Attached files
file | filename |
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EX-10.15 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex10-15.htm |
EX-10.14 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex10-14.htm |
EX-3.1 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex3-1.htm |
EX-10.7 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex10-7.htm |
EX-32.1 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex32-1.htm |
EX-31.2 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex31-2.htm |
EX-31.1 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex31-1.htm |
EX-10.16 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex10-16.htm |
EX-10.13 - SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. | v212120_ex10-13.htm |
UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington,
DC 20549
FORM
10-K/A
Amendment
No. 2
(Mark
One)
x ANNUAL
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934
For the
fiscal year ended February 28, 2010
or
¨ TRANSITION
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES
EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934
For the
transition period from _______ to _______
Commission
file number 33-51218
SensiVida
Medical Technologies Inc.
(Exact
name of registrant as specified in its charter)
New
Jersey
|
22-1937826
|
(State
or other jurisdiction of
|
(I.R.S.
Employer Identification No.)
|
incorporation
or organization)
|
77
Ridgeland Road, Henrietta, New York
|
14623
|
(Address
of Principal Executive Offices)
|
(Zip
Code)
|
Registrant's
telephone number, including area code: (585)413-9080
Securities
registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title
of each class
|
Name
of each exchange on which registered
|
None
|
Securities
registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:
Common
stock, $.01 par value
(Title of
Class)
Indicate
by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined
in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
Yes ¨ No x
Indicate
by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant
to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.
Yes ¨ No x
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on
its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be
submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this
chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the
registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes ¨ No ¨ (the Registrant is not
yet required to submit Interactive Data)
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be
filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the
preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required
to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for
the past 90 days. Yes ¨ No x
Indicate
by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of
Regulation S-K (ss.229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will
not be contained, to the best of registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or
information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K
or any amendment to this Form 10-K. ¨
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an
accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See
the definitions of "large accelerated filer," "accelerated filer" and "smaller
reporting company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large
accelerated filer ¨
|
Accelerated
filer ¨
|
Non-accelerated
filer ¨
|
Smaller
reporting company x
|
(Do
not check if a smaller reporting company)
|
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule
12b-2 of the Act). Yes ¨ No x
The
aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held by
non-affiliates computed by reference to the price at which the common equity was
last sold, or the average bid and asked price of such common equity, as of the
last business day of the registrant's most recently completed second fiscal
quarter, was approximately $2,236,750.
As of
June 16, 2010, there were outstanding 15,998,112 shares of the registrant's
common stock, $.01 par value.
DOCUMENTS
INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE
None.
Table
of Contents
Page
|
|||
Business
|
3
|
||
Risk
Factors
|
20
|
||
Unresolved
Staff Comments
|
25
|
||
Properties
|
25
|
||
Legal
Proceedings
|
25
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||
Submission
of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders
|
25
|
||
Market
for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and
Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
|
25
|
||
Selected
Financial Data
|
27
|
||
Management's
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations
|
27
|
||
Quantitative
and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
|
29
|
||
Financial
Statements and Supplementary Data
|
30
|
||
Financial
Statements
|
(Pages
1-21)
|
||
Changes
in and Disagreements With Accountants on Accounting and Financial
Disclosure
|
31
|
||
Controls
and Procedures
|
31
|
||
Other
Information
|
32
|
||
Directors,
Executive Officers and Corporate Governance
|
32
|
||
Executive
Compensation
|
35
|
||
Security
Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related
Stockholder Matters
|
36
|
||
Certain
Relationships and Related Transactions, and
Director Independence
|
36
|
||
Principal
Accounting Fees and Services
|
38
|
||
Exhibits,
Financial Statement Schedules
|
38
|
||
Signatures
|
39
|
||
Exhibit
Index
|
40
|
2
EXPLANATORY
NOTE
On
February 18, 2011, SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc., a New Jersey
corporation (“SensiVida” or the "Company") filed amendment No. 1 to its annual
report on Form 10-K for the year ended February 28, 2010. This Amendment No. 2
to the Form 10-K for the year ended February 28, 2010, hereby amends and
restates the prior Form 10-K to add the Restated Certificate of Incorporation to
complete Exhibit 3.1 in response to comments by the SEC. There are no changes to
the financial statements or the Company's financial results for the year ended
February 28, 2010.
This Form
10-K/A speaks as of the original filing date of the Form 10-K and does not
reflect events that may have occurred subsequent to the original filing
date.
SPECIAL
NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Certain
statements in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, including statements under "Item
1. Business," and "Item 7. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations," contain forward-looking statements within
the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"), although the
safe harbor under those statutes do not apply to companies, such as us, that
issue penny stock. Forward-looking statements include, among other things,
our assumptions underlying our statements concerning business strategy,
development and introduction of new products, research and development,
marketing, sales and distribution, manufacturing, competition, third-party
reimbursement, government regulation (including, but not limited to, FDA
requirements), continued clinical trial relationships and operating and capital
requirements, critical accounting determinations, efforts to raise additional
financing, and our commitment of resources. The forward-looking statements may
also be impacted by the additional risks faced by us as described in this
report, including those set forth under the section entitled "Risk Factors."
Forward-looking statements generally can be identified by the use of terminology
such as "may," "will," "expect," "intend," "estimate," "anticipate" or
"believe" or similar expressions or the negatives thereof. These expectations
are based on management's assumptions and current beliefs based on currently
available information. Although we believe that the expectations reflected in
such statements are reasonable, we can give no assurance that such expectations
will be correct. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these
forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this annual
report on Form 10-K. Our operations are subject to a number of
uncertainties, risks and other influences, many of which are outside our
control, and any one of which, or a combination of which, could cause our actual
results of operations to differ materially from the forward-looking
statements.
PART
I
Item
1. Business
Business
Background
We are a
minimally invasive bio-medical diagnostic device company. Its proprietary
optical Micro-systems based technology automates bio-sensing and data
acquisition while minimizing patient discomfort. Our platform technology
addresses a number of disease state diagnostics - allergy testing, pain-free
automated glucose monitoring without bio-fouling, blood coagulation testing
(e.g. for Coumadin patients), TB testing and cholesterol
monitoring.
3
We have
been developing two products based on its platform technology. The initial
market priority focus is to commercialize a highly accurate, rapid, 3X
productive, pain-free allergy test system in the US ($1.2B market growing at a
compounded rate of 7%). Several prototypes have been made and proof-of-concept
human clinical trials have been successfully performed. The second product,
based on the same technology is a unique portable glucose monitor ($10B market
growing at a compounded rate of 7%). This highly differentiated device consists
of a patch having multiple individually - addressable sensors that are activated
in accordance to the patient's test schedule, automatically measuring the
glucose level without bio-fouling, clogging or daily calibration.
In
addition, we have a patent portfolio in the area of "Molecular Optical Biopsy."
i.e. the design and development of medical diagnostic instruments that detect
cancer without a traditional biopsy by using light to excite the molecules
contained in tissue and measuring the differences in the resulting molecular
natural fluorescence between cancerous and normal tissue. We seek to license a
unique Molecular Optical Biopsy technology (Photonic "pill") that permits the
diagnosis of cancerous or pre-cancerous tissue without a biopsy. The small,
optical diagnostic device that can be swallowed, could be a replacement for
traditional endoscopy to diagnose cancers of the mouth, esophagus, colon and the
rest of the digestive tract.
We
have partnered with a number of companies in the areas of biomedical device
product development, FDA clinical studies, and reimbursement. It has received
clearance from the Western IRB to conduct 100 human clinical studies in the area
of allergy testing. Thus far, the first studies have shown that our
minimally-invasive allergy test significantly reduces: 1) extent of reaction, 2)
test time, 3) test-to-test variation. The objectives of the study are to
determine efficacy; the clinical sensitivity and clinical specificity for the
various diagnostic methods. Comparative analyses performed using our methods and
existing tests (e.g. allergy testing, glucose monitoring) will be used to assess
relative efficacy, sensitivity, and safety.
Strategy
Our
primary source of revenue will be through the sale of high margin disposable
products. In some product families, hardware and software would be provided for
free to accelerate product adoption. Our first product family is an allergy test
system comprising of a disposable Microsystems cartridge that painlessly and
rapidly administers a large number of allergens. A compact imaging module
captures images of the patient’s skin and provides them to a computer for
display and analysis. The product targets the $1.2B U.S. allergy test market and
the needs of a large and growing (7% CAGR) health care problem affecting over
50% of the U.S. population and responsible for an estimated $18B in health care
costs and lost productivity. Compounding the problem, there is a need for 100
additional Allergists each year to keep up with demand and to compensate for an
attrition of 20 Allergists per year. In the U.S., more than 75% of all Allergy
tests are done via the “Skin Prick Test” method- it is estimated that 6M skin
prick tests are performed each year. Current allergy tests take an average of 35
minutes, are uncomfortable and stressful especially for children. Our
Microsystems based test can accomplish the same test in 12 pain-free minutes,
while concomitantly improving the Allergists’ profitability by 25%.
One
significant advantage of image-based digital diagnostic systems is their ability
to use image processing to quantify allergic reactions, a significant advantage
over today’s subjective tests. We believe this capability will grow the channels
for allergy testing, thereby increasing business penetration and use in
preventive modes. Over time, SensiVida’s test will provide a new allergy
screening option to Retail Clinics and potentially 200,000 Primary Care
Physicians (PCP’s) who see on the average one allergy patient a
day.
Commercialization
of our Allergy test will be facilitated by the following:
•
|
Allergens
and reagents used by the SensiVida system are already FDA
approved
|
4
•
|
First
products to market will be intuitive image-based systems, substantially
equivalent to today’s test
|
•
|
3800
U.S. Allergists form a small community in the U.S. and can be easily
reached
|
•
|
Supporting
hardware and software expense will be provided free, thereby reducing
adoption barriers
|
•
|
Test
accuracy and reproducibility will be greatly
improved
|
•
|
Risk
for human error is reduced
|
•
|
Value
Proposition to Allergists is positive- Profitability could be 25% higher,
reduced and more efficient management of labor costs, automatic/simply
electronic medical records
|
•
|
Value
Proposition to patients is positive – painless, less invasive, faster
test
|
•
|
Value
Proposition to payers is positive- test is more accurate than today’s test
(may reduce need for follow-on tests e.g. intradermal or indicate more
effective therapy) and lower dosage of allergen may lower risk of test
complications.
|
•
|
We,
along with our partners, have the means to develop the needed technology
and the ability to do rapid
commercialization.
|
The
allergy test represents a near term revenue opportunity, having low regulatory
hurdles. Based on our current forecast for product development, clinical
testing, and FDA approvals, we expect to launch an allergy test product in the
3rd Quarter of 2011 serving the Allergist. Due to our inability to raise needed
capital during 2009, FDA clinical trials and product launch has been delayed by
approximately nine months. Beginning in March 2010, we have been raising money
steadily; as of June 16, 2010, approximately $1.5M has been raised. As a result,
critical product development, clinical studies, and collaborative projects with
commercialization partners have gained significant momentum.
Our
second product family, based on the same fundamental proprietary technology
base, addresses glucose monitoring, another multi-billion dollar market ($10B)
having many unmet needs. The large and growing number of diabetics, currently
estimated to be 18M in the U.S. and 177M worldwide, also lack a convenient,
painless method to monitor their glucose level. The estimated annual cost of
diabetes in the U.S. is estimated to be $132B, and is rapidly on the rise (also
a 7% CAGR). In addition to diabetes, related ailments such as obesity, heart
disease, kidney disease, blindness (e.g. diabetic retinopathy), atherosclerosis,
and amputation can be triggered or caused by diabetes. Given the dimensions of
the diabetes problem, it is difficult to quantitatively estimate the size of
this large market. A simple indicator is revealed from understanding money spent
by diabetics glucose testing. Assuming 18M diabetics in the U.S. perform two
daily tests (at ~$1/test), yields a number exceeding $10B. This number obviously
excludes standard blood tests performed by clinics, system costs, insulin shots,
pumps, etc.
Current
methods for glucose monitoring require periodic manual blood sampling using
“fingersticks”. Children and many adults find these tests painful, inconvenient,
and often are not in compliance. SensiVida will address this market need with an
unobtrusive, wearable glucose monitoring system having a disposable microlancet
array chip with individually monitored sensors selectively actuated in
accordance to the patient’s test schedule. The uniqueness and advantages over
existing offerings are:
•
|
Continuous
measurements without bio-fouling effect or
clogging
|
•
|
Accuracy
equivalent to the fingerstick test since it is a direct chemical
measurement
|
•
|
Hygiene
benefits- no blood is extracted
|
•
|
Virtually
pain-free to the patient
|
5
Our
minimally-invasive in vivo diagnostics technology has the potential to be
extended to other billion dollar markets such as blood coagulation testing (e.g.
Prothrombin Time test for patients on Coumadin), TB testing, and cholesterol
monitoring. TB skin testing, for example, benefits from mobile continuous
optical monitoring since reactions take days and may be missed in the follow-up
visit. A mobile continuous monitoring system would be able to capture and store
patient reactivity to be conveniently downloaded at a later time. The method
would also reduce scheduling problems and inefficiencies that occur when tested
patients are unable to make follow-up scheduled appointments.
Our third
business opportunity will involve partnering with established industry players
and/or licensing its fluorescence tissue spectroscopy. The “Compact Photonic
Explorer” pill is a modern alternative to traditional endoscopy that will
provide more extensive, complete, and accurate diagnostics that visual methods
used by others. Advantages of the Compact Photonic Explorer pill over
traditional endoscopy include:
•
|
Fluorescence
spectroscopy technology detect both pre-cancer and cancer
cells.
|
•
|
Spectroscopy
improves diagnostic accuracy over video-only pills (e.g.
GIVEN)
|
•
|
Eliminates
unnecessary images of non diseased
areas.
|
•
|
Eliminates
pain and patient sedation associated with current GI cancer
screens.
|
Other
potential diagnostics applications for our fluorescence tissue spectroscopy
include probing the following organ sites for cancer: oral cavity, cervix,
aero-digestive tract and colon. Our strategy is to maximize the value of our
significant patent portfolio in tissue spectroscopy by licensing its
optical imaging technology for applications in cancer detection. We wish to
position our Intellectual Property as enabling real-time, less invasive,
alternatives to traditional cancer diagnosis
method e.g. our ("CPE" or "Photonic Pill"), a small,
optical diagnostic device that can be swallowed, targeted as a replacement for
traditional Endoscopy to diagnose cancers of the mouth, esophagus,
colon.
Our
Products
The
SensiVida Allergy Test system, first product in the company’s family plan,
offers the Allergist an objective, painless allergy testing system that consists
of the following:
•
|
A
disposable microlancet chip/cartridge that painlessly and rapidly
administers the allergens.
|
•
|
A
compact imaging module/digital imager that captures real-time allergic
reactions and sends images and data wirelessly to a computer provided at
no cost.
|
•
|
User-friendly
software that allows the user to monitor the allergic reaction that
provides quantitative data regarding reaction extent, positive/negative
diagnosis versus allergen, and reaction kinetics. An e-record patient
report is automatically created which can printed or
transmitted.
|
Several
configurations for the allergen chip/cartridge have been covered in our patent
applications. The simplest involves a microlancet array individually coated with
the set of allergens. Upon insertion into the subject, the aqueous interstitial
fluid dissolves the allergen matrix, allowing it to diffuse into the skin,
thereby triggering the allergic reaction. In another embodiment, encapsulated
allergens are packaged 1:1 along with each microlancet and released upon
actuation. A removable film seals the packaged allergen array, keeping it
sterile until it is ready to use.
The
SensiVida Allergy Test provides a number of benefits to physicians and
patients:
Value
Proposition: Physicians
•
|
Automates
today’s subjective, manual Skin Prick Test with a standardized
test
|
•
|
Produces
digital records of allergic reactions and their
diagnosis
|
•
|
Quantitative
image analysis vs. subjective
diagnosis
|
•
|
Achieves
a 25% improvement in profitability
|
6
•
|
Significant
improvement in test accuracy have been demonstrated (1/3 variability of
standard test)
|
•
|
Reduces
test-to-test variability and operator
error
|
•
|
Improved
diagnosis of dark-skinned subjects, currently difficult and
inefficient
|
•
|
Short
procedure facilitates pediatric
test
|
Value
Proposition: Patients
•
|
Eliminates
discomfort and fear
|
•
|
Significantly
reduces procedure time, less agonizing
chair-time
|
•
|
Friendlier
test for children
|
•
|
Reduced
reaction areas
|
•
|
More
reliable test results for dark-skinned patients, e.g. African
Americans
|
•
|
Covered
by health insurance (unlike in vitro
tests)
|
The
SensiVida Allergy Test system is expected to receive rapid 510(k) approval since
the system uses FDA approved allergens, has received non-significant risk
classification by the WIRB, and is based on the well-known predicate device, the
Skin Prick Test.
The
second product in our product family is an unobtrusive, wearable or mobile
glucose monitoring system with a disposable microlancet chip having
individually-monitored sensors that are actuated in accordance to the patient’s
test schedule. The uniqueness and advantage over the existing offerings are: (1)
continuous measurements without bio-fouling or clogging; (2) accuracy equivalent
to fingerstick test since it is a direct chemical test; (3) hygiene benefits
since no blood is extracted; (4) the test is virtually painless. The first
version of this product will target hospital use and then migrate to
personal/mobile use. The glucose monitor will be comfortably worn as a band or
patch. At user-defined time intervals, each needle of the array is individually
deployed by an actuator, causing insertion into the patient’s skin. The fine
tips of each microlancet are coated with a glucose sensitive enzyme (e.g.
glucose oxidase) that is either optically or electrically read out by system
electronics. The data are calibrated so as to represent actual glucose
concentrations and displayed, stored, or transmitted depending on the
application.
A
compelling aspect of our glucose monitor is that it provides a positive Value
Proposition for a number of customer segments in the value chain, e.g. health
care facilities, hospitals, and patients:
Value
Proposition: Health Care Facility, Hospital
•
|
Automated
timed measurements- reduced monitoring by the medical
staff
|
•
|
Hygiene
benefits- no blood is extracted
|
•
|
Convenient
data recording- direct input to digital patient
records
|
•
|
Minimally
invasive, virtually pain-free
|
•
|
Densely
spaced sensors permit many measurements over extended
times
|
•
|
Minimal
periodic calibration
|
•
|
Wireless
transmission to nursing station and/or alerts for dangerous
levels
|
•
|
Opportunity
for closed loop smart system using insulin
pump
|
Value
Proposition: Patient
•
|
Painless-
patient friendly to children and
elderly
|
•
|
Microlancets
are much less invasive- reduced puncture skin
damage
|
•
|
Hygiene
benefits- no blood is extracted
|
•
|
Automated
data recording and management, improved
compliance
|
•
|
Less
disruption to patient during meals, nighttime, activities at hospital or
home
|
•
|
More
continuous operation reveals high-low glucose
levels
|
•
|
Comparable
cost per test as current fingerstick
test
|
7
•
|
Opportunity
for closed loop smart system using insulin
pump
|
Product
Development and
Partnerships
We are an
equity partner of the Infotonics Technology Center (ITC), a 501(c)
not-for-profit NYS Center of Excellence. SensiVida will be able to leverage
Infotonics’ state-of-the-art $80M Microsystems facility, housed in a 120,000-ft2
building and focused on applied research & development and commercialization
of photonics and Microsystems. In addition to its human and capital resources,
Infotonics draws support from partner educational institutions including Cornell
University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Syracuse University, University
of Buffalo, and the University of Rochester. Since several of these universities
have excellent medical schools, SensiVida will also tap into their associated
hospitals for medical and clinical work. In addition, the Rochester Regional
Photonics Cluster an association of over 70 small companies dedicated to
photonics, optics and imaging technology have joined Infotonics as a small
business member. The expertise resident collectively in these companies will be
engaged in the various optical subsystems part of our product plan, e.g. imaging
modules and optical chemical sensors. A partnership for the development of our
digital allergy testing module has been recently established with Dhurjati
Electronics Consulting, LLC of Rochester, NY.
In May
2010, we established a partnership with Wi Inc., a Colorado-based company with
years of experience developing biomedical devices. Wi, Inc. (www.wiinc.net) is a
vertically integrated product development firm specializing in assisting clients
in the commercialization of in vitro diagnostics devices from concept to pilot
build. Wi’s team of scientists and engineers are knowledgeable in the clinical
applications of the markets they serve and dedicated to advancing medical
science through point-of-care diagnostics and lifesaving therapies that
ultimately reduce the cost of healthcare. Under the agreement, Wi will provide
design and prototype development for the disposable allergen delivery component
of the allergy test system, building upon our disposable allergen cartridge
technology using design-for-manufacturing (DFM) disciplines while providing
access to high volume manufacturing partners. In addition to developing
preferred designs and prototypes, Wi’s pilot manufacturing capabilities will
help reduce our cycle time to reach FDA clinicals and product launch. The
agreement may be terminated by either party upon 30 days notice and is
automatically terminated for fraudulent behavior during the performance of the
agreement, if either party is legally banned from engaging in any industrial or
commercial activity, bankruptcy, whether voluntary or involuntary and
dissolution. The summary of this agreement is qualified in its
entirety by the terms of the agreement with Wi attached hereto and incorporated
herein as Exhibit 10.11 to this annual report on Form 10-K/A.
We have
also established a partnership with MDC Associates, a consulting firm that
specializes in FDA clearance and compliance, establishing company quality
systems for regulatory compliance, FDA documentation, developing pre-market
submissions, facility audits and more. After product launch, MDC will provide
our customer support services including its comprehensive call center,
over-the-phone training all conducted in compliance with FDA and ISO system
requirements. The agreement is terminable by us upon 30 days notice
to MDC. The summary of this agreement is qualified in its entirety by the
terms of the agreement with MDC attached hereto and incorporated herein as
Exhibit 10.12 to this annual report on Form 10-K/A.
Government Regulation (FDA)
Matters
The FDA
classifies medical devices into one of three classes, Class I, II, or III. This
classification is based on the controls deemed necessary by the FDA to
reasonably insure the safety and effectiveness of the device. Class I devices
are those whose safety and effectiveness can be reasonably ensured through the
use of general controls, such as labeling, adherence to GMP requirements and the
"510-(k)" process of marketing pre-notification. Class II devices are those
whose safety and effectiveness can reasonably be ensured through implementation
of general and special controls, such as performance standards, post market
surveillance, patient registries, and FDA guidelines. Class III devices are
those devices that must receive pre-market approval ("PMA") to insure their
safety and effectiveness. They are generally life-sustaining, life-supporting,
or implantable devices, and also include devices that are not substantially
equivalent to a legally marketed Class I or II devices or to a Class III device
first marketed prior to May 28, 1976 for which a PMA has not yet been requested
by the FDA.
8
The
Allergy test, glucose monitor and other future product offerings will require us
to prove efficacy prior to commercialization. As such, these will be classified
under the FDA’s Devices category and will be required to prove “substantial
equivalence” via a 510k (all the allergens are FDA approved). Due to the fact
that the allergen cartridge will lightly breach the skin, it will most likely be
classified as a Class II device. Initial Allergy clinical tests, are being
performed under an IRB, which authorizes human clinical testing on 100 patients.
A first round of testing performed on a subset of the 100 approved subjects is
virtually complete as of May 2010. Additional tests as approved by the IRB are
being strategically reserved for later in 2010, after refined engineering
prototypes closely resembling the final product design will become available
from Wi Inc. and Dhurjati Electronic Consulting. Our agreement with Dhurjati
Electronic Consulting is dated June 1, 2010 and is terminable by either party
upon 30 days notice and is automatically terminated upon the earlier of the
death, physical incapacity or mental incompetence of Dhurjati and 12 months from
the date of the agreement. The summary of this consulting
agreement is qualified in its entirety by the terms of the Consulting Agreement
attached hereto and incorporated herein as Exhibit 10.13 to this annual report
on Form 10-K/A.
Our
minimally-invasive allergy tester uses FDA approved allergens and is an
extension of the current gold standard, the Skin Prick Test. We believe, based
on initial assessment by the Western IRB that this test will be classified as a
“non-significant risk”, potentially expediting the FDA clinical trials. Future
tests will compare dose response characteristics of our test using side-by-side
testing of the Company’s technology vs. the standard test. Although the
statistics for the number of patients required for the FDA clinical trials has
not been set, it is expected that less than 500 patients will be sufficient. We
expect to work closely with MDC Associates for the next 14 months as it defines
and implements its clinical trials strategy.
We must
also comply with the prohibitions against promotion and other practices as
identified in ss. 812.7. According to this section of the regulation, the
sponsor of a NSR study, investigator, or any person acting for or on behalf of
our or investigator, is prohibited from promoting or test marketing the
investigational device until after FDA has approved the device for commercial
distribution; commercializing the device by charging a price greater them that
necessary to recover the cost of manufacture, research, development, and
handling; unduly prolonging the investigation; and representing the
investigational device as being safe or effective for the purposes for which it
is being investigated.
Although
we believe that our products will ultimately be approved, there is no assurance
the FDA will act favorably or quickly in making such reviews and approving our
products for sale. We may encounter delays or unanticipated costs in our efforts
to secure needed funding and all governmental approvals or licenses, which could
delay or possibly preclude us from completing our FDA process and/or marketing
our products. To the extent that we may market our products in foreign markets,
we will be subject to foreign governmental regulations, as well as USA, with
respect to the manufacture and sale of our medical device products. We cannot
accurately estimate the cost and time that will be required in order to comply
with such regulations.
9
Business Development and
Marketing
While our
platform technologies can address several billion dollar diagnostic markets, our
initial focus is to commercialize a rapid pain-free allergy test. Based on our
current forecast for product development, clinical testing, and FDA approvals,
we expect to launch an allergy test product in the Third Quarter of 2011 serving
the Allergist. A second product will become available at Retail Clinics as a
simple allergy screen test. Based on our current assumptions and projections, we
expect revenue from our allergy products grow to $270M in 2016, with gross
margins of 65% or more.
Although
allergies affect many industrialized countries worldwide, the U.S. is viewed as
our primary market. Skin testing is still considered the gold standard in the
U.S. due to its sensitivity, predictive value, low cost, health insurance
reimbursement policies, and its role in the Allergist’s current
practice/business. In vitro testing is more prevalent in some European countries
(~50% of tests) and Japan (~85% of tests) where socialized medical practices and
the small number of Allergists per capita affects the dynamics and Value Chain
of the local industry. Given its lower cost, immediacy, sensitivity, and the
aforementioned reasons, rapid adoption of in vitro allergy tests in the U.S. is
not expected, barring unexpected major changes in our healthcare system. Due to
similarities with the U.S. in this regard, Australia and some European countries
could also adopt our allergy test system. Nevertheless, our marketing and sales
focus will be the United States.
Early
adoption by Allergists is an essential part of our strategy since it validates
the technology and provides expert scientific and clinical information needed
for market adoption. Our primary target segment will be rapidly growing young
practices that are receptive to adopting digital patient records technology.
Based on surveys and demographic data, we estimate that this segment constitutes
approximately one third of the 3800 practicing Allergists. U.S. Allergists share
a relatively common set of processes, customers, and suppliers. They are well
connected by societies such as the Academy of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology
(AAAAI), its associated Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, the American
College of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology (ACAAI), the National Institute of
Health’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), the
Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America (AAFA), and a number of annual meetings
and conferences. Due to this relatively small number of specialists, achieving
customer reach and awareness in this segment will be relatively straightforward.
We will pursue the following approaches to achieve awareness in this
segment:
|
·
|
Develop
relationships and advocacy with Key Opinion Leaders (KOL’s) in
field
|
|
·
|
Extensive
tradeshow and conference participation e.g. AAAAI
meetings
|
|
·
|
Talks
and white paper describing minimally-invasive allergy
testing
|
|
·
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Posters
presenting benefits to specialist and
patient
|
|
·
|
Professionally
engineered prototypes demonstrated at SensiVida’s
booth
|
|
·
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Demo
software for testing process
|
|
·
|
Scientific
and trade journal advertising
|
|
·
|
Direct
contact using contract sales marketing in key regional
hubs
|
|
·
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Mailing
product and company brochures
|
|
·
|
Development
of SensiVida website describing product and scientific
data
|
Our
allergy test is an innovative, high-tech system that will require careful
cultivation of KOL’s. Early feedback from KOL’s, has been positive, especially
relative to the possibility of our adding more “science” to allergy testing
through improved quantification and reproducibility. Notwithstanding these and
other advantages, extending the life of skin testing through technological
improvements would also reduce disruption to specialists who significantly
depend on in-office testing and diagnostics for their livelihood. We plan to use
these factors to help create partnerships with a high level panel of KOL’s who
would serve as key advocates of our technology.
10
Given the
lack of scientific data involving minimally-invasive approaches in skin allergy
testing, we plan to publish a vetted “white paper” that gains credibility and
creates scientific interest from KOL’s. Additional work done in collaboration
with the KOL’s will be presented as a peer-review document in journals like
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, American Journal of Immunology,
International Journal of Allergy and Immunology, European Academy of Allergy and
Clinical Immunology etc. In parallel, selected KOL’s and SensiVida
representatives can jointly make presentations and participate in “Poster
Sessions” in key allergy and immunology conferences. This will provide an
excellent opportunity to disseminate technical and company literature such as
laminated copies of key charts and graphs from the “white paper”, FDA clinical
data summary, and information presenting expected improvements in Allergists’
profitability. These will be subtle messages, while the key focus would be to
present the benefits of our system. The one-on-one interaction with
practitioners will also provide the opportunity to gather names and contact
information to collect as potential customer leads.
Since the
number of U.S. Allergists is relatively small, a direct mailing campaign will be
mounted that communicates the efficacy of our system as well as the relative
profitability of the practitioners who adopt our system. Full-page ads in trade
magazines or newspapers that coincide with FDA approval will also enhance
customer awareness.
The
primary positioning of our product is threefold: a) practice building for
Allergists, b) pain-free Allergy testing for the patients, and c) accuracy,
reliability, and standardization. Tag lines include: “A new era of allergy
testing”, “The new standard of care”, “Automatic digital patient records”. An
important element of the marketing plan will be to communicate financial
benefits of the SensiVida Allergy Test to the practitioner.
Product
adoption will largely depend on acceptance of key basic premises behind our
Allergy test. In addition to clinical issues and cost, human factors aspects of
the Value Proposition such as ease of use, reliability, and productivity will
strongly influence adoption, especially early in the market cycle. For this
reason, our sales and marketing plan includes a mobile sales team that visits
doctors’ offices to demonstrate the product, thus allowing them to become
familiar with the user-friendly software and system. Leads resulting in customer
visits will be harvested from the various marketing activities described above
as well as regional business research and teleprospecting. Given the relatively
small revenue of our hardware and software compared to the consumable revenue
stream, the sales pitch will emphasize minimal adoption cost and rapid increase
in the physician’s profitability. The low unit manufacturing cost of the
hardware and software allows us to offer these at no cost to minimize
adoption barriers. Promotional literature estimating average gains in
productivity and profitability will also be widely distributed.
Following
purchase of our system, consumable cartridges will be made available to
Allergists through web or catalog sales, providing pricing advantages if done on
a subscription basis. These channels for purchasing consumables and supplies are
familiar to Allergists who routinely purchase allergen extracts, controls, and
lancets in this manner. Our website, customers, and sales team will be connected
by a Customer Relationship Management system (CRM) to optimize sales
effectiveness, customer satisfaction, and retention. Product
upgrades, new product/services, usage tips, training, and other services that
can retain customers and expand customer base can be effectively marketed when
customers buy consumables through our web or catalog.
Our
second product (launch 2012) is a screening test provided at retail clinics that
targets the estimated 32M US patients that go untested each year. The low cost,
simplified allergy screening test includes 15 broad spectrum allergens that will
provide a, convenient option for today’s undiagnosed allergic patients. Retail
clinics are an attractive channel for the SensiVida Allergy Screen Test.
Facilities such as MinuteClinics, RediClinics, and Take Care Health are growing
nationwide at rapid rates, already providing 1000’s of sites with in-place
capabilities for SensiVida’s simple screening test. A recent announcement by
MinuteClinic (CVS) of a $60 in vitro allergy screen test validates that interest
and need are there, in spite of the fact that in vitro is a more expensive, less
immediate, and non-reimbursable option. The retail clinic allergy test can be
either referred by the PCP or provided as walk-in business.
11
Our
allergy screening test will have automated image analysis capability, providing
data in digital pictorial/tabular formats and hard copy (will help transition
from paper to digital record keeping). Convenient file sharing capabilities will
be integrated in the software allowing clinics to share their results with PCP’s
and insurance companies productively, securely, and in a timely manner. Prior
acceptance of our test by the specialist community, will aid adoption
of the screen product by one or more of the major retail clinics. By product
introduction planned for 2012 (a year following the Allergist product) the
expected reach of retail clinics will substantially satisfy the needs of the
target population. Furthermore, retail clinics will likely drive their own
advertising campaigns to the general public through their extensive
channels.
Due to
our test automation and simplicity, the need for highly specialized nursing
staff is obviated. Furthermore, the reduced test cycle time (12 minutes vs. 35
minutes) has significant impact on patient throughput and profitability. The
clinic profitability of approximately 50% EBIT takes into account increased test
productivity and somewhat reduced labor costs compared to the Allergist
practice. We believe that our test provides a very profitable opportunity for
the clinics and a low cost (potentially reimbursed), painless option for allergy
patients.
As we
progress in the allergy test market, we will seek to expand its business into
other markets that highly leverage its core technology. Most notably, glucose
and blood monitoring products will be explored for future business expansion and
growth in subsequent years. Although the company will aggressively focus on
allergy testing, a number of patents based on our core microlancet and image
processing technology have been filed that should provide the company
significant future market options and growth opportunities.
Competitive
Landscape
Although
it is highly labor intensive and subject to operator variability, the Skin Prick
Test is still the gold standard and the most widely used test in the U.S. Some
of its advantages are: 1) highest positive predictive value, 2) immediate
results and, 3) low cost. One major negative is that the test can be traumatic
to the patients, especially children. our product automates this labor intensive
test, taking the subjectivity out of the equation and making the testing
experience significantly less traumatic to patients. While in vivo Skin Prick
Tests dominate in the U.S., in vitro tests such as RAST, MAST, ELISA, ImmunoCAP
are also used. The advantage of in vitro tests is that a small amount of blood
can be drawn at any location without minimal trauma and results come back as
quantitative data versus the subjectivity of the Skin Prick Test. On the
negative side, test results are not immediately available, costs are high, and
tests are still subject to false positives or negatives. The position of allergy
specialists in the U.S. relative to in vivo (skin test) and in vitro testing is
summarized below:
"In vivo
tests, most commonly skin tests, are viewed by many as the most relevant
indicator of IgE antibody since they involve direct observation of a biological
response in the patient. It remains the primary method used by Allergists to
detect IgE antibody, because of its sensitivity, specificity, speed, cost
effectiveness, and ease of performance."
American
Academy of Allergy Asthma and Immunology Work Group Report: Allergy Diagnosis in
Clinical Practice, November 2006
12
"Skin
tests with allergens represent the primary diagnostic tool in determining atopic
status. Prick tests are the most commonly used for diagnostic purposes. Their
characteristics–simplicity, rapidity of performance, low cost, and high
sensitivity–explain their key position... Measurement of specific IgE in serum
(in vitro) does not surpass skin tests and is more expensive."
Global
Strategy for Asthma Management and Prevention: NIH Publication 02-3659 update,
2005
"Skin
testing remains the principal tool in the determination of the presence of
allergic sensitization. Reliability of skin testing and understandable
documentation of test results are important when a patient is being evaluated by
an Allergist and when a patient changes Allergists... almost all Allergists (in
their survey) performed Skin Prick Testing (98.7%)"
Skin
Testing: a Survey of Allergists, Oppenheimer et al, Ann. Allergy Asthma Immunol.
2006;96:19–23.
For these
reasons, U.S. insurance providers generally do not cover in vitro tests, except
for special cases (e.g. patients with delicate skin, infants). Another issue
slowing adoption in the U.S. is that in vitro testing bypasses the Allergist’s
revenue source by outsourcing this profitable part of their business. On the
other hand, an analysis of Allergists’ cost structure reveals that our system
should be financially attractive and supportive of their
profession.
Feedback
regarding the Sensivida Allergy Test from some independent and internationally
known medical research professionals, as well as Key Opinion Leaders from the
field of allergy and immunology has provided valuable insights regarding the
Value Proposition to the Allergist. A sampling of their commentary is provided
below:
“… a good
market niche exists for a fully automated allergy testing system, particularly
if it has benefits for the patient and physician related to cost, time, and
clinical usefulness.”
“… a good
imaging subsystem can circumvent some of the most difficult parameters of
allergy testing to overcome…”
“…The
company (SensiVida) has identified a significant market
opportunity.”
“…(current)
skin testing is embarrassing- anything that’s going to standardize, is
reproducible, and quantifiable will be great.”
“…Clearly
opens up skin testing for kids.”
Market
participants in allergy testing include Alk Abello, Greer, Hollister-Stier,
Allergy Labs of Ohio, Lincoln Diagnostics for in vivo testing, and Phadia for in
vitro testing. In spite of the number of participants, no offering such as
SensiVida’s digital allergy test that overcomes shortcomings of skin tests while
providing objectivity of in vitro tests (at a lower cost and with immediacy) is
available.
Due to
its large business potential, many companies, large and small, are pursuing less
invasive, continuous, automated ways to sample glucose and other blood
chemicals. A sampling of the various technologies is given below:
-
|
Subcutaneous
“CGM”: sensor inserted into abdomen like infusion
set
|
-
|
NIR
in vivo: spectral analysis of near infrared by implanted
sensor
|
-
|
NIR
ex vivo: spectral analysis of near infrared scattered from
skin
|
-
|
Ophthalmic:
Spectral/fluorescence by retina or aqueous
humor
|
-
|
Impedance
analysis: glucose migrates to skin‐ impedance
analysis
|
-
|
Ultrasonic:
glucose diffusion through skin produced by
ultrasound
|
-
|
Photoacoustic:
IR light pulse into skin produces acoustic
signal
|
-
|
Sampling:
Small amount of blood/interstitial fluid drawn for
analysis
|
13
Although
many of these technologies have been investigated for many years, only
subcutaneous CGM’s has been granted FDA approval. Even those methods marketed by
companies like Dexcom, Medtronics, and Abbott, have a ways to go before they
achieve therapeutic accuracy and do not require excessive
calibration.
Developed
and proposed methods found in the literature to monitor blood chemistry suffer
from a number of disadvantages. The standard fingerstick test requires the use
of a lancet that pierces the skin and is able to draw blood for subsequent
measurements. Unfortunately, this process is not only invasive, but inconvenient
as well. Furthermore, fingerstick-based monitors provide periodically sampled
measurements of the subject’s blood chemistry even though glucose levels may be
fluctuating rapidly between readings. Non invasive optical approaches are being
investigated that are continuous and non-invasive but suffer from calibration
problems and day-to-today subject variation. Implantable devices could be
continuous but are prone to a process known as bio-fouling, poor calibration,
and periodic replacement needs.
Technical
literature suggests that there are companies that are pursuing
“microneedle-based” technologies capable of sampling minute quantities of blood
or interstitial fluid with minimal impact or pain to the subjects. In spite of
this advantage, microneedle systems described in the literature are still
somewhat invasive since they extract blood from the patients for the
measurements or reside long term as in vivo sensors. In vivo devices are also
hampered by bio-fouling, long start-up times, and require frequent calibration
or device replacement.
In view
of the above information, our primary advantages that set it apart from other
automated/minimally invasive monitors are in the following four
areas:
•
|
It
is a true chemical analysis- potentially accurate as fingerstick
test
|
•
|
Less
prone to calibration problems than optical or implanted
devices
|
•
|
No
blood is extracted- test is done in
vivo
|
•
|
Each
microlancet is used for only a short time- no
biofouling
|
Our
optical biopsy Intellectual Property offers some unique advantages over other
technologies from Given Imaging, Olympus Optical LTD, and Smart Pill
Corporation. Each company offers a product supported by a different technical
platform and with inherently different capabilities. Given's PillCam involves
recorded optical imaging and analysis, Olympus Optical LTD's EndoCapsule
involves real-time optical imaging, transmission and analysis, and SmartPill
involves chemical analysis of tissue as opposed to optical imaging. Based on
in-depth market and technology review (see 8-K Mar. 26, 2006) we believe that a
photonics technical platform of optical biopsy (CPE) introduces a new, and
capable concept for the emerging endoscopic ingestible pill market that may be
of interest to other market players (See CITIGROUP/Smith Barney Analyst Report
10-1-2004 by Peter Bye. Page 20 Mediscience-Infotonics).
Intellectual
Property
We have
secured a worldwide exclusive license to 8 minimally-invasive in vivo
diagnostics patent applications, including a number of PCT and European filings
(see Patent list). In addition to allergy testing and glucose monitoring using
microlancet technologies, coagulation monitoring for patients on blood thinners
(e.g. Coumadin), cholesterol and other blood chemistry. There can be no
assurance, however, that any pending patent applications will issue as patents,
or if patents do issue, that the claims will be sufficiently broad to protect
what the Company believes to be its proprietary rights.
On April
14, 2003 we secured the exclusive world-wide license for US patent "Stokes-Shift
Fluorescence Spectroscopy for Detection of Disease and Physiological State of
Specimen". The patent was filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty ("PCT")
(1970) for EU approval on January 23, 2004 and continues in that
process.
14
October
18, 2005 Mediscience secured the exclusive world-wide license rights for US
patent disclosure US 60/725,670 "Phosphorescence and Fluorescence Spectroscopy
for Detection of Cancer and Pre-Cancer from Normal/Benign regions" Dr. Robert
Alfano and Mediscience believe that all recent filings plus Mediscience’s
achieved IP claims in totality inter-relate in the process of non-invasively
detecting cancerous tissue within the body and on issuance would extend the
Company's core IP technology 17+ yrs expanding, maintaining and continuing
Mediscience’s IP leadership in the Optical Biopsy field. Mediscience regards
this accumulated and related patent cluster as pioneering, blocking and dominant
in its area of cancer and physiological change diagnosis both in-vivo and
in-vitro. (see Patent list infra.)
SensiVida
Medical Systems executed a license agreement in February 2007 with Infotonics
Technology Center, Inc. Under the terms of the license agreement
SensiVida Medical Systems received an exclusive license to utilize Infotonics'
intellectual property in minimally invasive devices, products and methods for
diagnostic and therapeutic medical applications for humans and
animals. SensiVida Medical Systems received a worldwide excusive
license in return for issuing 6,000 shares (6%) of its ocommon stock and
agreeing to pay a minimum royalty in years 1-3 equal to $10,000 and in years 4-6
of $20,000 and a 50% royalty on any sublicense. The agreement
terminates in the event that SensiVida Medical Systems fails to (i) make the
minimum royalty payments after a 60 day notice, (ii) cure a material breach
after a 30-day cure period, or (iii) produce a prototype by December 31, 2007 or
some other mutually agreed date thereafter, and our filing for bankruptcy
protection. The summary of license agreement is qualified in its entirety by the
terms of the License Agreement attached hereto and incorporated herein as
Exhibit 10.14 to this annual report on Form 10-K/A.
EU Patent Cooperation
Treaty
We are
seeking patent protection simultaneously in each of a large number of western
European countries by filing an "international" patent application. The
application is subjected to an "international search”. The search results in an
"international search report," a listing of the citations of such published
documents that might affect the patentability of the invention claimed in the
application. The ISA also prepares a written opinion on patentability. The
report and the written opinion are communicated to the applicant for his
decision to continue or not in the process. The medical device industry places
considerable importance on obtaining patent protection and protecting trade
secrets for new technologies, products, and processes because of the substantial
length of time and expense associated with bringing new products through
development and regulatory approval to the marketplace. We either own or hold
exclusive licenses to 28 U.S. patents, plus 1 in Japan, for a total of 29. There
can be no assurance, however, that any pending patent applications will issue as
patents, or if patents do issue, that the claims will be sufficiently broad to
protect what the Company believes to be its proprietary rights. In addition,
there can be no assurance that issued patents or pending patent applications
will not be challenged or circumvented by competitors, or that the rights
granted there-under will provide us a competitive advantage.
We also
rely on trade secrets and know-how to protect in part, through the use of
Confidentiality Agreements. There can be no assurance that these agreements will
not be breached, that we will have adequate remedies for any breach, or that our
trade secrets and know-how will not otherwise become known to or independently
developed by competitors.
Our
Patents
Patents
secured from the CUNY Research Foundation:
US Patent
Medical Diagnostic Optical Technology US Patent Pending "Stokes-Shift
Fluorescence spectroscopy for detection of disease and physiological state of
specimen" discussed above.
#5,261,410,
November 16, 1993, “Method for determining if a Tissue is a Malignant Tumor
Tissue, a Benign Tumor Tissue, or a Normal Benign Tissue using Raman
Spectroscopy”
15
#5,293,872,
March 15, 1994, “Method for Distinguishing between Calcified Atherosclerotic
Tissue and Fibrous Atherosclerotic Tissue or Normal Cardiovascular Tissue Using
Raman Spectroscopy”
#5,348,018,
September 20, 1994, “Method for determining if Tissue is Malignant as opposed to
Non-Malignant using Time-Resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy”
#5,413,108,
May 9, 1995, “Method and Apparatus for Mapping a Tissue Sample for and
Distinguishing Different Regions thereof based on Luminescence Measurements of
Cancer-indicative Native Fluorophor”
#5,467,767,
November 21, 1995, “Method for Determining if Tissue is Malignant as opposed to
Non-Malignant using Time-resolved Fluorescence Spectroscopy”
#5,635,402,
June 3, 1997. “Technique for Determining whether a Cell is Malignant as opposed
to Non-malignant using Extrinsic Fluorescence Spectroscopy”
#5,849,595,
December 15, 1998, “Method for Monitoring the Effects of Chemotherapeutic Agents
on Neoplasmic Media”
#5,983,125,
November 9, 1999, “Method and apparatus for in vivo examination of subcutaneous
tissues inside an organ of a body using optical spectroscopy”
#6,006,001,
December 21, 1999, “Fiber optic assembly useful in optical
spectroscopy”
#6,080,584,
June 27, 2000, “Method and apparatus for detecting the presence of cancerous and
precancerous cells in a smear using native fluorescence
spectroscopy”
#6,091,985,
July 18, 2000, “Detection of cancer and precancerous conditions in tissues
and/or cells using native fluorescence excitation spectroscopy”
#5,371,368,
December 6, 1994, “Ultrafast Optical Imaging of Objects in a Scattering
Medium”
#5,625,458,
April 29, 1997, “Method and System for Imaging Objects in Turbid Media using
Diffusive Fermat Photons”
#5,644,429,
July 1, 1997 (see #5,371,368),” 2-Dimensional Imaging of Translucent Objects in
Turbid Media”
5,710,429,
January 20, 1998, “Ultrafast Optical Imaging of objects in or Behind Scattering
Media”
#5,719,399,
February 17, 1998, “Imaging and Characterization of Tissue based upon the
Preservation of Polarized Light transmitted therethrough”
#5,799,656,
September 1, 1998, “Optical Imaging of Breast Tissues to enable the Detection
therein of Calcification Regions Suggestive of Cancer”
#5,813,988,
September 29, 1998, “Time Resolved Diffusion Tomographic Imaging in Highly
Scattering Turbid Media”
#5,847,394,
December 8, 1998, “Imaging of Objects Based upon the Polarization or
Depolarization of Light”
#5,931,789,
August 3, 1999, “Time-resolved diffusion tomographic 2D and 3D imaging in highly
scattering turbid media”
#
6,208,886 B1, March 27, 2001, “Non-linear optical tomography of turbid
media”
#
6,215,587, April 10, 2001, “Microscope imaging inside highly scattering
media”
The
Company and CUNY Research Foundation have been diligent in the payment of
maintenance obligations to the US Patent Office during the life of each of the
Company's significant patents.
16
Patent
applications exclusively licensed from the Infotonics Technology
Center:
“Minimally
Invasive Allergy Testing Systems and Methods”, PCT/US2006/026774, US
Non-provisional app. 11/995,366
“Minimally
Invasive Allergy Testing System with Coated Allergens”,
PCT/US2007/061604
“Allergy
Testing Cartridge with Coated Allergens”, PCT/US2007/061601
“Compact
Minimally Invasive Biomedical Monitor”, US Non-provisional app. 11/754,987,
PCT/US08/65024
“Blood
Monitoring Systems and Methods”, US Non-provisional app. 11/279,290, European
application EP 06 749 731.3
“MEMS
Interstitial Prothrombin Time Test”, US Non-Provisional app.
12/189,509
Patents
filed by and assigned to SensiVida Medical Technologies:
“Improved
Compact Minimally Invasive Biomedical Monitor Using Image Processing”, US
Provisional 61/276116
“Remote
Automated Skin Testing System”, US Provisional filed 5/3/2010
Third Party
Reimbursement
We will
ultimately seek reimbursement from third-party payers, primarily in the United
States, through Federal, State, Medicare, Medicaid and private health insurance
plans, and in other countries, typically national government sponsored health
and welfare plans. Such reimbursement will be subject to the regulations and
policies of governmental agencies and other third-party payers. Reduced
governmental expenditures in the United States and in other countries continue
to put pressure on diagnostic procedure reimbursement. We cannot predict what,
if any changes, may be forthcoming in these policies and procedures, nor the
effect of such changes on our business potential of our screening and diagnostic
technology.
Our has
recently contracted Scott Taylor Associates Inc., a Newbury Massachusetts-based
firm, to conduct a set of marketing studies and interviews with leading
payers/HMO’s. Feedback from payers will be used to refine the Company’s
reimbursement strategy and ascertain what if any changes to current
reimbursement guidelines would be required relative to today’s Skin Prick Test
(SPT). We believe that our allergy test provides a positive Value Proposition to
payers based on the following: 1) improved accuracy over SPT may reduce need for
re-testing or inappropriate therapy (both increase reimbursement expense), 2)
lower allergen concentration and dosage may reduce risk of test complications
such as anaphylaxis, 3) creation of accurate electronic medical records at
minimal cost increases operation efficiency and better ascertains patients’
allergic profile with time.
Other Technologies and Other
Applications
In
addition to our developments in native tissue fluorescence spectroscopy we have
also invented certain other potentially useful diagnostic optical imaging
technology. The optical imaging technology uses laser light to image dense
tissues by capturing the early photons of light shown through the imaged tissue
and gating off the scattered, later arriving light, which reduces the
interference and results in clearer images than can be traditionally be seen
using currently available optical imaging technologies, such as, computed
tomography scanning or x-rays or mammograms. Our Patents Mediscience’s
inter-related IP patent cluster acquired through contract with the Research
Foundation City University of New York (RFCUNY), see 8-K filed June 1, 2002,
Attachment "A" MTC Licensed/Funded Patents:
17
Employees
As of May
31, 2010, we had one full-time employee, one part time employee, and a number of
contracted workers. None of our employees are covered by collective bargaining
agreements and none are represented by labor unions. We believe that relations
with our employees and contractors are good.
Scientific Staff and Medical
Advisors
We have
assembled a group of experienced technology and industry experts to provide
critical review and analysis of product development programs and to serve as a
source of information on new and existing product ideas, new technologies and
current research activities. We also believe that we have attracted accomplished
scientists, engineers, and clinicians who will help guide us in product
development and at gaining regulatory approval for commercial applications of
our diagnostic technology. They will also be called upon to advise us about
priorities and unmet needs in their respective disciplines and in matters such
as physician's habits and preferences that would bear on product design and
configuration.
Key
people are:
•
|
Jose Mir: President, President,
CTO
|
|
Over
30 years experience managing innovation and New Business Development.
Co-founder of Eastman Kodak’s new business incubator. GM of $15M digital
motion picture business. Director of Infotonics Biomedical Initiatives.
SensiVida Medical Systems founder. 70+ patents and
publications.
|
•
|
David R. Smith,
Chairman
|
Former
CEO, Chairman and Founding Member of Infotonics Technology Center, Inc. from
2002 to 2008. Director
of Engineering and Technology at Eastman Kodak. 35 years of diverse technology
development experience. Board Chair of Optoelectronic Industry Development
Association.
•
|
John Condemi, M.D.:
Medical
Advisor (Independent)
|
|
President
of the Allergy Asthma Immunology of Rochester (AAIR) and Director of the
Clinical Research Department and Infusion Center. Fellow of all major
allergy/immunology societies. Over 90 technical papers, 23 chapters, 350
clinical studies.
|
•
|
Scott Taylor: FDA and
Reimbursement Advisor (Independent)
|
|
Has
more than 15 years consulting experience with Diagnostics, Medical Device,
Point-of-Care Testing (POCT), and Pharmaceutical companies facilitating
FDA approval process, reimbursement issues, and CPT Codes. President and
CEO of Scott Taylor Associates.
|
•
|
John
Agostinelli
|
Ph.D
(Univ. of Rochester) in Optics. Research Fellow at Kodak and Chief Technologist
at Kodak’s Display Research Center. A Kodak “Elite Inventor”. Over 70 patents
issued and pending.
•
|
Larry
DeMejo
|
PhD. (U.
Mass.) in Polymer Science and Engineering. Developed and scaled up impact
resistant composites at General Electric. Expertise in adhesion of small
particles on surfaces. Developed Kodak’s ink jet media technology and novel
protective overcoats. Over 80 patents and publications.
18
•
|
Margy
Lydon
|
M.S.
Materials Science and Engineering (RIT). Senior level manager with over 20 years
experience in operations management, product development in the medical device
field. Former GM of Angiotech BioCoatings, Vice President of Operations and
Product Development STS Biopolymers.
•
|
Scott
Rosebrough
|
PhD.
(Univ. of Rochester) in Pharmacology. Product development experience in Medical
Devices including Director of drug delivery coatings at Angiotech. Medical
Device start ups, including Quality Assurance and Regulatory
Affairs.
•
|
John
Spoonhower
|
PhD.
(Cornell) in Applied and Engineering Physics. Creator of several multi-hundred
million dollar business enterprises at Kodak. Former Managing Director of
Kauffman Foundation Innovation interface at Cornell – a multi university project
to investigate new businesses at Cornell and MIT. 56 patents and several
pending
19
Item.
1A.
|
Risk
Factors
|
The
following risk factors should be considered carefully in addition to the other
information presented herein:
WE DO NOT
HAVE A LONG OPERATING HISTORY, WHICH MAKES IT DIFFICULT FOR YOU TO EVALUATE OUR
BUSINESS.
Because
limited historical information is available on our revenue trends and
operations, it will be difficult for you to evaluate our business. Our prospects
must be considered in light of the substantial risks, expenses, uncertainties
and difficulties encountered by entrants into the medical device industry, which
is characterized by slow adoption, competition and a high failure
rate.
WE HAVE A
HISTORY OF LOSSES, AND WE EXPECT LOSSES TO CONTINUE.
We have
never been profitable, and we have had operating losses since our inception. We
expect our operating losses to continue as we continue to expend substantial
resources to launch our product line, to complete development of our products,
obtain regulatory clearances or approvals, and build our marketing, sales,
manufacturing and finance organizations, and conduct further research and
development. To date, we have been engaged primarily in research and development
efforts. The further development and commercialization of our products will
require substantial development, regulatory, sales and marketing, manufacturing
and other expenditures.
IF WE
CANNOT OBTAIN ADDITIONAL FUNDS WHEN NEEDED, WE WILL NOT BE ABLE TO IMPLEMENT OUR
BUSINESS PLAN.
We will
require substantial additional capital to develop our products, including
completing product testing and clinical trials, obtaining all required
regulatory approvals and clearances, beginning and scaling up manufacturing, and
marketing our products. We have historically funded a significant portion of our
activities through private placements and available university matching funds.
Any failure of such funding to take place or to be in an amount sufficient to
commercialize our technology may compel us to find other collaborative partners
to fund our capital expenditures, or our inability to obtain capital through
other sources will limit our ability to grow and operate as planned. Even if we
do enter into an agreement with a collaborative partner, the obligations of a
collaborative partner to fund our expenditures is largely discretionary and
depends on a number of factors, including our ability to meet specified
milestones in the development and testing of the relevant product. We may not be
able to meet these milestones, or our collaborative partner may not continue to
fund our expenditures. We bear responsibility for all aspects of our
Minimally-Invasive Diagnostic Platform Technology and its product line
consisting of Allergy Test System, Glucose and Blood Diagnostic Test System, and
its Optical Biopsy Pill products (early development done jointly with the
research of our collaborative equity partner, Infotonics Technology Center). We
may be required to raise additional funds through public or private financing,
additional collaborative relationships or other arrangements. We believe that
our existing capital resources may not be sufficient to fund our operations to
the point of commercial introduction of our diagnostic products. Any failure to
achieve adequate funding in a timely fashion would delay our development
programs and could lead to abandonment of one or more of our development
initiatives. Any required additional funding may not be available on terms
attractive to us, or at all. To the extent we cannot obtain additional funding,
our ability to continue to develop and introduce products to market will be
limited. Any additional equity financing will be dilutive to stockholders, and
debt financing, if available, may involve restrictive covenants that would limit
how we conduct our business or finance our operations. Absent additional funding
from private or public equity or debt financings, collaborative or other
partnering arrangements, or other sources and if we do not secure additional
funding, we will be unable to conduct all of our product development efforts as
planned, and we may need to cease operations or sell assets.
20
OUR
ABILITY TO SELL OUR PRODUCTS IS CONTROLLED BY GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS, AND WE MAY
NOT BE ABLE TO OBTAIN ANY NECESSARY CLEARANCES OR APPROVALS.
The
design, manufacturing, labeling, distribution and marketing of medical device
products are subject to extensive and rigorous government regulation including
but not limited to FDA which can be expensive and uncertain and can cause
lengthy delays before we can begin selling our products.
IN THE
UNITED STATES, THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION'S ACTIONS COULD DELAY OR PREVENT
OUR ABILITY TO SELL OUR PRODUCTS, WHICH WOULD ADVERSELY AFFECT OUR GROWTH AND
STRATEGY PLANS.
In order
for us to market our products in the United States, we must obtain continued
clearance or approval from the Food and Drug Administration. We cannot be sure
that we or any collaborative partners will make timely filings with the FDA;
that the FDA will act favorably or quickly on these submissions; that we will
not be required to submit additional information or perform additional clinical
studies; that we would not be required to submit an application for IDE as
described below; or that other significant difficulties and costs will not be
encountered to obtain FDA clearance or approval. The IDE approval
process can take several years from initial filing and require the
submission of extensive supporting data and clinical information clinical study
data. The FDA may impose strict labeling or other requirements as a condition of
its clearance or approval, any of which could limit our ability to market our
products. Further, if we wish to modify a product after FDA clearance of a
pre-market notification or approval of a pre-market approval application,
including changes in indications or other modifications that could affect safety
and efficacy, additional clearances or approvals will be required from the FDA.
Any request by the FDA for additional data, or any requirement by the FDA that
we conduct additional clinical studies or submit to the more rigorous and
lengthier pre-market approval process, could result in a significant delay in
bringing our products to market and substantial additional research and other
expenditures. Similarly, any labeling or other conditions or restrictions
imposed by the FDA on the marketing of our products could hinder our ability to
effectively market our products. Any of the above actions by the FDA could delay
or prevent altogether our ability to market and distribute our products.
Further, there may be new FDA policies or changes in FDA policies that could be
adverse to us.
IN
FOREIGN COUNTRIES, INCLUDING LATIN AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN COUNTRIES, WE ARE ALSO
SUBJECT TO GOVERNMENT REGULATION, WHICH COULD DELAY OR PREVENT OUR ABILITY TO
SELL OUR PRODUCTS IN THOSE JURISDICTIONS.
In order
for us to market our products in Latin America or Europe and some other
international jurisdictions, we and our distributors and agents must obtain
required regulatory registrations or approvals. We must also comply with
extensive regulations regarding safety, efficacy and quality in those
jurisdictions. We may not be able to obtain the required regulatory
registrations or approvals, or we may be required to incur significant costs in
obtaining or maintaining any regulatory registrations or approvals we receive.
Delays in obtaining any registrations or approvals required to market our
products, failure to receive these registrations or approvals, or future loss of
previously obtained registrations or approvals would limit our ability to sell
our products internationally. For example, international regulatory bodies have
adopted various regulations governing product standards, packaging requirements,
labeling requirements, import restrictions, tariff regulations, duties and tax
requirements. These regulations vary from country to country. For example in
order to sell our products in Europe, we must maintain ISO 9001 certification
and CE mark certification, which is an international symbol of quality and
compliance with applicable European medical device directives. Failure to
receive or maintain ISO 9001 certification or CE mark certification or other
international regulatory approvals would prevent us from selling in Europe and
similar requirements would prevent us from selling in Latin American
countries.
21
EVEN IF
WE OBTAIN CLEARANCE OR APPROVAL TO SELL OUR PRODUCTS, WE ARE SUBJECT TO ONGOING
REQUIREMENTS AND INSPECTIONS THAT COULD LEAD TO THE RESTRICTION, SUSPENSION OR
REVOCATION OF OUR CLEARANCE.
We, as
well as any collaborative partners, will be required to adhere to applicable FDA
regulations regarding good manufacturing practice, which include testing,
control, and documentation requirements. We are subject to similar regulations
in foreign countries. Ongoing compliance with good manufacturing practice and
other applicable regulatory requirements will be strictly enforced in the United
States through periodic inspections by state and federal agencies, including the
FDA, and in international jurisdictions by comparable agencies. Failure to
comply with these regulatory requirements could result in, among other things,
warning letters, fines, injunctions, civil penalties, recall or seizure of
products, total or partial suspension of production, failure to obtain
pre-market clearance or pre-market approval for devices, withdrawal of approvals
previously obtained, and criminal prosecution. The restriction, suspension or
revocation of regulatory approvals or any other failure to comply with
regulatory requirements would limit our ability to operate and could increase
our costs.
OUR
SUCCESS LARGELY DEPENDS ON OUR ABILITY TO OBTAIN AND PROTECT THE PROPRIETARY
INFORMATION ON WHICH WE BASE OUR PRODUCTS.
Our
success depends in large part upon our ability to establish and maintain the
proprietary nature of our technology through the patent process, as well as our
ability to possibly license from others patents and patent applications
necessary to develop products. If any of our patent applications are not
allowed, patents are successfully challenged, invalidated or circumvented, or
our right or ability to manufacture our products were to be limited, our ability
to continue to manufacture and market our products could be adversely affected.
In addition to patents, we rely on trade secrets and proprietary know-how, which
we seek to protect, in part, through confidentiality and proprietary information
agreements. The other parties to these agreements may breach these provisions,
and we may not have adequate remedies for any breach. Additionally, our trade
secrets could otherwise become known to or be independently developed by
competitors. We have been issued, or have rights to, 28 U.S. patents (including
those under license). In addition, we have filed for, or have rights to, 10
patents (including those under license) that are still pending. One or more of
the patents we hold directly or license from third parties, may be successfully
challenged, invalidated or circumvented, or we may otherwise be unable to rely
on these patents. We have contract obligations to financially maintain these
patents with periodic payments to the United States, Japan and European Union
patent offices which could be unmet jeopardizing our existing rights. These
risks are also present for the process we use or will use for manufacturing our
products. In addition, our competitors, many of whom have substantial resources
and have made substantial investments in competing technologies, may apply for
and obtain patents that prevent, limit or interfere with our ability to make,
use and sell our products, either in the United States or in international
markets. The medical device industry has been characterized by extensive
litigation regarding patents and other intellectual property rights. In
addition, the United States Patent and Trademark Office may institute
interference proceedings. The defense and prosecution of intellectual property
suits, Patent and Trademark Office proceedings and related legal and
administrative proceedings are both costly and time consuming. Moreover, we may
need to litigate to enforce our patents, to protect our trade secrets or
know-how, or to determine the enforceability, scope and validity of the
proprietary rights of others. Any litigation or interference proceedings
involving us may require us to incur substantial legal and other fees and
expenses and may require some of our employees to devote all or a substantial
portion of their time to the proceedings. An adverse determination in the
proceedings could subject us to significant liabilities to third parties,
require us to seek licenses from third parties or prevent us from selling our
products in some or all markets. We may not be able to reach a satisfactory
settlement of any dispute by licensing necessary patents or other intellectual
property. Even if we reached a settlement, the settlement process may be
expensive and time consuming, and the terms of the settlement may require us to
pay substantial royalties. An adverse determination in a judicial or
administrative proceeding or the failure to obtain a necessary license could
prevent us from manufacturing and selling our products.
22
WE ARE
CURRENTLY DEVELOPING OUR CURRENT PRODUCT LINE INDEPENDENTLY FROM ANY
COLLABORATIVE PARTNERS, WHICH MAY REQUIRE US TO ACCESS ADDITIONAL CAPITAL AND
TO DEVELOP ADDITIONAL SKILLS TO PRODUCE, MARKET AND DISTRIBUTE THESE
PRODUCTS.
We are
also currently seeking direct funding for and expect to commercialize our
products independently of any collaborative partner. These activities will
require development of partnerships and/or additional resources and capital that
we will expect to be provided through this Offering. There is no assurance that
we will be able to raise sufficient capital through the Offering or attract and
retain skilled personnel to enable us to finish development, launch and market
these products.
BECAUSE
OUR PRODUCTS, WHICH USE DIFFERENT TECHNOLOGY OR APPLY TECHNOLOGY IN MORE
INNOVATIVE WAYS THAN OTHER MEDICAL DEVICES, ARE OR WILL BE NEW TO THE MARKET, WE
MAY NOT BE SUCCESSFUL IN LAUNCHING OUR PRODUCTS AND OUR OPERATIONS AND GROWTH
WOULD BE ADVERSELY AFFECTED.
Our
products are based on new methods of in vivo diagnostics analogous to Skin Prick
Allergy Testing (SPT), glucose monitoring, and endoscopy. If our products do not
achieve significant market penetration, our sales will be limited and our
financial condition may suffer. Physicians and individuals may not recommend or
use our products unless they determine that these products are an attractive
alternative to current tests that have a long history of safe and effective use.
To date, our products have not been used by anyone, and
no independent studies regarding our products have been published.
The lack of independent studies limits the ability of doctors or consumers to
compare our products to conventional products.
IF WE ARE
UNABLE TO COMPETE EFFECTIVELY IN THE HIGHLY COMPETITIVE MEDICAL DEVICE INDUSTRY,
OUR FUTURE GROWTH AND OPERATING RESULTS WILL SUFFER.
The
medical device industry in general and the markets in which we expect to offer
products in particular, are intensely competitive. Many of our competitors have
substantially greater financial, research, technical, and manufacturing,
marketing and distribution resources than we do and have greater name
recognition and lengthier operating histories in the health care industry. We
may not be able to effectively compete against these and other competitors.
Furthermore, if our products are not available at competitive prices, health
care providers, and health insurance companies who are subject to increasing
pressures to reduce costs may not elect to purchase or reimburse them.
Accordingly, competition in this area is expected to increase. Furthermore, our
competitors may succeed in developing, either before or after the development
and commercialization of our products, devices and technologies that permit more
efficient, less expensive non-invasive and less invasive monitoring, or cancer
detection. It is also possible that one or more pharmaceutical or other health
care companies will develop therapeutic drugs, treatments or other products that
will substantially render our products obsolete.
THE
AVAILABILITY OF THIRD-PARTY REIMBURSEMENT FOR OUR PRODUCTS IS UNCERTAIN, WHICH
MAY LIMIT CONSUMER USE AND THE MARKET FOR OUR PRODUCTS.
In the
United States and elsewhere, sales of medical products are dependent, in part,
on the ability of consumers of these products to obtain reimbursement for all or
a portion of their cost from third-party payers, such as government and private
insurance plans. Any inability of patients, hospitals, physicians and other
users of our products to obtain sufficient reimbursement from third-party payers
for our products, or adverse changes in relevant governmental policies or the
policies of private third-party payers regarding reimbursement for these
products, could limit our ability to sell our products on a competitive basis.
We are unable to predict what changes will be made in the reimbursement methods
used by third-party health care payers. Moreover, third-party payers are
increasingly challenging the prices charged for medical products and services,
and some health care providers are gradually adopting a managed care system in
which the providers contract to provide comprehensive health care services for a
fixed cost per person. Patients, hospitals and physicians may not be able to
justify the use of our products by the attendant cost savings and clinical
benefits that we believe will be derived from the use of our products, and
therefore may not be able to obtain third-party reimbursement. Reimbursement and
health care payment systems in international markets vary significantly by
country and include both government sponsored health care and private insurance.
We may not be able to obtain approvals for reimbursement from these
international third-party payers in a timely manner, if at all. Any failure to
receive international reimbursement approvals could have an adverse effect on
market acceptance of our products in the international markets in which
approvals are sought.
23
OUR
SUCCESS DEPENDS ON OUR ABILITY TO ATTRACT AND RETAIN SCIENTIFIC, TECHNICAL,
MANAGERIAL AND FINANCE PERSONNEL.
Our
ability to operate successfully and manage our future growth depends in
significant part upon the continued service of key scientific, technical and
managerial and finance personnel, as well as our ability to attract and retain
additional highly qualified personnel in these fields. We may not be able to
attract and retain key employees when necessary, which would limit our
operations and growth.
WE ARE
SIGNIFICANTLY INFLUENCED BY OUR DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND THEIR
AFFILIATED ENTITIES.
Our
directors, executive officers and entities affiliated with them beneficially
owned an aggregate of —— % of our outstanding common stock as of June 15, 2010.
These stockholders, acting together, would be able to exert significant
influence on substantially all matters requiring approval by our stockholders,
including the election of directors and the approval of mergers and other
business combination transactions.
24
Item
1B.
|
Unresolved
Staff Comments
|
None.
Our
corporate headquarters are located in Henrietta, New York. We have
a month-to-month lease with Rochester BioVentures Center, a 40,000
square feet facility containing office and laboratory space. The Company
utilizes the Center’s conference, phone, internet, utilities as well as a 200
square foot wet lab space for its dedicated work. We believe that our
current facility adequately provides for our operations, but as more employees
and contractors are hired, we expect to require additional laboratory and office
space for sales, marketing and business development.
Item
3.
|
Legal
Proceedings
|
We have
been sued by Dr. Robert R. Alfano in a case styled Robert R. Alfano v.
SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc., C.A. No 09 CV 8753 (SDNY 2009). Dr.
Alfano alleges that he is owed $1,487,053 in consulting fees in connection with
a consulting agreement that he claims we breached. Dr. Alfano also is
claiming that he is owed 132,000 post reverse split shares of our common stock
under the terms of alleged various anti-dilution agreements with us. We have
filed an Answer and a Motion to Dismiss which is scheduled to be heard by the
court in June 2010.
Item
4.
|
Submission
of Matters to a Vote of Security
Holders
|
None.
PART
II
Market
for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer
Purchase of Equity Securities
|
Market
Information
Our
common stock is traded under the symbol "SVMT" on the OTC Bulletin Board. The
following table sets forth the range of high and low closing bid for our common
stock for the periods set forth below as reported by the OTC Bulletin
Board. Such quotations represent inter-dealer quotations, without
adjustment for retail markets, markdowns or commissions, and do not necessarily
represent actual transactions. The prices reflect our 10-to-1 reverse
stock split effected on May 18, 2009.
High
|
Low
|
|||||||
3/1/2009
through 5/31/2009
|
$ | 2.00 | $ | 0.62 | ||||
6/1/2009
through 8/31/2009
|
1.05 | 0.25 | ||||||
9/1/2009
through 11/30/2009
|
0.79 | 0.51 | ||||||
12/1/2009
through 2/29/2010
|
0.54 | 0.11 | ||||||
3/1/2008
through 5/31/2008
|
$ | 0.10 | $ | 0.06 | ||||
6/1/2008
through 8/31/2008
|
0.20 | 0.05 | ||||||
9/1/2008
through 11/30/2008
|
0.10 | 0.04 | ||||||
12/1/2008
through 2/28/2009
|
0.14 | 0.03 |
25
Holders
As
of June 15, 2010, there were approximately 663 holders of record of our common
stock.
Dividends
We
do not intend to pay cash dividends on our common stock for the foreseeable
future, but currently intend to retain any future earnings to fund the
development and growth of our business. The payment of dividends if any, on the
common stock will rest solely within the discretion of the Board of Directors
and will depend, among other things, upon our earnings, capital requirements,
financial condition, and other relevant factors. We have not paid or declared
any dividends upon our common stock since inception.
Securities
Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans
We
have two equity compensation plans. Our 1999 Stock Incentive Plan effective as
of April 1, 2003 (the "1999 Plan") provides for the issuance of up to 25,000,000
incentive and non-qualified stock options, stock appreciation rights and shares
of common stock to our eligible employees and consultants and our 2003
Consultants Stock Option, Stock Warrant and Stock Award Plan effective as of
February 17, 2004 (the "2003 Plan," and together with the 1999 Plan, the "Stock
Option Plans") provides for the issuance of up to 7,000,000 non-qualified stock
options, stock purchase warrants and shares of common stock to our eligible
employees and consultants. Each of the Stock Option Plans was approved by our
Board of Directors and ratified by the holders of a majority of our issued and
outstanding shares of common stock within 12 months of such board approval. The
following table presents certain information relating to outstanding awards and
shares available for future grant under our Stock Option Plans in accordance
with Item 201(d) of Regulation S-K.
Equity Compensation Plan
Information
Number of securities
|
||||||||||||
remaining available for
|
||||||||||||
future issuance under
|
||||||||||||
Number of securities to
|
Weighted-average
|
equity compensation
|
||||||||||
be issued upon exercise
|
exercise price of
|
plans (excluding
|
||||||||||
of outstanding options,
|
outstanding options,
|
securities reflected in
|
||||||||||
warrants and rights
|
warrants and rights
|
column (a))
|
||||||||||
Plan category
|
(a)
|
(b)
|
(c)
|
|||||||||
Equity
compensation plans approved by security holders
|
30,000 | $ | 10.00 | 997,000 | ||||||||
Equity
compensation plans not approved by
security holders
|
— | — | N/A | |||||||||
Total
|
30,000 | $ | 10.00 | 997,000 |
26
Recent
Sales of Unregistered Securities
Item
6.
|
Selected
Financial Data
|
We
are a “smaller reporting company” as such term is defined in Rule 12b-2 of
the Exchange Act and are exempt from making the disclosures required by this
item pursuant to paragraph (c) of Item 301 of
Regulation S-K.
Item
7.
|
Management's
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations
|
Results of
Operations
Year Ending February 28,
2010 Compared to
Year Ending February 28,
2009
Revenues
We had no
revenues during the years ending February 28, 2010 and February 28,
2009. Our prior focus was our continued development of our
light-based technology, however, effective March 3, 2009, with the merger of
SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. into the Company’s wholly-owned subsidiary
BioScopix, Inc., the Company’s technology has focused on the automation of
analysis and data acquisition for allergy testing, glucose monitoring, blood
coagulation testing, tuberculosis testing, and cholesterol
monitoring.
General and Administrative
Expense
General
and administrative expenses increased approximately $16,000, or 1%, during the
current year ended February 28, 2010 as compared to the year ended February 28,
2009. The increase was the net of increases and decreases in major
expense components. Salaries, wages and related expenses
approximating $387,000 increased approximately $44,000 over the prior year
period, as a result of the employment agreements of the new CEO, CTO and
Chairman of the Board. The increase was partially offset by the
voluntary termination of Mr. Katevatis’ employment agreement. In addition,
professional fees increased approximately $73,000 during the current year,
primarily due to the increased professional activities associated with the
merger and related matters. In October 2009, a civil action was entered against
the company by Dr. Robert Alfano. The litigation centers around
payment for accrued consulting fees and expenses totaling approximately
$1,490,000. In addition, Dr. Alfano is contesting the termination of
his anti-dilution rights and the transfer of his former Mediscience Technology
Corp. stock into SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. stock. The
Company does not believe the case has merit and has filed a Motion to
Dismiss. The Company intends to vigorously defend these
claims. Also, adding to the increase in general and administrative
expense was approximately $187,000 of amortization costs associated with the
Company’s intellectual property. As an offset to the increases, there
was a decrease in financial service (bridge fees and related costs) totaling
approximately $284,000 along with a decrease in other general and administrative
expenses approximating $4,000.
27
Product Development
Expense
Product
development expense increased approximately $79,000, or 39%, during the current
year ended February 28, 2010 when compared to the prior year ended February 28,
2009. The increase is due to allergy research being conducted in
Rochester, NY, by the Company and its consultants.
Cancellation of
Indebtedness
The
Company has written off certain accrued consulting fees totaling $43,597 that
had been outstanding for a number of years due to lack of completion of the
engagement by the consultant.
Liquidity and Capital
Resources
We had a
deficiency in working capital as of February 28, 2010 of approximately
$3,366,000 compared to a deficiency of approximately $5,841,000 at February 28,
2009 representing a decrease in the deficiency of approximately $2,475,000 for
the current year ended February 28, 2010. The decrease in the
deficiency consisted of a decrease of approximately $82,000 in current assets,
consisting of cash and prepaid expenses, and an offsetting decrease of
approximately $2,557,000 in current liabilities. The principal reason
for the decline in accrued liabilities is the cancellation of approximately
$2,147,000 of obligations to Mr. Katevatis who terminated his employment
agreement as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman along with his anti-dilution
rights and exercised his option to convert outstanding salary and fees accrued
through November 2008 in exchange for 1,172,510 shares of the Company’s common
stock. In addition, certain note holders converted $1,205,000 of note
principal and $249,325 of accrued interest into common stock of the
Company. The current deficiency in working capital is primarily
represented by accounts payable, accruals for professional fees, consulting,
salaries and wages and convertible debt. Subsequent to the Company’s
February 28, 2010 fiscal year end, the Company began an offering of a maximum of
$10,000,000 of Series A Preferred stock at $1.00 per share. The
Series A Preferred stock is convertible into shares of the Company’s common
stock, par value $.01 per share at $0.35 per share for a period of three years
from the date of issuance and bears interest at 12% per annum, such interest to
accrue and be paid in cash at the end of three years from the date of issuance
of the Series A Preferred stock or in shares of common stock if the investor
elects to convert the Series A Preferred stock. The investor also
will receive warrants to acquire shares of common stock in an amount equal to
50% of the number of shares of common stock into which the Series A Preferred
stock converts. The exercise price of the warrant is also at $1.00
per share. Series A Preferred stock subscriptions to date have
exceeded $1,400,000.
28
Our
ability to continue our operations is largely dependent upon obtaining
regulatory approval for the commercialization of our diagnostic technology for
allergy testing, glucose monitoring, blood coagulation testing, tuberculosis
testing and cholesterol monitoring. There can be no assurance as to
whether or when the various requisite government approvals will be obtained or
the terms or scope of these approvals, if granted. We intend to
defray the costs of obtaining regulatory approval for the commercialization of
such technology by the establishment of clinical trial arrangements with medical
institutions. We intend to continue to pursue the establishment of
co-promotional arrangements for the marketing, distribution and commercial
exploitation of our technology. Such arrangements, if established,
may include up-front payments, sharing of sales revenues after deduction of
certain expenses, and/or product development funding. Our management
anticipates that substantial resources will be committed to a continuation of
our research and development efforts and to finance government regulatory
applications. While management believes that we will obtain
sufficient funds to satisfy our liquidity and capital resources needs for the
short term from the private placement of our securities and short term
borrowings, no assurances can be given that additional funding or capital from
other sources, such as co-promotion arrangements, will be obtained on a
satisfactory basis, if at all. In the absence of the availability of
financing on a timely basis, we may be forced to materially curtail or cease our
operations. Our operating and capital requirements, as described
above, may change depending upon several factors, including: (i) results of
research and development activities; (ii) competitive and technological
developments; (iii) the timing and cost of obtaining required regulatory
approvals for our products; (iv) the amount of resources which we devote to
clinical evaluation and the establishment of marketing and sales capabilities;
and (v) our success in entering into, and cash flows derived from, co-promotion
arrangements.
Off-Balance Sheet
Arrangements
We have
no off-balance sheet arrangements that have or are reasonably likely to have a
current or future effect on our financial condition, changes in financial
condition, revenues or expenses, results of operations, liquidity, capital
expenditures or capital resources that is material to investors.
Recent Accounting
Pronouncement
Reference
is made to the summary or significant accounting policies included in the
consolidated financial statements for a discussion and analysis of recently
issued accounting pronouncements and their impact on the Company.
Item
7A.
|
Quantitative
and Qualitative Disclosures About Market
Risk
|
We
are a smaller reporting company, as defined by Item 10(f)(1) of
Regulation S-K, and we are not required to make the disclosures required by
this item pursuant to Item 305(e) of Regulation S-K.
29
Item
8.
|
Financial
Statements and Supplementary Data
|
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND 2009
CONTENTS
PAGE
|
||
REPORT
OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
|
1
|
|
CONSOLIDATED
BALANCE SHEETS
|
2
|
|
CONSOLIDATED
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
|
3
|
|
CONSOLIDATED
STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT
|
4
|
|
CONSOLIDATED
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
|
5
|
|
NOTES
TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
|
6 -
21
|
30
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT
REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the
Board of Directors
SensiVida
Medical Technologies, Inc.
77
Ridgeland Rd.
Henrietta,
New York
We have
audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of SensiVida Medical
Technologies, Inc. and subsidiaries, (the “Company”) as of February 28, 2010 and
2009, and the related consolidated statements of operations, changes in
stockholders' deficit and cash flows for the years then ended. These
consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
consolidated financial statements based on our audits.
We
conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require
that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether
the financial statements are free of material misstatement. The
Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit of its
internal control over financial reporting. Our audit included
consideration of internal control over financial reporting as a basis for
designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the circumstances, but not
for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s
internal control over financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no
such opinion. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting
principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as
evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe
that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our
opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in all material respects, the financial position of SensiVida Medical
Technologies, Inc. and subsidiaries as of February 28, 2010 and 2009, and the
results of their operations and their cash flows for the years then ended, in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States.
The
accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared assuming that
the Company will continue as a going concern. As disclosed in Note 1
to the financial statements, the Company has no revenues, incurred significant
losses from operations, has negative working capital and an accumulated deficit
which raises substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going
concern. Management’s plan in regard to these matters is also
described in Note 1. The financial statements do not include
any adjustments relating to the recoverability and classification of asset
carrying amounts or the amount and classification of liabilities that might
result should the Company be unable to continue as a going concern.
/s/
MORISON COGEN LLP
Bala
Cynwyd, Pennsylvania
June 16,
2010
1
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE
SHEETS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND 2009
2010
|
2009
|
|||||||
ASSETS
|
||||||||
CURRENT
ASSETS
|
||||||||
Cash
|
$ | 12,002 | $ | 76,797 | ||||
Prepaid
Expenses and Other Current Assets
|
- | 17,262 | ||||||
TOTAL
CURRENT ASSETS
|
12,002 | 94,059 | ||||||
PROPERTY
PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
|
||||||||
Net
of Accumulated Depreciation of $207,322 (2010) and $207,322
(2009)
|
- | - | ||||||
OTHER
ASSETS
|
||||||||
Intellectual
Property - Net of Accumulated Amortization of $187,237 (2010) and $-0-
(2009)
|
2,621,327 | - | ||||||
Deferred
Costs
|
49,167 | 130,547 | ||||||
Other
Assets
|
3,016 | 2,800 | ||||||
Restricted
Cash
|
18,727 | - | ||||||
TOTAL
ASSETS
|
$ | 2,704,239 | $ | 227,406 | ||||
LIABILITIES
AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
|
||||||||
CURRENT
LIABILITIES
|
||||||||
Convertible
Debt, Net of Discount of $-0- and $86,036 for 2010 and 2009,
respectively
|
$ | 451,500 | $ | 1,570,464 | ||||
Other
Loans Payable
|
99,828 | - | ||||||
Accounts
Payable
|
255,189 | 73,895 | ||||||
Officer
Loan Payable
|
5,524 | - | ||||||
Accrued
Liabilities
|
2,315,680 | 4,140,431 | ||||||
Preferred
Stock Subscribed
|
250,000 | 150,000 | ||||||
TOTAL
CURRENT LIABILITIES
|
3,377,721 | 5,934,790 | ||||||
TOTAL
LIABILITIES
|
3,377,721 | 5,934,790 | ||||||
STOCKHOLDERS'
DEFICIT
|
||||||||
Convertible
Preferred Stock - $.01 par value, 5,000 shares
|
||||||||
authorized, -0-
shares issued and outstanding in 2010 and
|
||||||||
2009
respectively
|
- | - | ||||||
Common
Stock - $.01 par value, 19,995,000 shares authorized,
|
||||||||
15,980,612
and 7,123,241 shares issued and outstanding in
|
||||||||
2010
and 2009, respectively
|
159,806 | 71,232 | ||||||
COMMON
STOCK SUBSCRIBED
|
140,800 | - | ||||||
ADDITIONAL
PAID-IN CAPITAL
|
34,153,453 | 27,784,596 | ||||||
ACCUMULATED
DEFICIT
|
(35,127,541 | ) | (33,563,212 | ) | ||||
TOTAL
STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
|
(673,482 | ) | (5,707,384 | ) | ||||
TOTAL
LIABILITIES & STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
|
$ | 2,704,239 | $ | 227,406 |
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial
statements.
2
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF
OPERATIONS
YEARS ENDED FEBRUARY 28,
2010 AND 2009
2010
|
2009
|
|||||||
SALES
|
$ | - | $ | - | ||||
COST
OF SALES
|
- | - | ||||||
GROSS
PROFIT
|
- | - | ||||||
GENERAL
AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE
|
1,094,041 | 1,078,416 | ||||||
RESEARCH
AND DEVELOPMENT EXPENSE
|
278,536 | 199,880 | ||||||
TOTAL
EXPENSE
|
1,372,577 | 1,278,296 | ||||||
LOSS
FROM OPERATIONS
|
(1,372,577 | ) | (1,278,296 | ) | ||||
OTHER
INCOME (EXPENSE)
|
||||||||
Cancellation
of Indebtedness
|
43,597 | - | ||||||
Interest
Income
|
86 | 4,380 | ||||||
Interest
Expense
|
(149,399 | ) | (190,751 | ) | ||||
Accretion
of Discount on Convertible Debt
|
(86,036 | ) | (721,434 | ) | ||||
Total
Other Income and (Expense)
|
(191,752 | ) | (907,805 | ) | ||||
NET
LOSS
|
$ | (1,564,329 | ) | $ | (2,186,101 | ) | ||
BASIC
AND DILUTED NET LOSS PER
|
||||||||
COMMON
SHARE
|
$ | (0.112 | ) | $ | (0.319 | ) | ||
BASIC
AND DILUTED WEIGHTED AVERAGE
|
||||||||
NUMBER
OF SHARES OUTSTANDING
|
$ | 13,984,738 | $ | 6,845,941 |
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial
statements.
3
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF
CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT
YEARS ENDED FEBRUARY 28,
2010 AND 2009
Preferred Stock
|
Common Stock
|
Common
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Number
|
Number
|
Additional
|
Stock
|
Accumulated
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
of Shares
|
Amount
|
of Shares
|
Amount
|
Paid-in Capital
|
Subscribed
|
Deficit
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
BALANCE
AT FEBRUARY 29, 2008
|
- | $ | - | 6,725,099 | $ | 67,251 | $ | 26,999,821 | $ | - | $ | (31,377,111 | ) | |||||||||||||||
Issuance
of stock - anti-dilution rights
|
- | - | 53,491 | 535 | (535 | ) | - | - | ||||||||||||||||||||
Issuance
of stock - services
|
- | - | 314,651 | 3,146 | 217,110 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Issuance
of stock - future consulting services
|
- | - | 30,000 | 300 | 29,700 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Discount
on debt due to beneficial conversion option
|
- | - | - | - | 538,500 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Net
loss for the year ended February 28, 2009
|
- | - | - | - | - | - | (2,186,101 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||
BALANCE
AT FEBRUARY 28, 2009
|
- | - | 7,123,241 | 71,232 | 27,784,596 | - | (33,563,212 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Common
stock subscribed
|
- | - | - | - | - | 140,800 | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Acquisition
of SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc.
|
- | - | 3,333,333 | 33,334 | 2,717,999 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Common
stock issued in cancellation of shareholder debt
|
- | - | 1,172,510 | 11,725 | 2,135,462 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Conversion
of debt and acrrued interest
|
- | - | 4,155,222 | 41,552 | 1,412,773 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Cancellation
of fractional shares as a result of reverse stock split
|
- | - | (27 | ) | - | - | - | - | ||||||||||||||||||||
Common
stock issued for future services
|
- | - | 150,000 | 1,500 | 76,000 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Common
stock issued for services
|
- | - | 46,333 | 463 | 26,623 | - | - | |||||||||||||||||||||
Net
loss for the year ended February 28, 2010
|
- | - | - | - | - | - | (1,564,329 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||
BALANCE
AT FEBRUARY 28, 2010
|
- | $ | - | 15,980,612 | $ | 159,806 | $ | 34,153,453 | $ | 140,800 | $ | (35,127,541 | ) |
The accompanying notes are an integral
part of these consolidated financial statements.
4
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF
CASH FLOWS
YEARS ENDED FEBRUARY 28,
2010 AND 2009
2010
|
2009
|
|||||||
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING
ACTIVITIES
|
||||||||
Net
loss
|
$ | (1,564,329 | ) | $ | (2,186,101 | ) | ||
Adjustments
to reconcile net loss to net cash used in operating
activities
|
||||||||
Depreciation
and Amortization
|
187,237 | 345 | ||||||
Amortization
of deferred costs
|
158,880 | 178,642 | ||||||
Accretion
of discount on convertible debt
|
86,036 | 721,434 | ||||||
Common
stock issued for services
|
27,086 | 220,256 | ||||||
Subtotal
|
(1,105,090 | ) | (1,065,424 | ) | ||||
Changes
in assets and liabilities
|
||||||||
(Increase)
decrease in assets
|
||||||||
Prepaid
expenses
|
17,262 | 43,681 | ||||||
Other
assets
|
(216 | ) | (1,000 | ) | ||||
Restricted
Cash
|
(18,727 | ) | - | |||||
Increase
(decrease) in liabilities
|
||||||||
Accounts
payable
|
181,294 | (54,752 | ) | |||||
Accrued
liabilities
|
569,882 | 342,210 | ||||||
Net
cash used in operating activities
|
(355,595 | ) | (735,285 | ) | ||||
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING
ACTIVITIES
|
- | - | ||||||
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING
ACTIVITIES
|
||||||||
Proceeds
from issuance of convertible debt
|
- | 538,500 | ||||||
Subscription
for convertible debt
|
100,000 | 150,000 | ||||||
Proceeds
from common stock subscribed
|
140,800 | - | ||||||
Increase
in other loans payable
|
50,000 | - | ||||||
Net
Cash provided by financing activities
|
290,800 | 688,500 | ||||||
NET DECREASE IN CASH
|
(64,795 | ) | (46,785 | ) | ||||
CASH - BEGINNING OF YEAR
|
76,797 | 123,582 | ||||||
CASH - END OF YEAR
|
$ | 12,002 | $ | 76,797 | ||||
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF
NON-CASH
|
||||||||
FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
|
||||||||
Common
stock issued in acquisition of intellectual
|
||||||||
property
and other liabilities (Note 10)
|
$ | 2,751,332 | $ | - | ||||
Common
stock issued for future services
|
$ | 77,500 | $ | 30,000 | ||||
Common
stock issued - anti-dilutive rights
|
$ | - | $ | 535 | ||||
Discount
on debt due to beneficial conversion option
|
$ | - | $ | 538,500 | ||||
Retroactive
adjustment for 10 for 1 reverse stock split related
|
||||||||
to
common stock and additional paid in capital
|
$ | - | $ | 577,155 | ||||
Common
stock issued in conversion of debt and accrued
|
||||||||
interest
|
$ | 1,454,325 | $ | - | ||||
Common
stock issued in cancellation of shareholder debt
|
$ | 2,147,187 | $ | - |
The
accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial
statements.
5
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
1 – NATURE OF BUSINESS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING
POLICIES
Nature of the
Business
The
consolidated financial statements include the accounts of SensiVida Medical
Technologies, Inc. f/k/a Mediscience Technology Corp. (“SensiVida”) and its
wholly-owned subsidiaries, Laser Diagnostic Instruments, Inc. (“Laser”),
Photonics for Women’s Oncology, LLC (“Photonics”) and Mediphotonics Development,
LLC (“Mediphotonics”), and Bioscopix, Inc. (“Bioscopix”), (collectively the
“Company”). All significant intercompany transactions and
balances have been eliminated in consolidation. Bioscopix and
Mediphotonics have been the only active subsidiaries of the
Company.
The
Company had operated in one business segment encompassing in the design and
development of medical diagnostic instruments that detect cancer in vivo in
humans by using light to excite the molecules contained in tissue and measuring
the differences in the resulting natural fluorescence between cancerous and
normal tissue. Effective March 3, 2009, with the merger of SensiVida
Medical Systems, Inc. into the Company’s wholly-owned subsidiary BioScopix, Inc.
(Note 10), the Company’s technology now focuses on the automation of analysis
and data acquisition for allergy testing, glucose monitoring, blood coagulation
testing, new tuberculosis testing, and cholesterol monitoring.
Management’s
Plan
The
Company is subject but not limited to a number of risks similar to those of
other companies at this stage of development, including dependence on key
individuals, the development of commercially usable products and processes,
competition from substitute products or alternative processes, the impact of
research and product development activity, competitors of the Company, many of
whom have greater financial or other resources than those of the Company, the
uncertainties related to technological improvements and advances, the ability to
obtain adequate additional financing necessary to fund continuing operations and
product development and the uncertainties of future
profitability. The Company expects to incur substantial additional
costs before beginning to generate income from product sales, including costs
related to ongoing research and development activities, preclinical studies and
regulatory compliance. Substantial additional financing is needed by
the Company.
The
Company has no revenues, incurred significant losses from operations, has an
accumulated deficit and a highly leveraged position that raises substantial
doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern. The
consolidated financial statements do not include any adjustments relating to
recoverability and classification of recorded asset amounts or the amount and
classification of liabilities that might be necessary should the Company be
unable to continue as a going concern. The Company expects to incur
substantial expenditures to further the development and commercialization of its
products. To achieve this, management will seek to enter into an
agreement with a consulting firm to be an advisor and explore options for the
Company to commercialize its technology, will seek additional financing through
private placements or other financing alternatives, and might also seek to sell
the Company or its technology. There can be no assurance that
continued financings will be available to the Company or that, if available, the
amounts will be sufficient or that the terms will be acceptable to the
Company.
Use of
Estimates
The
preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles
generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make
estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and
liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of
the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses
during the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those
estimates.
Equipment
Equipment
is stated at cost. Depreciation is computed using the straight-line
method over an estimated useful life of five years. Depreciation
expense was $-0- and $345 in 2010 and 2009, respectively.
6
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
1 – NATURE OF BUSINESS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
(CONT.)
Intellectual
Property
Intellectual
property consists of technology with patents pending approval that was included
in the acquisition of SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. (see Note 10) and is
stated at cost. Amortization is computed using the straight-line
method over an estimated useful life of fifteen years. Amortization
expense was $187,238 and $-0- for the years ended February 28, 2010 and 2009,
respectively.
Income
Taxes
The
Company accounts for income taxes under Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards (“SFAS”) No. 109, Accounting for Income Taxes,
which requires an asset and liability approach to financial accounting and
reporting for income taxes. Deferred income tax assets and
liabilities are computed annually for temporary differences between the
financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities that will result in
taxable or deductible amounts in the future based on enacted tax laws and rates
applicable to the periods in which the differences are expected to affect
taxable income. Valuation allowances are established when necessary
to reduce deferred tax assets to the amount expected to be
realized. Income tax expense is the tax payable or refundable for the
period plus or minus the change during the period in deferred tax assets and
liabilities.
Research and
Development
Research
and development costs are charged to operations when incurred. The
amounts charged to expense were $278,536 and $199,880 in 2010 and 2009,
respectively.
Loss per Common
Share
In
accordance with FASB ASC 260 (formerly SFAS No. 128), Earnings per Share, basic and
diluted net loss per share is computed using net loss divided by the weighted
average number of shares of common stock outstanding for the period
presented. Because the Company reported a net loss for each of the
years ended February 28, 2010 and 2009, common stock equivalents consisting of
options and warrants were anti-dilutive; therefore, the basic and diluted net
loss per share for each of these periods were the same.
Accounting for Stock-Based
Compensation
In
December 2004, the FASB issued FASB ASC 718 (formerly SFAS 123R), Share-Based
Payment. This statement requires measurement of all employee
stock-based compensation awards using a fair value method and the recording of
such expense in the consolidated financial statements. In addition,
the adoption of FASB ASC 718 (formerly SFAS 123R) requires additional accounting
related to the income tax effects and additional disclosure regarding the cash
flow effects resulting from share-based payment arrangements. There
were no employee stock options issued during the years ended February 28, 2010
and 2009.
Concentration of Credit Risk
Involving Cash
The
Company may have deposits with major financial institutions which exceed Federal
Deposit Insurance limits during the year.
Reclassification
The
February 28, 2009 financial statements have been reclassified to conform to the
2010 financial statement presentation.
7
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
1 – NATURE OF BUSINESS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
(CONT.)
RECENTLY
ADOPTED ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
FASB ASC
820-10 (formerly, SFAS No. 157) establishes a framework for measuring fair value
and expands disclosures about fair value measurements. The changes to
current practice resulting from the application of this standard relate to the
definition of fair value, the methods used to measure fair value and the
expanded disclosures about fair value measurements. This standard is
effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007; however, it
provides a one-year deferral of the effective date for non-financial assets and
non-financial liabilities, except those that are recognized or disclosed in the
financial statements at fair value at least annually. The Company adopted this
standard for financial assets and financial liabilities and nonfinancial assets
and nonfinancial liabilities disclosed or recognized at fair value on a
recurring basis (at least annually) as of January 1, 2008. The
Company adopted the standard for non-financial assets and non-financial
liabilities on March 1, 2009. The adoption of this standard in each
period did not have a material impact on its financial statements.
FASB ASC
805 (formerly, SFAS No. 141R) establishes principles and requirements for
how an acquirer recognizes and measures in its financial statements the
identifiable assets acquired, the liabilities assumed, any noncontrolling
interest in the acquiree and the goodwill acquired. This standard
also establishes disclosure requirements to enable the evaluation of the nature
and financial effects of the business combination. This standard was
adopted by the Company beginning March 1, 2009 and will change the accounting
for business combinations on a prospective basis.
FASB ASC
810-10 (formerly, SFAS No. 160) requires all entities to report noncontrolling
(minority) interests in subsidiaries as equity in the consolidated financial
statements. The standard establishes a single method of accounting
for changes in a parent’s ownership interest in a subsidiary that do not result
in deconsolidation and expands disclosures in the consolidated financial
statements. This standard is effective for fiscal years beginning
after December 15, 2008 and interim periods within those fiscal
years. This standard is not currently applicable to the
Company.
FASB ASC
815-10 (formerly, SFAS No. 161) is effective for fiscal years beginning after
November 15, 2008. This standard requires enhanced disclosures about
derivative instruments and hedging activities to allow for a better
understanding of their effects on an entity’s financial position, financial
performance and cash flows. Among other things, this standard
requires disclosures of the fair values of derivative instruments and associated
gains and losses in a tabular formant. This standard is not currently
applicable to the Company since the Company does not have derivative instruments
or hedging activity.
FASB ASC
350-30 and 275-10 (formerly, FSP FAS 142-3) amend the factors that should be
considered in developing renewal or extension assumptions used to determine the
useful life of a recognized intangible asset. This standard is effective for
financial statements issued for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2008,
and interim periods within those fiscal years. Early adoption is
prohibited. The adoption of this standard did not have any impact on
the Company’s financial statements.
FASB ASC
260-10 (formerly, FSP EITF 03-6-1) provides that unvested share-based
payment awards that contain nonforfeitable rights to dividends or dividend equivalents
(whether paid or unpaid) are participating securities and shall be included in
the computation of earnings per share pursuant to the two-class
method. This standard is effective for financial statements
issued for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2008, and interim periods
within those fiscal years. The Company does not currently have any
share-based awards that would qualify as participating
securities. Therefore, application of this standard is not expected
to have an effect on the Company’s financial reporting.
8
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
1 – NATURE OF BUSINESS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
(CONT.)
FASB ASC
470-20 (formerly, FSP APB 14-1) will be effective for financial statements
issued for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2008. The
standard includes guidance that convertible debt instruments that may be settled
in cash upon conversion should be separated between the liability and equity
components, with each component being accounted for in a manner that will
reflect the entity’s nonconvertible debt borrowing rate when interest costs are
recognized in subsequent periods. The adoption of this standard did
not have any impact on the Company’s financial statements
FASB ASC
815-10 and 815-40 (formerly, EITF No. 07-5) are effective for financial
statements for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2008, and interim
periods within those fiscal years. The standard addresses the
determination of whether an instrument (or an embedded feature) is indexed to an
entity’s own stock, which is the first part of the scope exception for the
purpose of determining whether the instrument is classified as an equity
instrument or accounted for as a derivative instrument which would be recognized
either as an asset or liability and measured at fair value. The
standard shall be applied to outstanding instruments as of the beginning of the
fiscal year in which this standard is initially applied. Any
debt discount that was recognized when the conversion option was initially
bifurcated from the convertible debt instrument shall continue to be
amortized. The cumulative effect of the change in accounting
principles shall be recognized as an adjustment to the opening balance of
retained earnings. The Company adopted this standard as of March 1,
2009, and was not required to reclassify any of its warrants as
liabilities.
In April
2009, the FASB issued FASB Staff Position No. 157-4 (FSP FAS 157-4) provides
additional guidance for Fair
Value Measurements, when the volume and level of activity for the asset
or liability has significantly decreased. This standard is effective
for interim and annual reporting periods ending after June 15,
2009. The adoption of this standard did not have a material effect on
its financial statements.
FASB ASC
320-10 (formerly, FSP FAS 115-2 and FSP FAS 124-2) amends the
other-than-temporary impairment guidance for debt and equity
securities. This standard is effective for interim and annual
reporting periods ending after June 15, 2009. The adoption of this
standard did not have a material effect on its financial
statements.
FASB ASC
855-10 (formerly, SFA No. 165) is effective for interim or annual financial
periods ending after June 15, 2009 and establishes general standards of
accounting and disclosure of events that occur after the balance sheet but
before financial statements are issued or are available to be
issued. However, since the Company is a public entity, management is
required to evaluate subsequent events through the date that financial
statements are issued and disclose the date through which subsequent events have
been evaluated, as well as the date the financial statements were
issued. The standard was adopted for its interim period ending August
31, 2009. Subsequent events have been evaluated through the date the
financial statements were issued.
In June
2009, the FASB issued Accounting Standards Update No. 2009-01, The FASB Accounting Standards
Codification, which establishes the Codification as the source of
authoritative GAAP recognized by the FASB to be applied by nongovernmental
entities. This standard is effective for financial statements issued
for interim and annual periods ending after September 15, 2009. The
adoption of this standard changes the referencing of financial
standards.
In
January 2010, FASB issued ASU No. 2010-01, Equity (ASC Topic 505), Accounting
for Distributions to Shareholders with Components of Stock and
Cash. The update clarifies that the stock portion of a
distribution to shareholders that allows them to elect to receive cash or stock
with a potential limitation on the total amount of cash that all shareholders
can elect to receive in the aggregate is considered a share issuance that is
reflected prospectively in earnings per share and is not considered a stock
dividend for purposes of ASC Topic 505 and Topic 260, Earnings Per
Share This standard is effective for interim and annual
periods ending on or after December 15, 2009, and should be applied on a
retrospective basis. This standard is not currently applicable to the
Company.
9
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
1 – NATURE OF BUSINESS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
(CONT.)
As of
February 28, 2010, the FASB has issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) through
No. 2010-10. None of the ASUs have had a material impact on the
Company’s financial statements.
Recently Issued Accounting
Pronouncements Not Yet Adopted
In
January 2010, FASB issued ASU No. 2010-06, Fair Value Measurements and
Disclosures (ASC Topic 820), Improving Disclosures about Fair Value
Measurements. This update provides amendments to ASC Topic 820
that will provide more robust disclosures about (1) the different classes of
assets and liabilities measured at fair value, (2) the valuation techniques and
inputs used, (3) the activity in Level 3 fair value measurements, and (4) the
transfers between Levels 1, 2 and 3. This standard is effective for
interim and annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2009, except
for the disclosures about purchases, sales, issuances, and settlements in the
roll forward of activity in Level 3 fair value measurements. Those
disclosures are effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2010,
and for interim periods within those fiscal years. This standard is
not currently applicable to the Company.
In
January 2010, FASB issued ASU No. 2010-05, Compensation - Stock Compensation
(ASC Topic 718), Escrowed Share Arrangements and the Presumption of
Compensation. This update codifies Emerging Issues Task Force
D-110. This standard is not currently applicable to the
Company.
NOTE
2 – RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
Legal
services rendered by Mr. Peter Katevatis amounted to $55,000 and $53,139 for the
two years ended February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009,
respectively. These amounts are recorded in general and
administrative expense. Effective November 2008, Mr. Katevatis’ legal
service agreement was amended to $60,000 per year. On February 3,
2010, Mr. Katevatis resigned from his legal service agreement.
As part
of Mr. Katevatis’ prior employment agreement, the Company paid property taxes
and certain operating expenses on the home of Mr. Katevatis in lieu of rent,
since the Company’s operations were located in Mr. Katevatis’ home through
November 2008. Expenses recognized were $1,823 and $18,463 in 2010
and 2009, respectively, and are recorded in general and administrative
expense. In December 2008, the Company leased an office in Henrietta,
New York.
See Note
7 for details regarding the Company’s consulting agreement with one of its
principal stockholders and Note 4 for related party loans and accrued
liabilities.
NOTE
3 – DEFERRED CHARGES
In fiscal
2010 and 2009, the Company issued 150,000 and 30,000, respectively, of fully
vested restricted shares of its common stock at fair market value to different
consulting groups in exchange for a variety of services to be rendered, over a
period of 12 months for matters such as corporate management, marketing
opportunities, product development and research, corporate funding and investor
relations. These costs have been capitalized and will be recognized
ratably over the terms of the agreements.
Expected
future amortization of deferred charges is as follows:
Years
Ending
|
||||
February
28, 2011
|
$ | 49,167 |
10
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
4 – ACCRUED LIABILITIES
Accrued
liabilities consist of the following:
2010
|
2009
|
|||||||
Legal
and professional fees
|
$ | 301,247 | $ | 182,826 | ||||
Consulting
and university fees
|
1,397,019 | 1,440,615 | ||||||
Salaries
and wages
|
346,500 | 2,148,786 | ||||||
Accrued
Interest
|
178,479 | 275,969 | ||||||
Other
|
92,435 | 92,235 | ||||||
Totals
|
$ | 2,315,680 | $ | 4,140,431 |
Accrued
legal and professional fees include services rendered by Mr. Peter
Katevatis. The amount of the accrual was $65,000 and $46,901 as of
February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009, respectively (Note 2).
Accrued
consulting and university fees include costs owed to Dr. Robert R. Alfano, a
principal stockholder and former chairman of the Company’s Scientific Advisory
Board (Note 7), with respect to his prior consulting agreement, of $1,397,019 as
of February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009.
Accrued
expense reimbursements of $92,235 were due to Dr. Alfano at February 28, 2010
and February 28, 2009. The Company has accrued these costs in
conjunction with Dr. Alfano’s prior consulting agreement.
Accrued
salaries and wages include amounts due to Mr. Katevatis of $-0- and $2,110,286
as of February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009, respectively.
Mr.
Katevatis agreed to forebear any and all collection action for accrued fees and
salary, including forgiveness of interest, in exchange for the option of
converting any such accrued salary and fees into the Company’s common stock at
$2.50 per share. The option is unlimited in duration. If
the Company were to receive financing, either may elect to receive all or part
of such accrued salary or fees in cash or common stock. As of
February 28, 2009, accrued salary and fees amounted to $2,157,187 for Mr.
Katevatis. As of February 28, 2010, accrued consulting fees and
expenses amounted to $1,489,254 for Dr. Alfano. (See Note 9 -
Anti-Dilution Rights).
On March
23, 2009 Mr. Katevatis exercised his option to convert all outstanding salary
and fees accrued through November 3, 2008 along with the termination of his
employment agreement and anti-dilution rights in exchange for 1,172,510, shares
of the Company’s common stock.
Accrued
salaries and wages include amounts due to Frank D. Benick, Chief Financial
Officer, of $29,000 and $6,000, as of February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009,
respectively.
Accrued
salaries and wages include amounts due to Kamal Sarbadhikari, former Chief
Executive Officer, of $106,250 and $6,250 as of February 28, 2010 and February
28, 2009, respectfully.
Accrued
salaries and wages include amounts due to Jose Mir, current Chief Executive
Officer and Chief Technical Officer of $131,250 and $6,250 as of February 28,
2010 and February 28, 2009, respectfully.
Accrued
salaries and wages include amounts due to David R. Smith, Chairman of the Board,
of $80,000 and $20,000 as of February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009,
respectfully.
Accrued
interest includes interest accrued on convertible debt of $141,431 (see Note 5),
interest accrued on the preferred stock subscribed of $29,836 (see Note 7) and
other debt.
11
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
5 – CONVERTIBLE DEBT AND OTHER DEBTS
On
January 10, 2007, the Company commenced a Private Placement Offering for
$2,000,000 of 12% convertible promissory notes (“the Notes”) in amounts of not
less than $25,000. The Notes shall be due and payable, together with
accrued and unpaid interest, on the earlier of April 15, 2008 for the first
$1,000,000 tranche and April 15, 2009 for the second $1,000,000 tranche (of
which $656,500 had been raised as of February 28, 2009) or three months after
the completion of the initial public offering (“the IPO”) of the shares of
BioScopix (now SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. as a result of the merger of
BioScopix into Mediscience Technology Corp. and subsequent name changes of the
Company to BioScopix and then SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. (SensiVida),
after the merger of BioScopix and SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. Holders
of the Notes may convert the notes into (i) cash in the amount of the principal
and accrued and unpaid interest due and a warrant exercisable until April 15,
2009 to purchase shares of BioScopix (now SensiVida) in an amount equal to 50%
of the principal of the Notes at an exercise price of 120% of the five day
volume weighted average preceding the effective date of the IPO of SensiVida or
(ii) shares of SensiVida at a price equal to 50% of the IPO price of the
SensiVida shares of common stock in an amount equal to the principal and accrued
and unpaid interest due on the Notes. In accordance with EITF 00-27
(codified in FASB ASC 470.2), under option (ii), the carrying value of the Notes
was reduced by the intrinsic value of the beneficial conversion option resulting
in a carrying value of $-0-. On January 29, 2008, the Notes were
modified to provide for two additional options. In addition to
options (i) and (ii), holders of the notes may now also convert the notes into
(iii) SensiVida stock with a six month lockup in the amount of principal and
accrued interest and receive 50% warrant coverage at 75% of the SensiVida stock
IPO price and (iv) combination of alternatives (ii) and (iii). The
additional options did not require an adjustment to the value of the
Notes.
As of May
31, 2009, the notes have been accreted to their maturity
value. Accretion of discount on convertible debt amounted to $86,036
and $721,434 for the fiscal years 2010 and 2009.
Accrued
interest payable on the notes as of February 28, 2010 and 2009 was $141,431 and
$275,969, respectively. Interest expense for the years ended February
28, 2010 and 2009 was $149,399 and $190,751, respectively.
Effective
April 15, 2008, the first $1,000,000 tranche of the Notes were in
default. Under the terms of the Notes, in the event of default, the
entire principal and unpaid accrued interest is immediately due and payable. The
January 29, 2008 modification of the Notes provided two additional options of
the Note holders as compensation for the delay of the IPO which was expected to
take place prior to April 15, 2009.
Effective
April 15, 2009, the second tranche of the Notes in the amount of $656,500 were
in default. Under the terms of the Notes, in the event of default,
the entire principal and unpaid accrued interest is immediately due and
payable.
On July
31, 2009, certain note holders converted the note and accrued interest thru July
31, 2009 into common stock of the Company at the net price of $.35 per share
which represents 50% of the opening market value of the stock on this
date. Principal of $1,205,000 and accrued interest of $249,325
were converted into 4,155,222 shares of the Company’s common stock.
As of May
19, 2010, one convertible note holder demanded repayment of principal of $50,000
with a subsequent demand for accrued interest approximating
$17,588. As of June 1, 2010, both principal and interest
had been satisfied. The remaining notes are in default.
12
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
5 – CONVERTIBLE DEBT AND OTHER DEBTS (CONT).
Note
Payable
On
September 1, 2005, SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. (SensiVida) issued a $50,000
convertible subordinated note to the order of Excell Partners, Inc.
(Holder). Principal and accrued interest was due and payable in one
installment on September 1, 2008, the maturity date. Interest
was accruable at 2% per annum on the unpaid principal amount of the
Note. Upon any default of this Note, the Holder has the right to
convert the Note to Common Stock of SensiVida. The number of shares
of Common Stock would be determined by dividing the outstanding principal and
accrued interest to the date of conversion by the conversion price or fair
market value paid in a most recent Qualified Transaction by
SensiVida. The note was in default upon acquisition (by the Company)
and was amended as of December 1, 2009. Commencing January 1, 2010,
interest will accrue on the balance at a rate of 8% compounded
annually. The Note has a maturity date of January 1,
2011. If the entire unpaid balance of the note is not paid when due,
then the amount unpaid shall bear interest at the current rate plus 1% and such
rate shall increase by an additional one percent each year until the note is
paid in full. The amount drawn on the note at February 28, 2010 and
February 28, 2009 was $49,828 and $-0-, respectively. Interest accrued on the
note was $4,286 and $-0- as of February 28, 2010 and 2009,
respectively.
Loan
Payable
On
September 1, 2009, the Company borrowed $50,000 from a
shareholder. The loan called for interest at 12% per
annum. The principal and accrued interest was convertible into the
company’s common stock at $.66 per share after six months at the discretion of
the note holder. Proceeds of the loan were to be used for the
company’s patient allergy clinical trial and related clinical
expenses. As of February 28, 2010, $18,727 of the original loan
remains in a restricted cash account for it’s intended use as approved by the
lender. Interest accrued on the note was $2,926 as of February 28,
2010. Subsequent to year end February 28, 2010, the terms of the loan
were modified to provide for an option to convert principal and accrued interest
into the preferred stock Series A. See Note 11 - Subsequent
Events.
NOTE
6 - PREFERRED STOCK SUBSCRIBED
Preferred Stock
Subscribed
During
February 2009, a current shareholder advanced $150,000 plus an additional
$100,000 received in March 2009 in exchange for 2,500 of Series A Preferred
stock having a par value of $100 (the shares). Each Series A
Preferred share is convertible into 150 shares of common stock for a total of
375,000 shares of common stock together with warrants to purchase up to 50,000
shares of common stock with an exercise price of $1.00. Because the
Company did not have the required authorized Preferred Stock to execute this
transaction, the Company has recorded the advances as a liability.
On April
13, 2010, the Company and a current preferred stock subscriber mutually agreed
to revised terms on a prior $250,000 unissued preferred stock subscription
agreement. The new terms call for a “ratcheted” conversion to common
stock, at a price of $0.35 from $0.66. In addition, accrued interest
of $34,849 as of May 1, 2010, on the $250,000 subscription, the subscription,
plus a 10% premium of $28,485 on the principal and accrued interest all totaling
$313,334, are available at the option of subscriber to roll over the total into
the Company’s current Series A subscription agreement. Also the
$50,000 loan (see Note 5) plus accrued interest of $3,929 as of May 1, 2010 for
a total of $53,929, can also be rolled over into the current Series A
subscription agreement at the option of the subscriber. In addition,
warrants to purchase 50,000 shares of common stock have been “ratcheted”
downward from $0.66666 to $0.35, resulting in a proportional increase in the
warrants to purchase 95,237 common shares.
13
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
7 – INCOME TAXES
There is
no income tax benefit for operating losses for the years ended February 28, 2010
and 2009 due to the following:
Current
tax benefit – the operating losses cannot be carried back to earlier
years.
Deferred
tax benefit – the deferred tax assets were offset by a valuation allowance
required by FASB ASC 740 (formerly known as FASB 109), “Accounting for Income
Taxes.” The valuation allowance is necessary because,
according to criteria established by this topic, it is more likely than not that
the deferred tax asset will not be realized through future taxable
income.
The
components of the net deferred income tax asset and liability as of February 28,
2010 and February 28, 2009 are as follows:
2010
|
2009
|
|||||||
Deferred
income tax asset:
|
||||||||
Net
operating loss carryforward
|
$ | 7,230,294 | $ | 7,389,208 | ||||
Valuation
allowance
|
7,230,294 | 7,389,208 | ||||||
- | - | |||||||
Deferred
income tax liability
|
- | - | ||||||
Totals
|
$ | $ | - |
As of
February 28, 2010 and 2009, the Company has valuation allowances of $7,230,294
and $7,389,208 respectively, which relate to federal and state net operating
loss carryforwards. The change in the total valuation allowance for
the years ended February 28, 2010 and 2009 was a (decrease) and increase of
($158,914) and $294,338, respectively. There were no temporary
differences for the years ended February 28, 2010 and 2009. The Company
evaluates a variety of factors in determining the amount of the valuation
allowance, including the Company’s earnings history, the number of years the
Company’s operating losses can be carried forward, the existence of taxable
temporary differences, and near-term earnings expectations. Future
reversal of the valuation allowance will be recognized either when the benefit
is realized or when it has been determined that it is more likely than not that
the benefit will be realized through future earnings. As of February
28, 2010 and 2009, the Company has net operating loss carryforwards of
approximately $19,414,000 and $19,796,000, respectively for federal purposes and
$10,656,000 and 11,087,000, respectively, for state purposes, which may be used
to reduce future income subject to income taxes.
The net
operating losses are scheduled to expire in the following years:
Federal
|
State
|
|||||||
2011
|
$ | 1,136,000 | $ | 850,000 | ||||
2012
|
1,556,000 | 2,358,000 | ||||||
2013
|
2,636,000 | 2,197,000 | ||||||
2014
|
1,128,000 | 1,399,000 | ||||||
2015
|
- | 2,159,000 | ||||||
2016
|
- | 1,433,000 | ||||||
2017
|
- | - | ||||||
2018
|
- | - | ||||||
2019
(*)
|
808,000 | - | ||||||
2020
(*)
|
943,000 | - | ||||||
2021
(*)
|
298,000 | - | ||||||
2022
(*)
|
316,000 | - | ||||||
2023
(*)
|
182,000 | - | ||||||
2024
(*)
|
790,000 | - | ||||||
2025
(*)
|
2,284,000 | - | ||||||
2026
(*)
|
2,156,000 | - | ||||||
2027
(*)
|
1,388,000 | - | ||||||
2028
(*)
|
2,096,000 | - | ||||||
2029
(*)
|
1,435,000 | - | ||||||
2030
(*)
|
262,000 | 260,000 | ||||||
Totals
|
$ | 19,414,000 | $ | 10,656,000 |
14
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
7 – INCOME TAXES (CONT.)
(*) Under
the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, the carryforward period of net operating losses
arising after May 1, 1998 was extended from 15 to 20 years.
The
Company’s policy is to record interest and penalties associated with
unrecognized tax benefits as additional income taxes in the statement of
operations. As of March 1, 2009, the Company had no unrecognized tax
benefits, and accordingly, the Company has not recognized any interest or
penalties during the year ended February 28, 2010 related to unrecognized tax
benefits. The Company did not accrue for interest or penalties as of
February 28, 2010. The Company does not have an accrual for uncertain
tax positions as of February 28, 2010.
The
Company files U.S. income tax returns and multiple state income tax
returns. With few exceptions, the U.S. and state income tax returns
filed for the tax years ending on February 28, 2007 and thereafter are subject
to examination by the relevant taxing authorities.
NOTE
8– COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
Dr. Robert R.
Alfano
The
Company had a consulting agreement (the “Agreement”) through March 2007 with Dr.
Robert R. Alfano, a principal stockholder of the Company and prior Chairman of
its Scientific Advisory Board. Pursuant to the terms of the
Agreement, Dr. Alfano was paid a consulting fee of not less than $150,000 per
annum in exchange for services to be rendered for approximately fifty days per
annum in connection with the company’s medical photonics
business. The Agreement further provided that Dr. Alfano was to be
paid a bonus and fringe benefits in accordance with policies and formulas
provided to key executives of the Company. The agreement expired on
March 5, 2007.
In
October 2009, a civil action was entered against the Company by Dr. Robert
Alfano, alleging that he is owed $1,487,053 in consulting fees and
expenses. The Company had accrued the consulting fees in conjunction
with a consulting agreement (Note 4). In addition, Dr. Alfano is
contesting the termination of his anti-dilution rights and claims the Company
owes him 132,000 shares of common stock (Note 9). The Company does
not believe the case has merit and has filed a Motion to Dismiss. The
Company intends to vigorously defend these claims.
In
connection with the acquisition of patent rights to its cancer detection
technology, the Company assumed an obligation to pay to Dr. Alfano’s daughter a
royalty of one percent of the gross sales derived from any equipment made,
leased or sold which utilizes the concepts described in the Company’s cancer
detection patent. Since there has been no revenue, no amounts have
been paid during the two years ended February 28, 2010 and 2009.
Other
Royalties
The
Company obtained worldwide licensing rights for patents from Yale University and
has agreed to pay royalties based on net sales of all products generated from
the patents and fifty percent of any income received from sublicensing of the
patents. The Company has not recorded any revenues since the
inception of this agreement and therefore has not recorded or paid any royalties
during the two years ended February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009.
Employment
Agreements
Mr. Peter
Katevatis, the Chief Executive Officer, Chairman and a stockholder of the
Company, had an employment agreement. The prior agreement was renewed
on March 5, 2007 which increased his salary from $200,000 to $250,000 per year.
The agreement also provided for a bonus and fringe benefits in accordance with
policies and formulas mutually agreed upon by Mr. Katevatis and the Board of
Directors. The contract was due to expire on March 5,
2015. In November 2008, Mr. Katevatis terminated his employment
agreement as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman along with his anti-dilution
rights and exercised his option to convert all outstanding salary and fees
accrued thru November 2008 in exchange for 1,172,510 shares of the Company’s
common stock.
15
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
8– COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (CONT.)
On
November 15, 2005, the Company entered into a two year employment agreement with
Frank D. Benick as Chief Financial Officer. Mr. Benick will be paid a
monthly salary of $3,000 per month for the first two months, then increasing to
$4,000 per month for the remaining term of the agreement and received an option
to purchase 30,000 shares of common stock at $10.00 per share. This
agreement has not been formally updated. Mr. Benick’s employment is continuing
under the terms of the expired agreement.
On
November 5, 2008, the Company entered into a three (3) year employment contracts
with Kamal Sarbadhikari as Chief Executive Officer and Jose Mir as Chief
Technical Officer. Mr. Sarbadhikari and Mr. Mir will each be paid a
base salary of $150,000 per annum. On November 2, 2009, Mr. Kamal
Sarbadhikari resigned for health reasons effective December 31,
2009. Jose Mir has been appointed interim President effective
December 31, 2009.
On
November 10, 2008, the Company entered into a three (3) year employment contract
with David R. Smith as Chairman of the Board. Mr. Smith will be paid
$60,000 per annum.
NOTE
9 – STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT
Reverse Stock
Split
The
consolidated balance sheets, statements of changes in stockholders’ deficit, and
related notes to consolidated financial statements have been adjusted to reflect
a 10 for 1 reverse stock split that was effective May 18, 2009.
Preferred
Stock
The
Company is authorized to issue 5,000 shares of preferred stock, $.01 par value
per share, which may be issued from time-to-time in one or more series, the
terms of which may be designated by the Board of Directors without further
action by stockholders. Any preferred stock issued will have
preferences with respect to dividends, liquidation and other rights, but will
not have preemptive rights.
Subsequent
to February 28, 2010, the Company amended its Certificate of Incorporation to
provide for 10,000,000 shares of Series A convertible preferred stock and
1,000,000 shares of preferred stock with preferences and characteristics to be
determined by the board of Directors. See Note 11 - Subsequent
Events.
Common Stock Issued for
Services
During
November 2008, the Company issued 314,651 restricted shares of its common stock
with a value of $220,256 to a group of financial consultants in exchange for
professional services and fund raising efforts, as per their
agreement. The transaction was recognized based on the fair market
value of the shares issued (the closing price of the Company’s common stock of
the date of issuance).
During
2009, the Company issued 46,333 restricted shares of its common stock with a
value of $30,620 to a group of consultants in exchange for professional
services, as per their agreements. The transactions were recognized
based on the fair market value of the shares issued (the closing price of the
Company’s common stock of the date of issuance).
Common Stock Issued for
Future Services
During
February 2009, the Company issued 30,000 restricted shares of its common stock
with a value of $30,000 to a consulting firm in exchange for public and investor
relations consulting services to be rendered over a one year
period. The transaction was recognized based on the fair value of
shares issued.
16
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
9 – STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT (CONT.)
During
July 2009, the Company issued 50,000 restricted shares of its common stock with
a value of $37,500 to a medical consultant in exchange for professional
services, as per agreement. The transaction was recognized based on
the fair market value of the shares issued (the closing price of the company’s
common stock of the date of the agreement).
During
February 2010, the Company issued 100,000 restricted shares of its common stock
with a value of $40,000 to a financial consultant in exchange for professional
services. The transaction was recognized based on the fair market
value of the shares issued (the closing price of the Company’s common stock on
the date of issuance).
Common Stock Issued in
Acquisition of SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc.
On March
3, 2009, the Company (formerly known as Mediscience Technology Corp.) and
SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. completed a merger of the two companies, with
Mediscience changing its name to SensiVida Medical Technologies,
Inc. As consideration for the merger, the Company issued 3,333,333
shares of the Company’s common stock, valued at $2,751,000 to the three
stockholders of SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. as consideration for
transaction.
Common Stock Issued in
Cancellation of Shareholder Debt
In March
2009, the Company issued 1,172,510 shares of its common stock to Mr. Katevatis
in settlement of all his accrued fees and salary to include termination of his
employment agreement as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, along with
cancellation of his anti-dilution rights.
On July
31, 2009, the company issued 4,155,222 shares of its common stock to certain
note holders who converted principal of $1,205,000 and accrued interest of
$249,326 into common stock of the company at a net price of $0.35 per
share.
Common Stock
Subscribed
In August
2009, the Company received $30,000 for 30,000 shares of the Company’s common
stock. As of February 28, 2010, the shares have not yet been
issued.
In
December 2009, the Company received $110,800 for 221,600 shares of the company’s
common stock. As of February 28, 2010, the shares have not yet been
issued.
2003 Consultants Stock
Plan
The Board
of Directors previously adopted, subject to stockholder approval, a 2003
Consultants Stock Plan (“Consultants Plan”). The Consultants Plan was
subsequently approved by the stockholders on February 17, 2004. The
aggregate number of shares that may be issued under the options shall not exceed
700,000. No options were issued prior to stockholder approval and no
options were outstanding under this plan as of February 28, 2010 and
2009.
1999 Incentive Stock Option
Plan
The Board
of Directors previously adopted, subject to stockholder approval, a 1999
Incentive Stock Option Plan (the “Plan”) for officers and employees of the
Company. The stockholders subsequently approved the Plan on February
17, 2004. Accordingly awards issued under the Plan prior to February
17, 2004 were deemed not to be granted until that date. The aggregate
number of shares that may be issued under the options shall not exceed
300,000.
17
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
9 – STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT (CONT.)
Stock
Options
Activity
related to stock options during the two years ended February 28, 2010 and 2009
is as follows:
Weighted
|
||||||||||||
Exercise
|
Avg. Exercise
|
|||||||||||
Shares
|
Price Range
|
Price
|
||||||||||
Outstanding,
February 29, 2008
|
70,000 | $10.00 - $20.00 | $ | 15.00 | ||||||||
Granted
|
- | |||||||||||
Exercised
|
- | |||||||||||
Forfeited
|
(40,000 | ) | ||||||||||
Outstanding,
February 28, 2009
|
30,000 | $ | 10.00 | $ | 10.00 | |||||||
Granted
|
- | |||||||||||
Exercised
|
- | |||||||||||
Forfeited
|
- | |||||||||||
Outstanding, February 28, 2010 | 30,000 | $ | 10.00 | $ | 10.00 |
Stock
Warrants
Stock
warrant activity during the two years ended February 28, 2010 and 2009 was as
follows:
Shares
|
Weighted
|
|||||||||||
Currently
|
Exercise
|
Avg. Exercise
|
||||||||||
Exercisable
|
Price Range
|
Price
|
||||||||||
Outstanding,
February 29, 2008
|
659,933 | $2.50 - $30.00 | $ | 9.00 | ||||||||
Granted
|
100,000 | $ | 1.00 | |||||||||
Exercised
|
(15,000 | ) | $ | 2.50 | ||||||||
Forfeited
|
(345,000 | ) | $2.50 - $10.00 | |||||||||
Outstanding,
February 28, 2009
|
399,933 | $2.50 - $30.00 | $ | 9.00 | ||||||||
Granted
|
195,800 | $.60 - $1.00 | ||||||||||
Exercised
|
- | - | ||||||||||
Forfeited
|
- | - | ||||||||||
Outstanding,
February 28, 2010
|
595,733 | $.60 - $30.00 | $ | 6.32 |
Weighted
average remaining life of warrants approximates 2.29 years at February 28,
2010.
Anti-Dilution
Rights
The
Company and Mr. Peter Katevatis had an anti-dilution rights agreement which
provided that Mr. Katevatis’ ownership interest would at all times represent 17%
of the issued and outstanding shares of the Company. The
anti-dilution rights were exercisable at Mr. Katevatis’ sole
discretion. During the years ended February 28, 2010 and February 28,
2009, Mr. Katevatis exercised his right and requested the Company issue -0- and
53,491 common shares respectively. In connection with the issuance of
these shares, the Company has capitalized only the stock’s par value from paid
in capital because of the Company’s accumulated deficit position. In
November 2008, Mr. Katevatis terminated his employment agreement as Chief
Executive Officer and Chairman along with his anti-dilution rights and on March
23, 2009 exercised his option to convert all outstanding salary and fees accrued
thru November 2008 in exchange for 1,172,510 shares of the Company’s common
stock.
18
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
9 – STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT (CONT.)
The
Company and Dr. Robert Alfano had an anti-dilution rights agreement which
provided that Dr. Alfano’s ownership interest would at all times represent 4% of
the issued and outstanding shares of the Company. The anti-dilution
rights were exercisable at Dr. Alfano’s sole discretion. As of
February 28, 2007, the Company was obligated to issue an additional 1,400 shares
to Dr. Alfano in connection with the anti-dilution rights. As a
result of the completion of Dr. Alfano’s consulting agreement as of March 5,
2007, the anti-dilution rights terminated. Subsequent to March 5,
2007, Dr. Alfano was issued 6,400 shares of the Company’s common stock in
connection with the anti-dilution rights of which 5,000 shares were issued in
error. The Company has placed a stop order and requested the 5,000
shares be returned by Dr. Alfano for cancellation. Dr. Alfano’s
anti-dilution rights are currently in the process of litigation along with
amounts owed to him for consulting and related expenses.
NOTE
10 – ACQUISITION OF SENSIVIDA MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC.
On
November 5, 2008, Mediscience Technology Corp., a New Jersey corporation
(“Mediscience”) entered into an agreement and plan of reorganization (the
“Merger Agreement”) with SensiVida Acquisition Corp., a Delaware corporation and
wholly-owned subsidiary of Mediscience (“Merger Sub”), and SensiVida Medical
Systems, Inc., a Delaware corporation (“SensiVida”), pursuant to which Merger
Sub will be merged into SensiVida and thereafter SensiVida will be merged with
and into Mediscience (the “Merger”). As a condition precedent to
completing the Merger, on January 29, 2009, BioScopix, Inc., a Delaware
corporation and wholly-owned subsidiary of Mediscience, merged with and into
Mediscience, with the surviving corporation changing its name to BioScopix, Inc.
(such surviving corporation hereafter referred to as the
“Company”).
On March
3, 2009, the Company and SensiVida completed the Merger and the Company changed
its name to SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. As consideration for
the Merger, the Company issued 3,333,333 shares of the company’s common stock,
par value $.01 per share (the “Common Stock”) to the three stockholders of
SensiVida as consideration for the transaction. In addition, the
Company issued 1,172,510 shares of its Common Stock to Mr. Katevatis in
settlement of all of his accrued claims and salary, to include termination of
his employment agreement as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, along with
cancellation of his anti-dilution rights.
The
merger will be accounted for under the acquisition method in accordance with
SFAS 141(R), Business Combination. The merger of SensiVida Medical
Systems, Inc. into the Company’s wholly-owned subsidiary BioScopix, Inc. will
enable the Company to focus on the automation of analysis and data acquisition
for allergy testing, glucose monitoring, blood coagulation testing, new
tuberculosis testing, and cholesterol monitoring. The fair value of
the consideration was approximately $2,751,000, the value of the 3,333,333
shares on March 3, 2009, which includes the assumption of various liabilities
totaling approximately $58,000. The Company has completed its
valuation of the identifiable assets acquired and liabilities assumed at their
acquisition date fair values as follows:
Cash
|
$ | 558 | ||
Technology
with Patents Pending Approval
|
2,808,563 | |||
Note
Payable
|
(49,828 | ) | ||
Accrued
Expenses
|
(2,437 | ) | ||
Officer
Loan
|
(5,524 | ) | ||
$ | 2,751,332 |
The
Company engaged the services of a valuation firm to estimate the fair value of
SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. Based on the valuation report, the
acquisition date fair values of the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed
ranged from $591,000 to $7,740,000. Due to the wide range in
valuation amounts and uncertainty of realizing the probabilities employed in the
valuation, the Company has used the fair value of the common stock issued,
$2,751,000, as it approximates the fair value of the assets acquired and
liabilities assumed.
19
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
10 – ACQUISITION OF SENSIVIDA MEDICAL SYSTEMS, INC. (CONT.)
The
operating results of the acquired Company has been included in the consolidated
financial statements from the date of acquisition, effective on March 1, 2009
for accounting purposes. The following table provides the unaudited
proforma results of operations as if the acquisition had occurred as of March 1,
2008.
Year Ended
|
||||
February 28, 2009
|
||||
Net
Sales
|
$ | -0- | ||
Net
Loss
|
$ | (2,195,967 | ) | |
Basic
and Diluted Loss for Common Share
|
$ | (0.321 | ) |
On March
19, 2009, the Company’s Board of Directors, the holders of a majority of the
Company’s voting capital stock, approved an amendment to the Company’s Restated
Certificate of Incorporation to provide for the reduction of the total number of
authorized, issued and outstanding shares of the Company’s common stock, par
value $.01 per share (“Common Stock”) and its preferred stock, par value $.01
per share (“Preferred Stock”), by exchanging each ten (10) shares of such
authorized, issued and outstanding shares of Common Stock and Preferred Stock
for one (1) share of Common Stock or Preferred Stock, respectively (such
exchange, the “Reverse Split”). The Reverse Split became effective on
May 18, 2009. All references to number of shares and per share
amounts in the consolidated financial statements and notes have been adjusted to
give retroactive effect to the reverse stock split.
NOTE
11 – SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
Amendment of Certificate of
Incorporation
On March
1, 2010, the Board of Directors approved and on March 1, 2010, the holders of a
majority of the voting capital stock approved an amendment to restate the
Certificate of Incorporation to provide for the increase in the total number of
authorized shares of the Company’s common and preferred stock.
The
aggregate number of shares which the Company shall have authority to issue is
100,000,000, 89,000,000 of which shall be common stock, $.01 par value per share
and 11,000,000 of which shall be preferred stock, $.01 par value per
share. 10,000,000 shares of preferred stock are designated Series A,
convertible preferred stock and 1,000,000 shares of preferred stock shall have
all preferences and characteristics to be determined by the Company’s Board of
Directors on a case-by-case basis, prior to issuance.
The
Series A Preferred stock shall have the following relative rights, preferences
and limitations:
a). The
Series A Preferred stock shall bear interest at 12% per annum, such interest to
accrue and be paid in cash at the end of three years from the date of issuance
of the Series A Preferred stock or in shares of common stock if the holder of
the Series A Preferred stock elects to convert the Series A Preferred
stock.
b). The
holders of the Series A Preferred stock shall be entitled to receive, when, as
and if declared by the Board of Directors out of funds legally available
therefore, dividends, whether in cash or stock, in preference to the holders of
common stock.
c). The
holders of the Series A Preferred stock shall be entitled to a preference over
holders of common stock with regard to distribution of assets in the event of
any liquidation, dissolution or winding-up of the Company, whether voluntary or
involuntary.
20
SENSIVIDA MEDICAL
TECHNOLOGIES, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
FEBRUARY 28, 2010 AND
2009
NOTE
11 – SUBSEQUENT EVENTS (CONT.)
d). The
shares of Series A Preferred stock shall not entitle the holder thereof to have
any right to vote or to receive any notice of any meeting of the holders of the
Company’s stock or to exercise any voting power.
e). The
Series A Preferred stock may, at any time for a period of three years
from the date of its issuance, at the option of the holders thereof, be
converted into common stock at a price of $0.35 per share (as adjusted for
subsequent stock dividends, stock splits, combinations, recapitalizations or the
like).
Series A Convertible
Preferred Stock Offering
Subsequent
to the Company’s February 28, 2010 fiscal year end, the Company began an
offering of a maximum of $10,000,000 of Series A Preferred stock at $1.00 per
share. The Series A Preferred stock is convertible into shares of the
Company’s common stock, par value $.01 per share at $0.35 per share for a period
of three years from the date of issuance and bears interest at 12% per annum,
such interest to accrue and be paid in cash at the end of three years from the
date of issuance of the Series A Preferred stock or in shares of common stock if
the investor elects to convert the Series A Preferred stock. The
investor also will receive warrants to acquire shares of common stock in an
amount equal to 50% of the number of shares of common stock into which the
Series A Preferred stock converts. The exercise price of the warrant
is also at $1.00 per share. Series A Preferred stock subscriptions to
date have exceeded $1,400,000.
21
Item
9.
|
Changes
in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial
Disclosure
|
None.
Controls
and Procedures
|
Evaluation
of disclosure controls and procedures
Our President and Chief Financial
Officer evaluated the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as
of the end of the period covered by this report. Based on that evaluation, the
Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that our
disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by
this report are not effective due to the existence of material weaknesses in our
internal control over financial reporting, discussed below.
Management's
Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
Our
management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal
control over financial reporting for the Company. Internal control over
financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance
regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of
financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles.
Our
system of internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and
procedures that: pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable
detail,
i. accurately
and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the
Company;
ii.
provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to
permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the Company are
being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of
the Company; and
iii.
provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of
unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition of the Company's assets that could
have a material effect on the financial statements.
Because
of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not
prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of
effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become
inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance
with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
Management
performed an assessment of the effectiveness of our internal control over
financial reporting as of February 28, 2010 based upon criteria in Internal
Control-Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations
of the Treadway Commission ("COSO"). Based on this assessment, management has
concluded that the Company's internal control over financial reporting was not
effective as of February 28, 2010 because of the material weaknesses
described below.
A
material weakness and significant deficiency are defined as a control
deficiency, or combination of control deficiencies, that adversely affects an
entity’s ability to initiate, authorize, record, process or report financial
data reliably in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles such
that there is more than a remote likelihood that a material misstatement (with
respect to material weaknesses) of the entity’s financial statements or a
misstatement that is more than inconsequential (with respect to a significant
deficiency) will not be prevented or detected by the entity’s internal controls
over financial reporting.
31
i. We do
not have an independent board of directors or audit committee to oversee our
internal control over financial reporting.
ii. We have a limited number of
personnel and as a result, there is limited segregation of duties amongst the
company's employees with respect to preparation and review of the Company's
financial statements.
iii. We have limited ability to account
for complex equity transactions, such that our controls relating to
disclosure and related assertions in the financial statements in the area
of non-routine transactions
were not
adequate.
iv. We have informal policies and
procedures and we lack a formal budgeting process.
These material weaknesses may affect
management's ability to effectively review and analyze elements of the
financial statement closing process and prepare financial statements in
accordance with generally accepted
accounting
principles.
This annual report does not include an
attestation report of the Company's registered public accounting firm
regarding internal control over financial reporting. Management's report
was not subject to attestation by the Company's registered public
accounting firm pursuant to temporary rules of the Securities and Exchange
Commission that permit the Company to provide only management's report in
this annual report.
Changes
in internal control over financial reporting
During
the last fiscal quarter, there was no change in our internal control over
financial reporting that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely
to materially affect, our internal control over financial
reporting.
Other
Information
|
None
Directors,
Executive Officers and Corporate
Governance
|
Board
of Directors
The
following table sets forth information regarding our executive officers and
directors. Each of our executive officers has been elected by our board of
directors and serves until his or her successor is duly elected and
qualified.
Name
|
Age
|
Position
|
||
David
R. Smith
|
66
|
Director
and Chairman of the Board
|
||
Jose
Mir
|
58
|
Director,
President, Chief Technology Officer
|
||
Ed
Cabrera
|
50
|
Director
|
||
Frank
D. Benick
|
|
61
|
|
Chief
Financial
Officer
|
The
principal occupations and business experience that led to the conclusion that
each person should serve as a director or executive officer are set forth in the
paragraphs that follow.
32
Each director holds office until the
next annual meeting of shareholders or until their successors have been
duly elected and qualified. Executive officers are appointed and serve at
the discretion of the Board of Directors.
The Company’s Bylaws provided that the
Board of Directors shall consist of not more than 15 and not less than seven
members. As a result of the recent changes to the composition of the
Board of Directors following the Company’s completion of its merger with
SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. and name change on March 3, 2009 and reverse
stock split on May 18, 2009, there are currently two vacancies that exist on the
Board of Directors. At this time, the current members of the Board of
Directors are evaluating the Company’s options at this time, including
identifying prospective candidates for appointment to the Board as well as
amending the Bylaws to reduce the size of the Board of Directors. The
Company will make prompt public disclosure of any actions relating to the
composition of its Board of Directors.
Our Board of Directors has one
separate, standing committee, the Executive Committee, consisting of directors
Cabrera and Smith. The Executive Committee has been delegated all
power and authority of the Board of Directors acts for the Board of Directors
when formal Board action is required between meetings in connection with matters
already approved in principle by the full Board or to fulfill the formal duties
of the Board. During the fiscal year ending February 28, 2010, the
Executive Committee met four times.
The Board
of Directors does not have a separate, standing audit committee at this
time. Pursuant to Section 3(a)(58) of the Exchange Act, the full
Board of Directors performs the functions of an audit committee for the
Company. During the year ended February 28, 2010, the Board of
Directors met five times. Each member of the Board attended at least 75% of the
meetings of the Board and committees on which he served. Although all
of the members of the Board of Directors are financial literate under listing
standards of national securities exchanges such as the NYSE, none of the members
of the Board of Directors qualifies as an “audit committee financial expert” as
such term is defined under Item 407(d)(5) of Regulation S-K. John
Kennedy, a former member of the Board of Directors until his resignation was
accepted effective as of May 18, 2009, previously qualified as an “audit
committee financial expert.” Although the Board of Directors believes
that it is appropriate and desirable for the Board to have an “audit committee
financial expert,” the Board believes that based upon the limited size and
operations of the Company at this time, it is appropriate for the Company to not
have an “audit committee financial expert.”
Directors
and Executive Officer Biographies
David R.
Smith, Chairman of the Board. Mr. Smith is a founding member of
Infotonics Technology Center Inc. and served as its President, Chief Executive
Officer and Chairman of the Board from 2002 to 2008. Mr. Smith also
previously served as the Chairman of the Board for OIDA (Optoelectronics
Industry Development Association). His professional memberships include the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE Senior Member) and
American Society for Quality. Mr. Smith has a MS in Electrical
Engineering from the University of Rochester and a BS in Electrical Engineering
from the University of Massachusetts. He began his Eastman
Kodak career in 1965 as an electrical engineer. He has had many diverse
assignments in Kodak Apparatus Division and Kodak Park Engineering with
increasing levels of responsibility in design engineering, technology
development, process improvement and systems engineering. In 1985 he was
appointed Director of Automatic Machine Systems Technology, now known as
Manufacturing Systems Technology Division (“MSTD”). MSTD is a corporate
technical resource that develops manufacturing process technology, designs high
performance manufacturing systems and installs these systems in new and existing
factories around the world. Effective in June 1997, Mr. Smith was
then appointed Director, Production Systems Engineering & Technology
Organization, Eastman Kodak Research & Development. The organization
concentrated on process R&D for discrete products, encompassing media
converting, packaging and high volume equipment manufacturing. Mr. Smith
remained the R&D Technical Director, Advanced Production &
Commercialization Technology Platform until he just recently
retired.
Key Director
Qualifications: Mr. Smith has significant directorship, manufacturing and
engineering expertise to assist us in commercializing our products.
33
Jose Mir,
President and CTO. Mr. Mir started his career at the Eastman
Kodak Company, pioneering new technologies that enabled some of the world's
earliest digital imaging products. He evangelized and co-founded a corporate
worldwide innovation initiative that after five years was able to drive
significant growth beyond Kodak's traditional product lines. Mr. Mir had profit
and loss statement responsibilities for a $16 million business that
commercialized four radically new digital products- two of them won industry
awards for technical excellence. After leaving Kodak, he started and led
Infotonics Technology Center's Innovation initiative, responsible for founding
two new start-ups. Most recently, he founded SensiVida Medical Systems Inc. and
served as its President/CTO for three years. Mr. Mir is a prolific inventor
and has won several professional awards.
Key Director
Qualifications: Mr. Mir has the requisite business and
technical background that have enabled him to develop our patents and patent
strategy, design our medical devices, assist with our financing and oversee the
growth of our company.
Peter
Katevatis Esq., Director. Mr. Katevatis served as Chairman of
the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer from 1993 to February 2009
and as a director since 1981. Mr. Katevatis has been a
practicing attorney in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Marlton, New Jersey, and
is also licensed as an attorney in the State of New York and in the District of
Columbia. Mr. Katevatis was a trustee of the New Jersey State's
Police and Fireman Retirement Pension Fund from 1989 to 1996 and served as a
member of the State of New Jersey Investment Council from 1990 to December
1992. Mr. Katevatis is a member of the American Arbitration
Association, serves as an arbitrator with the National Association of Security
Dealers and is a member of the National District Attorney's Association and the
New York Academy of Science.
Key Director
Qualifications: Mr. Katevatis has a legal background and years of
experience in working with our company as President and CEO to assist with our
company's strategic direction.
Edward Cabrera,
Director. Mr. Cabrera has worked on Wall Street for over 20 years,
including his current position as Head of Investment Banking at Jesup &
Lamont Securities Corporation where he has been employed since July 2005, at J.
Giordano Securities Group from March 2004 until July 2005 and with Merrill Lynch
as Managing Director and Head of Latin America from May 1993 until December
2002. Since 2003, Mr. Cabrera has focused on providing advisory
services and capital market access for emerging growth companies. Mr. Cabrera
was selected for the 2000 Millenium edition of Who’s Who In Finance and in 1999
was named to the All-America team by Institutional Investor. Mr.
Cabrera received his Bachelor of Science from the University of Florida in
Engineering and Material Sciences where he graduated with honors and received
his MBA in 1987 from Harvard Business School. Jesup & Lamont
provides various financing assistance and M&A advisory services to the
Company for a range of success fees.
Key Director
Qualifications: Mr. Cabrera has a financial background to
assist with raising capital, negotiating the most favorable financing terms and
advising us with our financing strategy.
Frank D.
Benick, Chief Financial Officer. Mr. Benick has served as our Chief
Financial Officer since November 2005. He has been a partner at the
accounting firm of Gust, Dori,& Benick since 1983.
There are
no family relationships between any of our directors, executive officers, or
advisors.
Nominating
Procedures
During the fiscal year ended February
28, 2010, there were not any material changes to the procedures by which
security holders may recommend nominees to the Company’s Board of
Directors.
34
Directors'
Fees
No
compensation has been paid to any individual for services rendered as a
director.
Compliance
with Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act
In connection with the completion of
the Company’s merger with SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. on March 3, 2009,
David R. Smith, Kamal Sarbadhikari, Jose Mir and Ed. Cabrera were appointed to
the Board of Directors but have not yet filed initial statements of beneficial
ownership on Form 3. On March 3, 2009, Messrs. Sarbadhikari and Mir
each were issued 14,204,545 shares of the Company’s common stock as their pro
rata share of the merger consideration and statements of changes in beneficial
ownership on Forms 4 have not been filed to report these
transactions. Also on March 3, 2009, Mr. Peter Katevatis, the former
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of the Company, was issued
1,172,510 shares of the Company’s common stock in consideration for his waiver
of certain accrued salary and other claims and a Form 4 reporting this
transaction has not been filed.
Code
of Ethics
We have
adopted a Code of Ethics for all officers and directors which is filed as
Exhibit 14.1 to this Annual Report on Form 10-K. We will provide a copy of our
Code of Ethics to any person, without charge, upon written request to the
Company. There have been no waivers to any of the Code of Ethics provisions nor
any amendments made to the Code of Ethics during the year ended February 28,
2010.
Compensation
paid to Jose Mir, our President since the voluntary termination in December 2009
by Kamal Sarbadhikari, our former President and CEO, as of February 28, 2010, is
set forth in the Summary Compensation Table below. No other executive officer's
compensation exceeded $100,000 in the fiscal years ended February 28, 2010 and
February 29, 2009, respectively.
SUMMARY
COMPENSATION TABLE
All Other
|
|||||||||||||
Compensation
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Name and Principal Position
|
Year
|
Salary ($)
|
($)
|
($)
|
|||||||||
Kamal
Sarbadhikari
|
2010
|
$
|
125,000
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
125,000
|
||||||
Former
Chairman, Pres. and
|
2009
|
$
|
46,635
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
46,635
|
||||||
Chief
Executive Officer (PEO)
|
|||||||||||||
Jose
Mir (PEO) President
|
2010
|
$
|
150,000
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
150,000
|
||||||
As
Chief Technology Officer
|
2009
|
$
|
46,635
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
46,635
|
||||||
David
R. Smith
|
2010
|
$
|
60,000
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
60,000
|
||||||
Chairman
|
2009
|
$
|
20,000
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
20,000
|
||||||
Frank
D. Benick
|
2010
|
$
|
48,000
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
48,000
|
||||||
Chief
Financial Officer
|
2009
|
$
|
48,000
|
$
|
-0-
|
$
|
48,000
|
Change
of Control
Our 1999
Stock Incentive Plan and our 2003 Consultants Stock Option, Stock Warrant and
Stock Award Plan provide that all outstanding options, warrants and restricted
stock will become vested and immediately exercisable, in the case of options and
warrants, or free from all restrictions, in the case of restricted stock, upon
the change of control of our company.
35
Security
Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related
Stockholder Matters
|
The
following table sets forth, as of June 14, 2010, certain information concerning
the beneficial ownership of common stock by (i) each person known by the company
to be the owner of more than 5% of the outstanding common stock, (ii) each
director, (iii) each Named Executive Officer, and (iv) all directors and
executive officers as a group. In general, "beneficial ownership" includes those
shares a director or executive officer has the power to vote or the power to
transfer, and stock options and other rights to acquire common stock that are
exercisable currently or become exercisable within 60 days. Except as
indicated otherwise, the persons named in the table below have sole voting
and investment power with respect to all shares shown as beneficially owned by
them. The calculation of the percentage owned is based on 11,632,390 shares
outstanding, which reflects the 10-to-one reverse stock split of the Company’s
securities effected on May 18, 2009 (plus, with respect only to each holder of
securities that are exercisable for or convertible into common stock within 60
days, shares underlying such securities).
PLEASE
UPDATE
Name
|
Shares Owned
|
Percentage Ownership
|
||||||
Directors
and Executive Officers:
|
||||||||
Peter
Katevatis
|
2,228,659 | 19.2 | % | |||||
Jose
Mir
|
1,420,454 | 12.2 | % | |||||
Kamal
Sarbadhikari
|
1,420,454 | 12.2 | % | |||||
Edward
Cabrera
|
122,713 | 1.1 | % | |||||
Frank
D. Benick
|
9,187 | * | ||||||
David
R. Smith
|
— | — | ||||||
All
Directors and Executive Officers as a group:
|
5,201,467 | 44.7 | % | |||||
5%
Stockholders:
|
||||||||
William
M. Baker
|
1,700,896 | (1) | 13.6 | % | ||||
Infotonics
Technology Center, Inc.
|
592,424 | 5.1 | % |
* Beneficial
ownership of less than 1% is omitted.
(1)
|
Includes
895,240 shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of shares of
Series A convertible preferred stock and warrants to purchase up to
447,620 shares of common stock issuable in connection with the issuance of
shares of Series A convertible preferred
stock.
|
Related
Person Transactions
Legal
services rendered by Mr. Peter Katevatis amounted to $55,000 and $53,139 for the
two years ended February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009,
respectively. These amounts are recorded in general and
administrative expense. Effective November 2008, Mr. Katevatis’ legal
service agreement was amended to $60,000 per year. On February 3,
2010, Mr. Katevatis resigned from his legal service agreement.
36
As part
of Mr. Katevatis’ prior employment agreement, the Company paid property taxes
and certain operating expenses on the home of Mr. Katevatis in lieu of rent,
since the Company’s operations were located in Mr. Katevatis’ home through
November 2008. Expenses recognized were $1,823 and $18,463 in 2010
and 2009, respectively, and are recorded in general and administrative
expense. In December 2008, the Company leased an office in Henrietta,
New York.
Accrued
legal and professional fees include services rendered by Mr. Peter
Katevatis. The amount of the accrual was $65,000 and $46,901 as of
February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009, respectively (Note 2).
Accrued
salaries and wages include amounts due to Mr. Katevatis of $-0- and $2,110,286
as of February 28, 2010 and February 28, 2009, respectively.
Mr.
Katevatis agreed to forebear any and all collection action for accrued fees and
salary, including forgiveness of interest, in exchange for the option of
converting any such accrued salary and fees into the Company’s common stock at
$0.25 per share. The option is unlimited in duration. If
the Company were to receive financing, either may elect to receive all or part
of such accrued salary or fees in cash or common stock. As of
February 28, 2009, accrued salary and fees amounted to $2,157,187 for Mr.
Katevatis.
On March
23, 2009 Mr. Katevatis exercised his option to convert all outstanding salary
and fees accrued through November 3, 2008 along with the termination of his
employment agreement and anti-dilution rights in exchange for 1,172,510, shares
of the Company’s common stock.
Mr. Peter
Katevatis, the Chief Executive Officer, Chairman and a stockholder of the
Company, had an employment agreement. The prior agreement was renewed
on March 5, 2007 which increased his salary from $200,000 to $250,000 per year.
The agreement also provided for a bonus and fringe benefits in accordance with
policies and formulas mutually agreed upon by Mr. Katevatis and the Board of
Directors. The contract was due to expire on March 5,
2015. In November 2008, Mr. Katevatis terminated his employment
agreement as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman along with his anti-dilution
rights and exercised his option to convert all outstanding salary and fees
accrued thru November 2008 in exchange for 1,172,510 shares of the Company’s
common stock.
Director
Independence
The Company is not subject to any
independence standards of a national securities exchange or national securities
association dealer quotation system. The Board of Directors has
determined that to be considered independent, an outside director may not have a
direct or indirect material relationship with the company. A material
relationship is one which impairs or inhibits/ or has the potential to impair or
inhibit a director's exercise of critical and disinterested judgment on behalf
of the company and its stockholders. To determine whether a material
relationship exists, the Board consults with the company's counsel. This ensures
that the Board's determinations are consistent with:
|
1.
|
All
relevant securities and other laws;
and
|
|
2.
|
Recent
relevant cases and regulations regarding the definition of (independent
director/business judgment) including those set forth in the listing
standards of the New York Stock Exchange as in effect from time to
time.
|
Based on
the foregoing criteria, the Board of Directors has determined that David R.
Smith, our Chairman of the Board, is the only member of the Board of Directors
that is independent.
37
Audit
Fees
The
aggregate fees billed for each of the fiscal years ended February 28, 2010 and
February 28, 2009 for professional services rendered by the principal
accountant for the audit of our annual financial statements and reviews of the
quarterly financial statements was $60,000 and
$45,000, respectively.
Audit
Related Fees
Provisions
and services of $28,500 related to the acquisition of Sensivida Medical Systems,
Inc. as of December 31, 2008.
Tax
Fees
None.
All
Other Fees
None.
PART
IV
|
(a)
|
The
Financial Statements filed as part of this annual report on Form 10-K are
filed under Part II, Item 8 beginning on page
18.
|
|
(b)
|
The
Exhibits filed as part of this annual report on Form 10-K are listed in
the Exhibit Index beginning on page
40.
|
|
(c)
|
Not
applicable.
|
38
Pursuant
to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc. has duly caused this report to be
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
SENSIVIDA
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
|
||
Date:
February
18, 2011
|
By:
|
/s/ Jose Mir
|
Jose
Mir
|
||
President
|
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has
been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and
in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
Date:
February 18, 2011
|
/s/ Jose Mir
|
Jose
Mir
|
|
President
and
|
|
Director
|
|
(Principal
Executive Officer)
|
|
Date:
February 18, 2011
|
/s/ David R. Smith
|
David
R. Smith
|
|
Chairman
of the Board
|
|
Date:
February 18, 2011
|
/s/ Frank D. Benick
|
Frank
D. Benick, CPA
|
|
Chief
Financial Officer
|
|
(Principal
Financial and Accounting
|
|
Officer)
|
39
2.1
|
Agreement
and Plan of Merger of BioScopix, Inc., a Delaware corporation, into
MediScience Technology Corp., a New Jersey corporation, dated as of
November 5, 2008.*
|
|
2.2
|
Agreement
and Plan of Reorganization by and Among BioScopix, Inc., a New Jersey
corporation (successor by merger to MediScience Technology Corp.),
SensiVida Acquisition Corp., a Delaware corporation, and SensiVida Medical
Systems, Inc., a Delaware corporation, dated as of November 5,
2008.*
|
|
2.3
|
Certificate
of Ownership and Merger merging SensiVida Medical Systems, Inc. with and
into BioScopix, Inc., with the surviving corporation changing its name to
SensiVida Medical Technologies, Inc.*
|
|
3.1
|
Restated Certificate
of Incorporation
|
|
3.2
|
By-laws
*
|
|
4.1
|
Form
of common stock certificate *
|
|
4.2
|
Anti-Dilution Agreement between
the registrant and Peter Katevatis, dated July 19,
2004 *
|
|
10.1
|
Employment
Agreement dated May 1, 1992 between the registrant and Peter Katevatis
*
|
|
10.2
|
Summary
of amendment to Employment Agreement between the registrant and Peter
Katevatis **
|
|
10.3
|
1999
Incentive Stock Option Plan *
|
|
10.4
|
2003
Consultants Stock Option, Stock Warrant and Stock Award Plan
*
|
|
10.5
|
Letter Agreement between Memorial Hospital for Cancer and
Allied Diseases and the registrant dated
March 30, 1993 amending Clinical Trial Agreement
dated June 1, 1992 *
|
|
10.6
|
Clinical Trial Agreement effective December 1, 1994 between the
registrant and the General Hospital
Corporation, d.b.a. Massachusetts General Hospital
*
|
|
10.7
|
Investigational
Device Exemption dated January 3, 1997 by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration *
|
|
10.8
|
Consultant
Agreement between registrant and Chesterbrook Partners Inc. dated April 1,
2004 *
|
|
10.9
|
SMC
agreement dated May 18, 2007, between
the registrant and Dr. Fredrick Naftolin
*
|
|
10.10
|
Term
Sheet dated by and between the registrant and William M. Baker relating to
the issuance of shares of Series B Convertible Preferred Stock of the
registrant*
|
|
10.11
|
Agreement
between the registrant and Wi Inc. dated May 26, 2010
|
|
10.12
|
Agreement
between the registrant and Dhurjaty Electronics Consulting LLC dated June
1, 2010
|
|
10.13
|
Agreement
between the registrant and MDC dated May 21, 2010
|
|
10.14
|
Agreement
between the registrant and Infotonics Technology Center dated February
2007
|
40
10.15
|
Warrant
issued by the registrant to the holders of Series A convertible preferred
stock
|
|
10.16
|
Consulting
Agreement between the registrant and John Condemi dated July 3,
2009***
|
|
10.17 | First License Agreement Amendment dated April 10, 2010 between registrant and Rochester BioVentures Center for office space | |
21.1
|
Subsidiaries
of the registrant *
|
|
31.1
|
Certification
of the Chief Executive Officer required by Rule 13a-14(a) or Rule
15d-14(a) **
|
|
31.2
|
Certification
of the Chief Financial Officer required by Rule 13a-14(a) or Rule
15d-14(a) **
|
|
32.1
|
|
Certification of
the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer
required by Rule 13a-14(b) or Rule 15d-14(b) and 18 U.S.C.
1350**
|
*
|
Previously
filed and incorporated herein by
reference
|
**
|
Filed
herewith
|
***
|
Previously filed with our
Form 8-K filed July 6, 2009
|
41