1Provided September 13, 2018.Provided August 3, 2018.
A pioneer in pet therapeutics. Delivering safe and effective therapeutics that elevate the standard of care in veterinary medicine
2Provided September 13, 2018.
Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking StatementsThis presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements contained in this presentation that do not relate to matters of historical fact should be considered forward-looking statements, including without limitation statements with respect to anticipated financial performance; our anticipated use of cash in 2018; our ability to bring innovative therapeutics to the market; steps necessary for and timing of regulatory submissions and approvals of therapeutic candidates; study, development and commercialization of therapeutics or therapeutic candidates, including without limitation ongoing efforts to commercialize ENTYCE and NOCITA; timing of anticipated study results; increased market recognition of and demand for our therapeutics; our beliefs on sales coverage of our pet therapeutics in our MSAs in the U.S.; and statements regarding the Company's efforts, plans and opportunities, including, without limitation, advancing our therapeutic candidates and offering innovative therapeutics that help manage pet's medical needs safely and effectively and that result in longer and improved quality of life for pets.
These forward-looking statements are based on management's current expectations. These statements are neither promises nor guarantees, but involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, the following: our history of operating losses and our expectation that we will continue to incur losses for the foreseeable future; failure to obtain sufficient capital to fund our operations; risks relating to the impairment of intangible assets; risks pertaining to stockholder class action lawsuits; unstable market and economic conditions; restrictions on our financial flexibility due to the terms of our credit facility; our substantial dependence upon the commercial success of our therapeutics; development of our biologic therapeutic candidates is dependent upon relatively novel technologies and uncertain regulatory pathways, and biologics may not be commercially viable; denial or delay of regulatory approval for our existing or future therapeutic candidates; failure of our therapeutic candidates that receive regulatory approval to achieve market acceptance or achieve commercial success; product liability lawsuits that could cause us to incur substantial liabilities and limit commercialization of current and future therapeutics; failure to realize anticipated benefits of our acquisitions and difficulties associated with integrating the acquired businesses; development of pet therapeutics is a lengthy and expensive process with an uncertain outcome; competition in the pet therapeutics market, including from generic alternatives to our therapeutic candidates, and failure to compete effectively; failure to identify, license or acquire, develop and commercialize additional therapeutic candidates; failure to attract and retain senior management and key scientific personnel; our reliance on third-party manufacturers, suppliers and partners; regulatory restrictions on the marketing of our approved therapeutics and therapeutic candidates; our small commercial sales organization, and any failure to create a sales force or collaborate with third-parties to commercialize our approved therapeutics and therapeutic candidates; difficulties in managing the growth of our company; significant costs of being a public company; risks related to the effectiveness of our internal controls; changes in distribution channels for pet therapeutics; consolidation of our veterinarian customers; limitations on our ability to use our net operating loss carryforwards; the impact of tax reform legislation; impacts of generic products; safety or efficacy concerns with respect to our therapeutic candidates; effects of system failures or security breaches; delay or termination of the development of grapiprant therapeutic candidates and commercialization of grapiprant products that may arise from termination of or failure to perform under the collaboration agreement and/or the co-promotion agreement with Elanco; failure to obtain ownership of issued patents covering our therapeutic candidates or failure to prosecute or enforce licensed patents; failure to comply with our obligations under our license agreements; effects of patent or other intellectual property lawsuits; failure to protect our intellectual property; changing patent laws and regulations; non-compliance with any legal or regulatory requirements; litigation resulting from the misuse of our confidential information; the uncertainty of the regulatory approval process and the costs associated with government regulation of our therapeutic candidates; failure to obtain regulatory approvals in foreign jurisdictions; effects of legislative or regulatory reform with respect to pet therapeutics; the volatility of the price of our common stock; our status as an emerging growth company, which could make our common stock less attractive to investors; dilution of our common stock as a result of future financings; the influence of certain significant stockholders over our business; and provisions in our charter documents and under Delaware law could delay or prevent a change in control. These and other important factors discussed under the caption "Risk Factors" in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, on March 14, 2018, along with our other reports filed with the SEC could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by the forward-looking statements made in this presentation. Any such forward-looking statements represent management's estimates as of the date of this presentation. While we may elect to update such forward-looking statements at some point in the future, we disclaim any obligation to do so, even if subsequent events cause our views to change, except as required under applicable law. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any date subsequent to the date of this presentation.
Safe Harbor Statement
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3Provided September 13, 2018.
Our Highlights Well-positioned in the most attractive segment of the animal
health industry – pet therapeutics
Proven ability to access innovation and translate that into regulatory success; the only pet NCEs approved by the FDA in the prior four years are our therapeutics
Created a differentiated commercial model targeting a unique customer, the therapeutics-focused veterinarian
Team with experience in both animal and human health who have successfully developed relationships with collaboration partners
We believe our therapeutic development and commercial execution have significantly de-risked the platform since our IPO
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4Provided September 13, 2018.
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($Billions)
Our MarketPet Owner Spend - US
68%Households
with Pets
90M94M
Source: APPA March 20184
5Provided September 13, 2018.
The Evolution of Veterinary Care
“Snoopy Generation” “Brian Generation”
5
Historical Situation Outside pets Rural Puppies & kittens Wellness (vaccines, parasites) Generalist veterinarians Clinics
Emerging Trends Inside pets Urban Mature pets Disease states Specialist veterinarians Multi-specialty hospitals
6Provided September 13, 2018.
What Problem Needs Solving? Addressing Innovation Gap of Pet NCEs
Source: United States Government Federal Register based on FDA fiscal year.* Pet New Chemical Entities defined by Aratana as new chemical entities not previously fully approved in humans or pets (excluding parasite drugs)
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27
41
45
22
39
64 4 5
10
20
20 0
20
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
NMEs for Humans NADAs for cats/dogs Pet NCEs*
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7Provided September 13, 2018.
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Our Pet Therapeutics
8Provided September 13, 2018.
8
Our Commercial Strategy
MarketingBuild Brand Awareness
SalesEncourage Trial, Penetration
and Retention
Sales OperationsEnable and Measure
Veterinary ServicesEducate and Train
Veterinarians
9Provided September 13, 2018.
Our Sales Channel
Pet Owners
Dispensed in Clinic/Pharmacy/Home Delivery
9
AratanaSales
Co-Promoteor CSO Distributors Corporate Sales eCommerce
10Provided September 13, 2018.
Go-to-Market Paradigms
10
Lower Higher
High
erLo
wer
Relevance to Specialists
Prim
ary
Care
Ado
ptio
n
Direct +/- Contract Selling
Co-promotion & Distribution Direct & Distribution
11Provided September 13, 2018.
Our Sales Coverage~35 Aratana Sales Team Members in Top-40 MSAs
11
Our sales team covers MSAs of approximately
80% of multi-specialty & 40% of general practices
Our recent experience indicates > 50% of pet
therapeutic revenue is from our sales coverage MSAs
Data on file as of December 2017.
12Provided September 13, 2018.
Since late-October 2017, ENTYCE has been ordered by 10,000 U.S. veterinary clinics and more than half of ENTYCE customers re-ordered in the second quarter of 2018
Within targeted accounts served by our therapeutic specialists, net sales were 250% higher than non-targeted accounts in the second quarter. We have observed a positive correlation between net sales an the number of educational events and promotion by our therapeutic specialists
Market research completed in 2018 showed that of the veterinarians prescribing ENTYCE, 90% are doing so because of the therapeutic’s efficacy
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Early Experience
13Provided September 13, 2018.
Opportunity
ENTYCE Clinics40%
Early Experience
$1.3M
$0.8M
$1.3M
Q4 2017* Q1 2018 Q2 2018
ENTYCE Net Product Sales
~25,000 U.S. Veterinary Clinics
ENTYCE Clinics
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*Approximately half as initial stocking orders
14Provided September 13, 2018.
We’ve had more than 13,000 customer interactions to educate & discuss the long-acting local anesthetic’s impact on the veterinary surgical protocol
According to market research among surgeons, 90% of those surveyed were aware of NOCITA and they’re prescribing NOCITA because it provides 72 hours of pain relief and its safety profile
We were granted FDA-approval for a label expansion to include its use as a peripheral nerve block to provide regional post-operative analgesia following onychectomy in cats
We amended our agreements with the supplier of NOCITA, Pacira, and anticipate commencing a post-approval submission process for a smaller vial size. If approved, we anticipate a 10 mL vial could be available in the fall of 2019
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Successes
15Provided September 13, 2018.
Re-ordered65%
Initial Only35%
Sequential GrowthQuarter-after-quarter
$150K
$330K
$650K$730K
$1.1M
$1.5M
$1.8M
Q4 2016 Q1 2017 Q2 2017 Q3 2017 Q4 2017 Q1 2018 Q2 2018
NOCITA Net Product Sales
30%Corporate Account Orders
Customers in 2017
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16Provided September 13, 2018.
Along with Elanco, we’re capturing & growing market share in the competitive OA market. GALLIPRANT is already the second-leading NSAID tablet stocked by veterinarians and has achieved approximately 13% market share1
GALLIPRANT is recording sequential growth and account penetration with approximately two-thirds stocking GALLIPRANT in 20182
According to market research, 95% of customers are satisfied with GALLIPRANT and cite its safety profile as the top reason for stocking3
GALLIPRANT named Best Companion Animal Product of 2017 by Animal Pharm
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SuccessesCo-promotion experience
1. Elanco third-party market research on file. A sample of veterinary clinics as of June 2018. 2. Data on file as of June 2018. 3. Third-party research on file as of September 2017.
17Provided September 13, 2018.
SalesAs Recorded by Elanco
Source: VetStreet, Elanco Market Share Report, published January 2018
*GALLIPRANT is marketed in collaboration with Elanco Animal Health
$5M
$4M
$6M
$8M
$9M
$10M
Q1 2017 Q2 2017 Q3 2017 Q4 2017 Q1 2018 Q2 2018
GALLIPRANT* Sales
U.S. SOM and Market Size
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18Provided September 13, 2018.
Our Portfolio
18
Chart is not comprehensive.
19Provided September 13, 2018.
Exclusive, worldwide rights to develop and commercialize AT-019 from AskAt, Inc.
- AT-019 is a chemically and molecularly differentiated therapeutic candidate that is thought to work by inhibiting the EP4 receptor downstream on the arachidonic cascade
- The therapeutic candidate has potential in pain, inflammation and other indications in dogs and cats
AskAt has conducted several pre-clinical studies evaluating AT-019 safety, potency and toxicity compared to grapiprant. Data on file shows promising initial indicators
Aratana has started early development work. For our commercially available therapeutics, the path to regulatory approval can take 4-6 years and includes pilot work; establishing a clinical dose; securing supply; and target animal safety and pivotal efficacy studies
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AT-019Next Generation EP4 Receptor Antagonist
20Provided September 13, 2018.
Second Quarter 2018 Financial Results
Aratana reported $4.9M in net revenues for the second quarter of 2018, including:- ENTYCE net product sales of $1.3M- NOCITA net product sales of $1.8M- GALLIPRANT licensing and collaboration revenue of $1.9M
The Company’s first quarter 2018 net loss was $6.4 million or $0.14 diluted loss per share- Included SG&A expenses of $6.7M and R&D expenses of $1.6M
Aratana has ~$60 million of cash as of June 30, 2018- For the remainder of 2018, the Company expects to use ~$15 million of cash for on-going operations and
~$9.8 million to cover existing debt principal obligations- Second quarter 2018 cash usage included $4.5M in debt principal payments
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21Provided September 13, 2018.
Closing Comments21
Turn on AppetiteFinally, appetite stimulation is in your control
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Inappetence in Dogs in the U.S.
“I have nothing that works well for inappetence. It makes it difficult to diagnose or treat the underlying condition.”
“Lack of appetite can be very distressful to owners. If the dog isn’t eating they call me and if I
can’t fix the problem, it can be one of the main reasons
for euthanasia.”
10 million dogs are inappetent
4 million dogs are treated for inappetence
(2M chronic/2M acute)
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Consequences of Inappetence• When animals do not eat over a period of time, they experience weight loss and
muscle wasting
• Pet owners are distressed by these effects and often perceive them as evidence of suffering
• If pets develop extreme frailty, treatment options may not be as effective
• A long-term poor nutritional state may result in:1,2,3
• Decreased quality of life leading to decreased survival• Decreased musculoskeletal strength• Delayed wound healing• Decreased immune response
1Ettinger SJ, Feldman EC. Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine. Vol 1. 7th ed. St. Louis, MO: Saunders Elsevier; 2010. 2Liu DT, Brown DC, Silverstein DC. Early nutritional support is associated with decreased length of hospitalization in dogs with septic peritonitis: a retrospective study of 45 cases (2000-2009). J Vet Emerg Crit Care (San Antonio). 2012;22(4):453-459.3Seller CA, Ravalia A. Anaesthetic implications of anorexia nervosa. Anaesthesia. 2003;58(5):437-443.
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Underlying conditions that can lead to inappetence
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Treatment Paradigms
29 2920
5
ChronicConditions
AcuteConditions
Aging PetConditions
End-of-LifeConditions
Number of Treatment Days Required Over One Year for Inappetence
(n=409) (n=373) (n=393) (n=393)
Aratana Research Sept. 2015. Q120. On average, how many days of treatment are needed by dogs suffering from inappetence due to each of the following condition types over the course of one year?
(Base: Treat dogs with condition type)
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• Prior to ENTYCE, there weren’t any approved drugs to stimulate appetite; clinicians were using drugs extra-label to treat inappetence
• 68% of veterinarians reported they were unsatisfied with products available to treat in inappetence1
• 81% of veterinarians expressed a need for an effective product indicated to treat inappetence1
Before ENTYCE, treatment options were limited
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(n=166)
1. Aratana data on file.
• ENTYCE is a ghrelin receptor agonist that mimics the effect of ghrelin (the “hunger hormone”)
• Like naturally occurring ghrelin, ENTYCE binds to specific cell receptors and affects signaling in the hypothalamus, causing the feeling of hunger.
Mechanism of Action
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• Administer oral solution at a dose of 3 mg/kg (1.4mg/lb.) body weight once daily• Packaging - Three SKUs
- 10 mL bottle, 1 mL syringe
- 15mL bottle, 2.5mL syringe
- 30mL bottle, 7 mL syringe
Dosing and Packaging
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• ENTYCE is the ONLY FDA-approved therapeutic for appetite stimulation in dogs
• ENTYCE has a targeted mechanism of action that mimics ghrelin (the “hunger hormone”) to trigger feelings of hunger
• ENTYCE is proven to effectively and safely stimulate appetite in dogs
• Treats the symptom of inappetence so the veterinarian can diagnose and treat the underlying chronic or acute condition
Summary
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Reimagine Recovery.
• All surgical procedures result in some degree of tissue trauma and associated pain1
• There are 3 main reasons to minimize acute, post-surgical pain:• Ethical obligation to minimize pain and suffering
• Pain delays healing and return to function
• Unmanaged, acute pain can lead to chronic, maladaptive pain
Post-Operative Pain
1Lascelles BDX, Kirkby Shaw K. (2016), An extended release local anesthetic: potential for future use in veterinary surgical patients? Vet Med Sci, 2:229-238. doi:10.1002/vms3.43.Graph: Tomas et al. 2015. Canine arthrotomy model. The Veterinary Journal 2015 Jun;204(3):293-8.
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Time (hours)
• How long does post-operative pain persist?• Limited data, but will vary with the type of surgical procedure
performed
• Perception of pain occurs during the inflammatory phase of wound healing, which lasts approximately 72 hours
• Therefore, 72 hours is the recommended minimum amount of time analgesics should be provided following surgery1
• Local anesthetics (LAs) are one of the most effective means of preventing transduction and transmission of pain signals
• Block sodium channels on the nerve cell membrane
• Prevent propagation of action potentials (pain signals)
• Current guidelines advocate use of LAs for post-operative pain1,2
• Considered safe with side effects generally limited to very high doses and do not appear to delay tissue healing1
Local Anesthetics
1Epstein ME, Rodanm I, Griffenhagen G, et al. 2015 AAHA/AAFP pain management guidelines for dogs and cats. J Feline Med Surg. 2015;17(3)251-272.2Mathews K, Kronen PW, Lascelles D, et al. Guidelines for recognition, assessment and treatment of pain. J Small Ani. 2014;55(6):E10-E68
A long-acting local anesthetic that lasts up to 72 hours post-surgery
• Bupivacaine in a liposome injectable suspension that releases over time
• Indications
• As a single-dose infiltration into the surgical site to provide local post-operative analgesia for cranial cruciate ligament surgery in dogs
• For use as a peripheral nerve block to provide regional postoperative analgesia following onychectomy in cats
• Sterile, non-pyrogenic, preservative-free aqueous suspension of multivesicular liposomes containing bupivacaine
• Bupivacaine is released over time
Bupivacaine Liposome Injectable Suspension
Infiltration Injection Technique
• NOCITA is for single dose administration prior to surgery
• Administer 5.3 mg/kg/forelimb (0.4 mL/kg per forelimb, for a total dose of 10.6 mg/kg/cat) as a 4-point nerve block technique2
• Do not dilute NOCITA prior to administration as a nerve block in cats
Nerve Block Technique
1NOCITA Prescribing Information, August 3, 2018.2Enomoto M, Lascelles BDX, Gerard MP. Defining the local nerve blocks for feline distal thoracic limb surgery: a cadaveric study. JFMS 2016;18(10):838-845.
• All surgical procedures result in some degree of tissue trauma and associated pain1
• Local anesthetics are one of the most effective means of preventing/relieving pain, however, previous options have limitations
• NOCITA is the only long-acting local anesthetic that controls post-op pain with one dose at the source for up to 72 hoursfollowing canine CCL surgery or feline onychectomy
Long-Acting Local Analgesic Solution
1Epstein ME, Rodanm I, Griffenhagen G, et al. 2015 AAHA/AAFP pain management guidelines for dogs and cats. J Feline Med Surg. 2015;17(3):251-272.