturing
costs were expensed to the income statement.
Expenditure on science (R&D) and
quality departments remain flat on the prior year, with regulatory
costs reducing in-line with diminished trial
activity.
Other administrative expenses
totalled £3.8 million in 2023, which comprise all expenses which
are not research and development expenditure, and predominantly
reflect staff costs and professional fees. This represents a
decrease of £1.6 million on the prior year (2022: £5.4 million),
due to cost saving initiatives implemented within commercial,
medical affairs, business development, and corporate
communications.
Interest receivable increased from
£0.2 million to £0.6 million, as deposit interest rates increased
during 2023.
The research and development tax
credit (including R&D expenditure credit - "RDEC") decreased
from £2.4 million to £1.3 million in line with reduced qualifying
research and development expenditure. The credit equates to 20% of
our 2023 research and development expenditure (2022:
16%).
The loss after tax for 2023 was £8.4
million (2022: £17.6 million) and the basic loss per share was
4.18p (2022: basic loss per share of 8.76p).
Consolidated Statement of Financial Position and Cash
Flows
At 31 December 2023, net assets
amounted to £12.7 million (2022: £20.3 million), including cash and
deposit balances of £12.0 million, comprising cash and cash
equivalents of £10.5 million and other financial assets - bank
deposits of £1.5 million (2022: £19.7 million cash and bank deposit
balances).
The principal elements of the £7.7
million decrease during the year ended 31 December 2023 (2022:
£14.1 million decrease) in cash and bank deposit balances
were:
· Cash
outflows from operations before changes in working capital: £9.4
million (2022: £19.3 million), with the reduction being
attributable to the lower research and development administrative
expenditure and as explained above;
· Changes in working capital: £1.2 million outflow (2022: £4.1
million outflow), due to a reduction in trade and other payables of
£1.7 million, and a £0.5 million decrease in trade and other
receivables;
· Interest received £0.6 million (2022: £0.2 million);
and
· Research and development tax credits received: £2.4 million
(2022: £9.1 million) on account of receipt of the 2022 tax
credit.
The other significant changes in the
Statement of Financial Position were:
· Current tax receivable decreased from £2.4 million to £1.3
million on account of the lower research and development tax credit
(including RDEC) receivable;
· Trade
and other receivables decreased by £0.5 million to £0.8 million
(2022: £1.3 million), due predominantly to a reduction in
prepayments due to the reduction in the level of operating
expenditure; and
· Trade
and other payables decreased by £1.7 million to £1.6 million (2022:
£3.3 million), in line with the reduction in the level of operating
expenditure.
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive
Income
for the year ended 31 December
2023
|
|
Year
|
Year
|
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
|
31 December
|
31
December
|
|
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
Notes
|
£000
|
£000
|
|
|
|
|
Research and development
expenditure
|
|
(6,531)
|
(14,936)
|
Other administrative
expenses
|
|
(3,761)
|
(5,364)
|
Total administrative expenses and loss from
operations
|
|
(10,292)
|
(20,300)
|
Finance income
|
|
635
|
207
|
Loss before tax
|
|
(9,657)
|
(20,093)
|
|
|
|
|
Tax
|
5
|
1,249
|
2,448
|
Loss and total comprehensive loss for the period attributable
to equity holders of the parent
|
|
(8,408)
|
(17,645)
|
|
|
|
|
Loss per ordinary share
|
|
|
|
Basic and diluted loss per share
(pence)
|
6
|
(4.18)p
|
(8.76)p
|
Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity
for the year ended 31 December
2023
|
Share
capital
|
Share
premium
|
Merger
reserve
|
Retained
deficit
|
Total
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
£000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 1 January 2022
|
2,013
|
125,245
|
483
|
(90,741)
|
37,000
|
Loss and total comprehensive loss
for the year
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(17,645)
|
(17,645)
|
Transactions with equity holders of
the Group
|
|
|
|
|
|
Issue of ordinary shares
|
1
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
1
|
Recognition of share-based
payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
919
|
919
|
At 31 December 2022
|
2,014
|
125,245
|
483
|
(107,467)
|
20,275
|
Loss and total comprehensive loss
for the year
|
|
|
|
(8,408)
|
(8,408)
|
Transactions with equity holders of
the Group
|
|
|
|
|
|
Recognition of share-based
payments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
790
|
790
|
At
31 December 2023
|
2,014
|
125,245
|
483
|
(115,085)
|
12,657
|
Consolidated Statement of Financial Position
as at 31 December 2023
|
|
31 December
|
31
December
|
|
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
Assets
|
|
|
|
Non-current assets
|
|
|
|
Intangible assets
|
|
102
|
44
|
Property, plant and
equipment
|
|
26
|
86
|
|
|
128
|
130
|
Current assets
|
|
|
|
Current tax receivable
|
|
1,249
|
2,415
|
Trade and other
receivables
|
|
828
|
1,308
|
Other financial assets - bank
deposits
|
|
1,500
|
3,750
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
10,516
|
15,926
|
|
|
14,093
|
23,399
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets
|
|
14,221
|
23,529
|
|
|
|
|
Liabilities
|
|
|
|
Current liabilities
|
|
|
|
Trade and other payables
|
|
(1,564)
|
(3,254)
|
|
|
|
|
Total liabilities
|
|
(1,564)
|
(3,254)
|
|
|
|
|
Total net assets
|
|
12,657
|
20,275
|
|
|
|
|
Equity
|
|
|
|
Capital and reserves attributable to equity holders of the
parent
|
|
|
|
Share capital
|
|
2,014
|
2,014
|
Share premium
|
|
125,245
|
125,245
|
Merger reserve
|
|
483
|
483
|
Retained deficit
|
|
(115,085)
|
(107,467)
|
Total equity
|
|
12,657
|
20,275
|
|
|
|
|
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows
for
the year ended 31 December 2023
|
|
Year
|
Year
|
|
|
ended
|
ended
|
|
|
31
December
|
31
December
|
|
|
2023
|
2022
|
|
|
£000
|
£000
|
Cash flows from operating activities
|
|
|
|
Loss before tax
|
|
(9,657)
|
(20,093)
|
Adjustments for:
|
|
|
|
Finance income
|
|
(635)
|
(207)
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
73
|
93
|
Amortisation of intangible fixed
assets
|
|
11
|
9
|
Share-based payment
charge
|
|
790
|
919
|
Cash flows from operations before changes in working
capital
|
|
(9,418)
|
(19,279)
|
Decrease in trade and other
receivables
|
|
473)
|
289)
|
(Decrease) in trade and other
payables
|
|
(1,690)
|
(4,384)
|
Cash used in operations
|
|
(10,635)
|
(23,374)
|
Tax credit received
|
|
2,415
|
9,088
|
Net
cash used in operating activities
|
|
(8,220)
|
(14,286)
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from investing activities
|
|
|
|
Interest received
|
|
642
|
140
|
Purchase of intangible
assets
|
|
(69)
|
-
|
Purchase of property, plant and
equipment
|
|
(13)
|
(6)
|
Receipt of bank deposits
|
|
3,750
|
-
|
Cash paid for deposits
|
|
(1,500)
|
(3,750)
|
Net
cash generated from/(used in) investing
activities
|
|
2,810
|
(3,616)
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from financing activities
|
|
|
|
Proceeds from issue of ordinary
shares
|
|
-
|
1
|
Net
cash generated from/(used in) financing
activities
|
|
-
|
1
|
|
|
|
|
Decrease in cash and cash equivalents
|
|
(5,410)
|
(17,901)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the
year
|
|
15,926
|
33,827
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the year
|
|
10,516
|
15,926)
|
|
|
|
|
Notes
1. Basis of
preparation
The financial information of the
Group set out above does not constitute "statutory accounts" for
the purposes of Section 435 of the Companies Act 2006. The
financial information for the year ended 31 December 2023 has been
extracted from the Group's audited financial statements which were
approved by the Board of directors on 26 June 2024 and will be
delivered to the Registrar of Companies for England and Wales in
due course. The financial information for the year ended 31
December 2022 has been extracted from the Group's audited financial
statements for that period which have been delivered to the
Registrar of Companies for England and Wales. The reports of the
auditors on both these financial statements were unqualified, did
not include any references to any matters to which the auditors
drew attention by way of emphasis without qualifying their report
and did not contain a statement under Section 498(2) or Section
498(3) of the Companies Act 2006. While the financial information
included in this preliminary announcement has been prepared in
accordance with the recognition and measurement criteria of UK
adopted International Financial Reporting Standards ('IFRSs'), this
announcement does not itself contain sufficient information to
comply with those IFRSs. This financial information has been
prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in the
December 2023 report and financial statements.
2. New standards,
interpretations and amendments adopted from 1 January
2023
With effect from 1 January 2023, the
Group adopted the amendments to existing standards set out below
that are effective for an annual period that begins on or after 1
January 2023:
·
Amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice Statement 2
- Disclosure of Accounting Policies
·
Amendments to IAS 8 - Definition of Accounting
Estimates
The adoption of these amendments has
not had a material impact on the disclosures or on the amounts
reported in the Group's financial statements.
3. New standards,
interpretations and amendments not yet
effective
At the date of approval of these
Group financial statements, the Group had not yet applied the
following new and revised accounting standards, amendments and
interpretations that have been issued by the IASB and have been
adopted by the UK Endorsement Board (UKEB):
Effective 1 January
2024:
·
Amendments to IFRS 16 - Lease Liability in a Sale
and Leaseback
·
Amendments to IAS 1 - Classification of
Liabilities as Current or Non-current
The Group does not expect the
adoption of these IFRS amendments will have a material impact on
the Group in the current period or will have material impact on
future reporting periods and on foreseeable future
transactions.
The Group financial statements are
presented in Sterling.
4. Going
concern
The directors have prepared
financial forecasts to estimate the likely cash requirements of the
Group over the period to 31 December 2025, given its stage of
development and lack of recurring revenues. In preparing these
financial forecasts, the directors have made certain assumptions
with regards to the timing and amount of future expenditure over
which they have control. The directors consider that they have
taken a prudent view in preparing these forecasts.
The directors have identified that
the Group will need to raise further funds during 2024 in order to
conduct the planned Phase 2 clinical trial in mechanically
ventilated patients. The ability of the Group to secure a fund
raise in 2024 cannot be guaranteed, therefore the directors have
prepared an alternative forecast which maintains a budget for
further pre-clinical preparatory work that would produce data to
undertake a fund raise in 2025, whilst significantly reducing
research and development, and administrative spend. Should this
alternative forecast be required, the directors are confident of
achieving savings in expenditure within their control, resulting in
the Group having sufficient resources until Q1 2026 without the
need for a further fund raise, whilst maintaining the principal
activity of the Group.
In addition, the directors have
considered the sensitivity of the financial forecasts to changes in
key assumptions, including, among others, potential cost overruns
within anticipated spend.
After due consideration of these
forecasts and current cash resources, including the sensitivity of
key inputs, the directors consider that the Group has adequate
financial resources to continue in operational existence for the
foreseeable future (being a period of at least 12 months from the
date of this report) and, for this reason, the financial statements
have been prepared on a going concern basis.
5. Tax
The tax credit of £1.3
million (2022: £2.4 million) relates to research and development
tax credits (including R&D expenditure credit - "RDEC") in
respect of the year ended 31 December 2023.
6. Loss per ordinary
share
Basic loss per share is calculated
by dividing the loss attributable to ordinary equity holders of the
parent company by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in
issue during the year.
The loss attributable to ordinary
shareholders and weighted average number of ordinary shares for the
purpose of calculating the diluted earnings per ordinary share are
identical to those used for basic loss per share. This is because
the exercise of share options would have the effect of reducing the
loss per ordinary share and is therefore antidilutive under the
terms of IAS 33.
References
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