May 8, 2018
Executives
Randy Steward - CFO Doug Bryant - President and CEO
Analysts
Jack Meehan - Barclays Brian Weinstein - William Blair Max Masucci - Canaccord Genuity Tycho Peterson - JP Morgan Bill Quirk - Piper Jaffray Alex Nowak - Craig Hallum David Westenberg - CL King
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Quidel Corporation’s First Quarter 2018’s Earnings Conference Call.
At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, instructions will be given for the question-and-answer session.
[Operator Instructions] Also as a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I’d now like to turn the call over to Mr.
Randy Steward, Quidel’s Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.
Randy Steward
Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, everyone.
Thank you for joining today’s call. With me today is our President and Chief Executive Officer, Doug Bryant.
Our first quarter 2018 earnings release is now available on ir.quidel.com, our Investor Relations website. We will also post our prepared remarks on the Presentations tab of our IR website following the conclusion of this call on May 8th for a period of 24 hours.
Please note that this conference call will include forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws. It is possible that actual results and performance could differ significantly from these stated expectations.
For a discussion of risk factors, please review Quidel’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, registration statements and subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q as filed with the SEC. Furthermore, this conference call contains time-sensitive information that is accurate only as of the date of the live broadcast, May 8th, 2018.Quidel undertakes no obligation to revise or update any statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this conference call, except as required by law.
Today, Quidel released financial results for the three months ended March 31, 2018. If you have not received our news release, or if you would like to be added to the Company’s distribution list, please contact Ruben at 858-646-8023.
Following Doug’s comments, I will briefly discuss our financial results, and we’ll then open the call for your questions. I’ll now hand the call over to Doug for his comments.
Doug Bryant
Thank you, Randy, and good afternoon, everyone. We’ve had another extraordinary quarter and we’re positioned well to achieve all our targets and expectations for 2018.
As I’ll describe shortly, revenue for both our legacy Quidel products and the acquired Triage and BNP businesses was ahead of what we had anticipated. Sofia 2 was an absolute hit and we placed as many analyzers on three-year contracts as we could make in the quarter, enlarging our Sofia installed base to over 31,000 analyzers globally.
Sofia has truly become a flagship product for us and a highly leverage-able asset as we continue to expand our immunoassays for the Sofia platform and as the movement of patients away from traditional healthcare settings continues. Solana placements and revenue grew nicely in the quarter as well.
And finally, our R&D teams continued to make impressive progress. Most notably, the Savanna team achieved its most critical milestone in the quarter, locking down the design of the multiplex cartridge that will enable the delivery of unique and highly desirable content and capability to the point-of-care molecular segment.
Based on where we are at this stage, I think that we can confidently say that Savanna will Quidel’s second flagship product. Total revenue for quarter one 2018 was $169 million, a 130% increase from the first quarter of the prior year, driven by an incremental $68 million from the acquired Triage and BNP businesses that closed on October 6th and an additional $27 million in growth from the legacy Quidel businesses, about 37% higher than in Q1 2017.
The $68 million in the acquired businesses was about $6 million higher than we were expecting due to strong growth in the United States. And the $27 million delta in legacy revenue was largely Influenza at $24 million which includes molecular influenza sales as well.
As I mentioned during our Analyst Day presentation in Chicago, our strategic intent has long been to build a broader base diagnostic company that delivers revenue and margin more consistently. In support of our strategic intent, I outlined three main objectives for 2018.
First, we will cultivate organic growth through continued effort and investment in our Sofia and Virena immunoassay, Solana and Savanna molecular and Triage cardiovascular and toxicology programs. Second, we will continue to integrate the acquired businesses, realize synergies we have modeled at minimum and pay down debt.
Third, we will execute an evolving plan that through a combination of organic growth and M&A will get us to $1 billion in annual revenue in the not too distant future while leveraging our existing infrastructure and growing our costs at a much slower rate. Let me comment briefly on our efforts to grow organically as well as where we are with respect to integration of the Triage and BNP businesses and then I will provide an update on the ongoing Danaher, Beckman anti-trust claim.
Clearly, we had a great quarter as did other companies with influenza-related products of all sorts. While our QuickVue product was temporarily off market awaiting FDA clearance due to the new reclass guidelines.
For most of the quarter, Quidel was shipping four different products to our customers, each of which performed very well. Sofia influenza sales led the way of course with obvious growth in the market, noticeable gains and market share and assisted by conversions from our visually red QuickVue product, a brand that has remained incredibly sticky as we saw in the quarter.
Solana influenza and Lyra, our PCR influenza assay also saw noticeable gains in revenue and share. Often overlooked as is assumed, even by us internally is our supply chain and manufacturing leverage incompetency, which proved hugely beneficial at the times it appeared as though we were among a select few companies that could consistently supply products.
Moving forward we're adding a six fully automated manufacturing line with a capacity of up to 30 million additional Sofia test cartridges per year, as we believe that the market for rapid influenza testing will continue to grow over the longer term. In terms of product development, we're making consistent steady progress at the same fast paced rate, Quidel has become known for it.
We recently launched a moderately complex Lyme assay for Sofia 2 and we received CE Mark for both Sofia Legionella and Sofia Strep pneumo for use on Sofia 2. Work on CLIA-waiver for Sofia 2 whole blood Lyme is ongoing and we hope to launch this summer in the United States.
Sofia 2 vitamin D CLIA-waived is also further down its development path and we're making great strides with Sofia Strep 98 and Sofia RVP among several others in the pipeline. We expect to add a couple more Solana assays shortly, while we begin to shift more molecular assay development effort and investment to the Savanna platform.
Integration of the Alere asset is going extremely well. The team we’ve assembled to manage this project is motivated, highly skilled and diligent.
There are many actions to be accomplished, but we know what to do and it's getting done. The cooperation, knowhow and assistance we're getting from our Abbott counterparts who have clearly done this before should be noted as well as they've clearly made it easier than I could have done.
There are a few milestones we're tracking from an external perspective. Our effort to pay down debt in the near-term is a big one and Randy will provide color there.
Our control of order to cash in the sales and distribution processes for big chunks of the business is another, in that regard the U.S. is done.
We expect Europe to be finished in August and we expect to be live in China by January, 2019. And of course, numerous other smaller countries are finished and/or are in process at this time.
We did set up a shared service center in Galway Island with the faculty scheduled to begin supporting Europe, Middle East and Africa personnel in mid-June and Europe, Middle East and Africa customers in August. And finally, I recognize that there is an interest in the ongoing Danaher claim that the agreement that has been in place for many years with Beckman to distribute BNP kits for use on their analyzers was somehow anti-competitive.
And so I'll provide a brief update on the proceedings. As we've said before, we filed our demurrer to the claim in February and we expected the judge to rule on it sometime in May as if the normal process and sequence of events.
I’ve said that our filing was a standard practice and that rarely what a judge rule in our favor at this stage. The hearing was held on Friday, it went exactly as anticipated and the demurrer was dismissed by the judge.
We expected this outcome as the demurrer is more of a legal process type hearing. The most important outcome from Friday's hearing in our view was that a trial date has been set for August 30th, 2019.
With that said, our views of our legal position remain unchanged and we are highly confident in our legal position as we have continued to learn more in engaging experts and as we move through the discovery process. In conclusion, we had a couple of fantastic quarters having led the work with a highly talented team at Quidel for several years now.
I can say the following with confidence. At no time in the history of Quidel has the Company been as poised to meet the demands of customers in these traditional diagnostic segments in which it has competed or as poised to meet the demands for testing where patients are increasingly headed.
Many have speculated the testing for routine and chronic conditions would ultimately move closer to patients who demand efficiency and convenience. We are just beginning to see evidence of that trend and Sofia with its data management capabilities is proving to be a valuable diagnostic tool in a growing number of alternate site settings.
With the intending launch of Savanna, Quidel will have another valuable diagnostic tool in the emerging point-of-care segment and I will predict another flagship product. In summary, great quarter, great start to what will be another great year.
We are enthused and motivated. Randy?
Randy Steward
Thank you, Doug. Good afternoon again everyone.
As we reported earlier today, total revenues for the first quarter of 2018 were $169.1 million, this compares to $73.7 million in the first quarter of 2017. The 130% increase in revenue was driven by the $68.4 million in revenue from the acquired Triage and BNP businesses as well as a very robust influenza season.
Rapid Immunoassay product revenues increased 40% to $80.7 million in the first quarter of 2018. Within that category, Sofia product revenues increased 131% to $58.1 million.
Sofia is clearly the driver of the Rapid Immunoassay category and continues to deliver growth primarily from flu but also from Strep A and RSV due to the over 31,000 instrument placements in the field. As expected, QuickVue product revenues decreased 34% to $21.4 million largely due to the continued emphasis to convert customers over to the Sofia platform.
The influenza Rapid Immunoassay revenue split was $51.2 million from Sofia versus $9.5 million from QuickVue. Across all categories, influenza revenue increase 59% in the quarter to $64.6 million and $131.5 million on a trailing 12 month basis.
Also within this category, Strep revenue was up 12% over the prior year quarter and for the trailing 12 months was $39.7 million, an increase of 14%. RSV was up 3% in the quarter and up 20% on a trailing 12 month basis to $11.1 million.
Cardiac Immunoassay revenues at $68.4 million represented the revenue contribution of the acquired Triage and BNP businesses. The category overall grew 13% from the first quarter of 2017.
Triage revenue was $39.3 million and grew 12% from the first quarter of 2017. Segment BNP revenue was $29.2 million a 15% increase over first quarter of 2017.
For the Triage business, U.S. revenue increased 14%, Asia Pacific grew 18% and Europe, Middle East, Africa grew 2%.
For the Beckman BNP business, the revenue growth mainly came from the United States. As you may recall, we achieved our objective in the fourth quarter of last year in building out the majority of our international commercial team as well as the realignment of our US commercial team in order to properly support this acquired business.
We initially commented we thought it would take us the first six months of the transaction to stabilize the business. We are quite pleased that the Cardiac Immunoassay products achieved first quarter growth over the prior year.
While we are encouraged at this point, it is still early and we will need to report several more quarters in order to understand the drivers of the underlying growth in cardiac. Revenue in the Specialized Diagnostic Solutions category increased 14% to $14.9 million led by 9% growth in our virology products due to the heavy respiratory season and 16% growth in our specialty products.
Our Molecular Diagnostic Solutions category increased 65% in the quarter to $5.1 million due to a 178% growth in Solana revenue. Gross profit in the first quarter increased $57.8 million mostly the result of the incremental Cardiac Immunoassay revenue from the acquired Triage and BNP businesses and the profits generated from the increased influenza sales.
Gross profit margin in the first quarter of 2018 was approximately 63%. This compares to 66% in the first quarter of 2017.
Amortization of intangibles reduced the Q1 2018 consolidated gross margin by 2 percentage points and the Triage, BNP inventory step up of fair value reduced the total gross margin by an additional 2 percentage points. Net of the acquisition related one-time costs and amortization of intangibles, the legacy Quidel business gross margin was 72%, Triage gross margin was 53% and the BNP business gross margin was 65%.
R&D expense increased by $4.7 million in the quarter as compared to last year, this increase is due to the increase in projects and personnel associated with the acquired Triage business. As we stated on our Analyst Day presentation, we continue to believe our R&D expense in 2018 should be in the range of $50 million to $52 million.
Sales and marketing expense increased by $14.3 million in the first quarter of 2018 as compared to the first quarter of 2017. This increase was largely due to incremental personnel costs associated with the Triage business.
For the full year 2018, we expect sales and marketing expense to be between $100 million to $110 million driven by the full year impact in an expanded and multinational sales force, supporting both the legacy products as well as the Triage and BNP businesses. G&A expense increased by $3.4 million in the quarter, primarily due to acquisition related costs and stock comp expense.
Interest expense in the quarter was $7.9 million, of which $2.6 million relates to our convertible senior notes, $2.5 million related to our senior credit facility and $2.8 million relates to the deferred consideration associated with the purchase of the BNP business. Of the $7.9 million, $3.5 million related to cash portion of the interest expense.
Non-cash components include the $2.8 million related to the BNP deferred consideration, $1.3 million for the accretion of our convertible senior notes and $300,000 for the amortization of debt issue cost on our senior credit facility. We also recorded a loss on extinguishment of debt of $4.6 million.
This relates to the $100 million early payment on the term loan and the extinguishment of $70 million in aggregate principal of the convertible senior notes and exchange for our common stock. In the quarter, we reported income tax expense of $4.7 million and we continue to book a full valuation allowance against our net deferred tax asset value due to three years of cumulative losses.
With the passage of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, we believe our effective tax rate for 2018 should be in the range of 18% to 20% of pretax income without consideration for the reversal of the valuation allowance. The share count we used in calculating fully diluted shares outstanding has changed in the first quarter, due to the convertible senior notes exchange transactions.
Due to the settlement with certain holders of the convertible notes entirely with common stock, the accounting rules stipulate that we now must assume that the remaining convertible note balance of $97.1 million will be exchanged for common stock. In the quarter, the $70.2 million in convertible note exchange increased the outstanding shares by approximately 2.4 million shares.
The potential share issuable from the remaining outstanding convertible notes, if converted, is an incremental 3 million shares. In total then for the quarter, we’re reporting fully diluted shares outstanding of 41.9 million shares.
We continue to represent that on a go-forward basis, the convertible notes may be settled in cash or in combination of cash and shares of common stock. Net income for the first quarter of 2016 was $34 million or $0.86 per share as compared to net income of $14.3 million or $0.42 per diluted share for first quarter of 2017.
On a non-GAAP basis, net income for the first quarter of 2018 was $54.3 million or $1.29 per diluted share. This compares to net income of $15.3 million or $0.45 per diluted share for the first quarter of 2017.
As we’ve mentioned on our Analyst Day in April, we took several steps in the quarter toward improving our capital structure. In January, the Company sold the Summers Ridge property for net consideration of $146.6 million.
As a result of this transaction, Quidel used a $100 million of the net cash proceeds to pay down, approximately 40% of the existing term note/loan. Also as part of the transaction, the Company repaid the entire outstanding $10 million balance on its revolving credit facility.
The remaining portion of the sale leaseback proceeds plus cash on the balance sheet were used in April to pay the first annual contingent and deferred consideration payment to Abbott of $48 million. As a result of the prepayment on the term loan, the Company wrote off of approximately $3 million on unamortized debt issuance cost.
Also in the quarter, Quidel exchanged approximately $70 million in aggregate principal amount of the convertible senior notes, as mentioned previously for approximately 2.4 million shares of the Company’s common stock. As a result, the Company recorded a 1.6 million loss on extinguishment for the write-off of previously capitalized transaction cost and transaction fees for the exchange transaction.
Quidel’s convertible note balance currently stands at approximately $97.1 million. As a result of these transactions, plus the first quarter term note amortization payment, Quidel’s total principal balance on its debt as of March 31st was $244.2 million.
With this significant reduction in debt plus the exceptional first quarter earnings, our leverage ratio excluding the netting of cash is now below two times. As a result, our LIBOR spread was reduced by 50 basis points.
As of today and after the first annual installment payment to Abbott, the Company has $87 million in cash on the balance sheet. And with that, we conclude our formal comments for today.
Operator, we are now ready to open the call for questions.
Operator
Thank you, sir. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Jack Meehan of Barclays.
Your question please.
Jack Meehan
I wanted to start with the Cardiac Immunoassay business, so big beat there versus expectations. What drove the strength in the United States and was there any pull-forward of revenue timing wise?
Doug Bryant
There was no timing impact and as it turns out, Jack, the beat as you call it was equal between the Triage business and the BNP businesses. So, obviously as we get more familiar with the business, we will understand the underlying drivers of both.
So I can’t actually tell you that we can predict moving forward, what that means quite yet. But obviously we are encouraged.
Jack Meehan
Then on Sofia, could you talk a little bit about the cross-sale of additional tests and what adoption you are seeing beyond just through in the quarter?
Doug Bryant
So it’s a big driver Jack of course but we’ve done a pretty good job of pulling in RSV and Strep and our commercial organization has specific goals that are tied to increasing the number of assays per box. And I think we are seeing that the program has legs.
Jack Meehan
Final question, where do inventory levels stand at the end of the quarter and just any thoughts on a normal full year it may it look for the second quarter?
Doug Bryant
I think we are in a good shape. As you know towards the end of the first quarter it’s typical for distributors to wind down inventory and they did.
So as we go into the next season which we would predict would be more normal because we have to. I think we are in good shape, that -- meaning that distributors will major order let’s say know that they are going to shipping products to their end users.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brian Weinstein of William Blair. Your question please.
Brian Weinstein
Just following up on Jack's question a moment ago, I recognized that you said that there was -- you have nothing pulled forward on the cardiac side. But what is specifically going better operationally is?
Is it just simply execution? Is it more focused?
And should we expect that, that business will be sequentially down in the next quarter? Or is this really kind of the base to really thinking about building off the best?
Doug Bryant
You're talking about two parts, aren't you though, Brian. You're talking about the cardiovascular business?
Brian Weinstein
Yes.
Doug Bryant
In that regard, sequentially it would normally be slightly down just because of the seasonality of the cardiovascular business, obviously, not a significant as on the respiratory side. But nevertheless, there is some seasonality.
We are encouraged though by the focus that we're getting from our commercial organization. This is one of their three key goals for 2018 and I do see a lot of momentum as a result, certainly lots in the queue in terms of thing that could be closed as we move forward.
I wasn’t anticipating that we would see that level of success so early, but I do think that both from a process and focus perspective, we're doing pretty well, certainly doing better than it was doing before.
Brian Weinstein
Fair enough. And then I don't know if I missed this I maybe jumped on a couple of minutes late, but Randy, did you address the prior comment about I think it was revenue up to $520 million is that still what you guys are targeting?
Was there any kind of changes since it was more broad annual target that you made out at the annual or at the Analyst Day?
Randy Steward
It's a terrific comment. Obviously, we knew early in the quarter that we were doing nicely.
And it was probably inappropriate to make comment at Analyst Day as to now or what nicely meant. But even we were a little bit surprised as things rolled up at the end of the quarter.
So, we do have some favorability relative to our own internal expectations. I would just say that the $520 million that we suggested is certainly achievable.
Brian Weinstein
And then the last question for me, I don't think you addressed it at the Analyst Day or on this call, but, can you just give an update on toxicology instruments that you guys talked about when you are first aware where that stands today and where it’s going to take to the market? Thank you.
Randy Steward
We're still working on the toxicology product. We’re still looking at clinical trials, we’re also looking at our longer term strategy in trying to make instrument choice decisions as well.
So I can't really comment a whole lot further than that Brian, but it's certainly one of the topics that’s top of mind for us as we look at the Triage business.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Mark Massaro of Canaccord Genuity.
Your question please.
Max Masucci
Hi, this is Max Masucci on for Mark. On Savanna, on your Analyst Day, I believe you indicated plans to launch in the EU in the late 2019 and in the U.S.
in 2020. I think you're planning to shrink the size of the instrument compared to the one you showed at ACC a few years ago.
Can you speak to some of the bigger items also on your checklist for you to take Savanna into the EU and initiate clinical trials in the U.S?
Doug Bryant
Sure, couple of points. One, as you’re right, the instrument will be much smaller than we had originally projected and that's due to a different cartridge design.
Right now, we are moving a lot of resources over to assay development. We have a small number of cartridges that have multiplexed assays on board in development.
I would suggest that the timeline that we mentioned at Analyst Day is still intact in terms of milestone. The biggest milestone that we had in front of us frankly for the year we just hit and that was that we have locked down the design of the cartridge and are highly confident that the cartridge we need and that it’s manufacturable.
At this stage now we are thinking about what additional investments we might make to speed up assay development because I think in the longer term menu is going to matter and the number of things you have on the instrument is far more interesting to the customer than the instrument itself.
Max Masucci
And you reiterated your $1 billion revenue target up to 2023 which I believe by your Analyst Day estimates imply you only to acquire about 150 million to 250 million of revenues. Can you speak to the size of your M&A funnel deal multiples there whether anything might be close to fruition?
Doug Bryant
Not really, I mean I don’t have the flip in, but I can’t really talk about what our funnel looks like or the size of the funnel. I would say we are actively looking at a number of different things and some things are more interesting than others.
I could see a combination of things that are medium to larger size that I -- it’s harder once you think about an acquisition that we’ll deliver go on one shot. So I would just say stay tuned and we will keep working on it and I don’t know that we can reproduce what we just did.
But we do have a couple of good ideas.
Max Masucci
And one more if I can. Are your previously provided margin targets intact, 65% gross margin, 75% EBITDA and 20 million run rate synergies by the end of 2020?
Doug Bryant
Yes.
Randy Steward
Correct.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Tycho Peterson of JP Morgan.
Your question please.
Tycho Peterson
I guess on Triage, BNP. The China excess inventory has that all kind of worked its way through and is there lingering inventory issues for the second quarter?
Doug Bryant
There are none for the second. We did see a modest amount of mop up if you will in the first quarter that’s behind us now.
Randy Steward
Yes, China was on our internal expectations for the first quarter, so we're off and running.
Tycho Peterson
And then just any comments on tariff dynamics given that's an important U.S. market for Triage?
Doug Bryant
No, we’ve been looking at it pretty closely. We think we understand where everything is.
I don’t anticipate anything at this stage.
Tycho Peterson
And no change to your full year outlook on cardiac while you're are still assuming 250 million, back to kind of Brian’s question from before whether this is the new run rate?
Doug Bryant
I think so. Let me be a little bit more specific.
I think seeing the growth is great but understanding the underlying drivers to the growth will require you a little bit more digging which we are doing, as we require some effort on the part of the commercial organization to see what’s real and what’s reproducible and how much of that therefore allows us to predict what might happen in next several quarters. In our defense, it's still pretty new to us.
The good news though is what we're seeing here is increases in the U.S., which we have recently assumed to be quite flat and then more to that we have ordered cash and distribution responsibility under our responsibility at this stage. So our ability to understand it, it’s far greater than some of the countries that we're still working through.
So again good news is, the U.S. ought to be somewhat predictable at some stage in the next couple of quarters I would think.
Tycho Peterson
And then the last one just on margins, I know you commented on the longer term goal a minute ago, but just as we think about the next few quarters, given Sofia 2 momentum and the lower margin there. How should we think about gross margins trending for the next quarter or two?
Doug Bryant
Well, certainly in Q2, it will go down because of the absence of flu. So I believe we had said all in for the full year, it was going to be in the range of 58% to 60%.
I'd still think it may be on the high side of that. I’d still think probably somewhere around 60% is a good target.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Bill Quirk of Piper Jaffray.
Your question please.
Bill Quirk
So, first, Doug, just thinking a little bit about the integration process with Alere, you touched on Europe and China coming later on the summer in early ’19. Can you talk a little bit about some of the longer term plans to help get more Quidel products into the hands of some of your distribution from the acquired business?
Doug Bryant
The good news is with the infrastructure we’re putting in place plus some specific R&D effort design to meet the needs of those markets. Moving forward, we do expect to seeQuidel legacy business to increase at an increasing rate as well.
In addition, in terms of M&A targets we're also looking at things that this would specifically benefit from our improved international channel.
Bill Quirk
And then just thinking about the -- and I think your comment, your response rather to one of Tycho's question that within the next couple of quarters, you should have a better handle on the U.S. puts and takes of the acquired business.
Any comment Doug on, if I go back to when those assets were publicly traded as Biosite, BNP in particular did seem to have a correlation with flu, the severe weather seem to exacerbate a lot of patient symptoms. Any thoughts to that, it doesn’t explain that why the Triage was up so much, but do you think that contributed at all to why BNP was so strong in the fourth quarter -- excuse me sorry first quarter?
Doug Bryant
Yes, the increase in flu in the quarter, were due to severe weather. I would agree with you, Bill.
But I don't know that I can say for certainty that the weather had an impact on this influenza season. I think what had an impact on this influenza season, was a poor match with the vaccine and a specific H3N2 that a lot of the population had not seen before.
So -- but you are right in colder months, we see more BNP and in ex-U.S. we see a lot of shortness of breath panels being sold during those colder months.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Alex Nowak of Craig Hallum. Question please.
Alex Nowak
I had to jump on late, so apologies, if this is already discussed, but do you have any update on the Beckman Coulter lawsuit? It appears the court dismissed your demur yesterday and looks like the judge ruled to the case is going to head to trial here in 2019.
So, any update there? And what sort of legal spend should we'd be forecasting for this in 2018 and 2019?
Doug Bryant
Okay, well great questions, not inappropriate, although I did, as you’ll see in the transcript, make a comment during my prepared remarks. But still I would encourage everybody to read the order, the judge ruled on Friday actually.
And the order explains what we had said before and supports my original supposition that our chances of demur, having the case dismissed at this stage was highly unlikely. There were two causes of action as I think everybody knows, and I will just read a couple of comments from the order itself.
It said, the first cause of action, moreover the demur can be used only to challenge detracts that appear on the face of the pleading under attack or matters outside the pleading that are judicially noticeable and that continues as demur for uncertainty is strictly construed even where a complaint is in some respects uncertain because the ambiguities can’t be clarified under modern discovery procedures. And of course we are about to head into significant discovery here.
So it continues the demur for uncertainty will be sustained where the complaint is so bad that the defendant cannot reasonably respond that is he or she cannot reasonably determine what issues must be admitted or denied. And finally, in terms of that first cause of action, the final comment was judged usually make short shrift of demurs for uncertainty.
They expect counsel to clear up any ambiguities through discovery or stipulations rather than by demur. And then my second cause of action, it’s similar.
A couple of comments from the order, it is an abusive discussion for a judge to sustain a demur to such a complaint and to dismiss the action even if the judge concludes that the plaintiff is not entitled to a favorable declaration. And then as a final remark, it said, it should be noted that the United States Supreme Court has observed that a summary judgment let alone as demur in favor of defendants is really warranted in anti-trust cases, which I believe I said before in public settings.
So, we fully expected this was going to happen. We were fully prepared to move forward with discovery.
The news though is that the trial date is set for August of 2019. We will move forward as we had intended to.
Even if we prevail at trial, next fall, I suspect that the plaintiff will consider at least an appeal and that could take another 12 to 18 months pass that. So your question though Alex with regard to spend, I would just say that spend is going to ramp up starting now.
And prior to this we have spent very, very little. And actually honestly the management team has spent practically no time on this issue whatsoever.
In discovery though, we will be involved somewhat and moving forward that will become just another thing that is part of business. So in terms of spend, we are probably looking at $1 million or so this year.
Alex Nowak
And then just real quick, any update on Sofia Lyme CLIA-waive and Sofia 2 Vitamin D?
Doug Bryant
Sofia Lyme, Sofia 2, yes, that’s the FDA. As I commented in my remarks, we expect to have the CLIA-waive a finger stick whole blood product in market in the United States this summer.
Vitamin D, we’re still working on. We have got things to do, but we are going to launch in Europe while we continue to work on the Sofia 2 CLIA-waived version for the U.S.
Operator
Our next question comes from David Westenberg of CL King. Your question please.
David Westenberg
I do had hop on late, so I am sorry if things were covered that I am going to ask. But actually this one, next one I know probably it wasn’t because it was just asked, but did the actual trial date catch you guys off-guard or may be catch you up off guard was the wrong word.
Is there the trial date sort of on a timeline as expected or was that sooner or later than your prior expectations?
Doug Bryant
No again, I would just say one more time, we are not surprised at all by either the judge's ruling or the timeline and we had anticipated all this. We have budgeted this moving out several years.
In fact we have suggested before that total spend all-in by the time it get done over a four year period of time or so will be in the $7 million to $12 million range.
David Westenberg
And then just may be an update on some of your instruments. First with Sofia, what percent of them are using more than one assay?
And then in terms of Solana, do you have any update on your confidence and your ability to head more than $20 million in revenue for 2018?
Doug Bryant
I will go in reverse order. I think $20 million very achievable for Solana at this stage.
We were certainly encouraged by what we saw in the first quarter and honestly I was just surprised by the number of customers that were Solana influenza. Honestly I am a little bit surprised that the uptick was so quick in the quarter.
And those places are up and running already, waiting for the next season. So I think $20 million is definitely achievable now that I saw what happened in the first quarter.
In terms of the number of placements that have more than one assay, I don’t -- I am sorry I don’t have a number off the top of my head. I would just say that I know that the number of multiple assays per blocks of those customers is increasing and obviously has to do with a number of factors, including the fact that I think our Strep product works extremely well, customer recognize that.
And more and more customers are now also running RSV.
Operator
Thank you. That is all the time we have today.
Please proceed with your presentation or any closing remarks.
Doug Bryant
I don’t have any closing remarks. I will just say thanks everyone for your support and your interest in Quidel, and we did have a great quarter.
I heard somebody just say blow out. They say just blow out but we’re certainly off to a great start and I believe that we are well positioned to achieve all those things that we talked about during the Analyst Day.
Thanks again. Take care everybody.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, we thank you for your participation. And ask that you please disconnect your lines.
Good bye.