Ocular Therapeutix™ Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Financial Results and Business Highlights
Rhea-AI Summary
Ocular Therapeutix (NASDAQ: OCUL) reported Q4 and full‑year 2025 results and business highlights on Feb 5, 2026. Key items: SOL‑1 Week 52 topline data expected at the 49th Macula Society meeting Feb 25–28, 2026; plan to file an NDA for AXPAXLI pending positive SOL‑1 results; SOL‑R randomized 631 subjects; cash of $737.1M supporting runway into 2028.
2025 revenue declined to $52.0M and net loss was $265.9M; R&D spending rose sharply to $197.1M.
Positive
- $737.1M cash supports runway into 2028
- SOL‑R randomized 631 subjects, exceeding 555 target
- Raised ~$475M gross from Sept 2025 equity offering
- SOL‑1 Week 52 topline data expected Feb 25–28, 2026
Negative
- Revenue -18.5% YoY to $52.0M in 2025
- Net loss $265.9M for full year 2025
- R&D +54% to $197.1M in 2025, increasing cash burn
- DEXTENZA reimbursement challenges reduced net product revenue
Key Figures
Market Reality Check
Peers on Argus
OCUL is up 0.47% while key biotech peers like TARS (-4.95%), LQDA (-4.66%), TVTX (-3.41%), BEAM (-2.78%) and BLTE (-1.99%) are down, pointing to stock-specific drivers rather than a sector-wide move.
Previous Earnings Reports
| Date | Event | Sentiment | Move | Catalyst |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 04 | Q3 2025 earnings | Negative | -4.5% | Q3 2025 revenue decline, larger net loss amid accelerated trial spending. |
| Aug 05 | Q2 2025 earnings | Negative | -2.8% | Q2 2025 revenue down 18.1% YoY with sizable net loss and trial costs. |
| May 05 | Q1 2025 earnings | Negative | -12.2% | Q1 2025 revenue drop and higher R&D driving a $64.1M net loss. |
| Mar 03 | Q4 2024 earnings | Negative | -17.0% | Higher 2024 revenue but continued losses and expanding trial commitments. |
| Nov 14 | Q3 2024 earnings | Negative | -6.4% | Q3 2024 net loss despite modest revenue growth and SOL-1 spend ramp. |
Earnings releases have consistently been followed by negative next-day moves, averaging -8.58%, suggesting a pattern of cautious market responses to financial updates.
Across the last five earnings reports from Nov 2024 through Nov 2025, Ocular repeatedly highlighted strong cash positions with projected runway into 2028 while reporting declining DEXTENZA revenue and widening net losses. Each update also advanced the AXPAXLI program, with SOL-1 and SOL-R progressing toward topline data and NPDR development moving into Phase 3. Today’s Q4/FY 2025 release continues this theme of heavy investment in late-stage trials alongside revenue pressure.
Historical Comparison
Past five earnings reports averaged a -8.58% next-day move as investors reacted to recurring revenue pressure and sustained net losses despite ample cash runway.
Earnings updates show a steady build-out of AXPAXLI, from SOL-1 randomization and SPA-aligned designs through SOL-R and HELIOS Phase 3 starts, funded by rising cash balances and equity raises while revenues soften and R&D expenses rise.
Regulatory & Risk Context
The company has an effective S-3ASR shelf filed on 2025-09-30, allowing it to offer various securities via prospectus supplements for general corporate purposes including R&D, clinical trials, regulatory submissions, commercialization, and working capital. One related 424B5 takedown has been recorded, indicating the shelf is already in use.
Market Pulse Summary
This announcement combines Q4/FY 2025 results with major AXPAXLI milestones. Ocular reported cash of $737.1M and runway into 2028, funded partly by a $475M equity raise, while revenue fell to $13.3M in Q4 and $52.0M for 2025. At the same time, SOL-1 superiority data and SOL-R enrollment progress, plus HELIOS-3 in NPDR, frame a pivotal period where late-stage trial outcomes and spending discipline remain key watchpoints.
Key Terms
phase 3 medical
superiority trial medical
non-inferiority trial medical
new drug application regulatory
NDA regulatory
505(b)(2) regulatory
special protocol assessment regulatory
aflibercept medical
AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.
SOL-1 Phase 3 superiority trial results remain masked to date
SOL-1 data expected to be presented at the 49th Macula Society Annual Meeting
Ocular plans to submit NDA for AXPAXLI™ in wet AMD based on SOL-1 52 Week data, pending positive results and planned FDA interactions
Completed randomization of 631 subjects in SOL-R Phase 3 non-inferiority trial in December 2025; timing of topline results accelerated and now anticipated in 1Q 2027
HELIOS-3 Phase 3 trial in diabetic retinopathy underway
Cash balance of
BEDFORD, Mass., Feb. 05, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. (NASDAQ: OCUL, “Ocular”), an integrated biopharmaceutical company committed to redefining the retina experience, today provided recent business highlights and reported financial results for the fourth quarter and year ended December 31, 2025. The business highlights include updated timing for the presentation of topline results of the SOL-1 Phase 3 superiority clinical trial of AXPAXLI™ (also known as OTX-TKI), for the treatment of wet age-related macular degeneration (wet AMD), which are expected to be presented at the 49th Macula Society Annual Meeting, taking place between February 25 – 28, 2026.
Ocular will not be hosting a fourth quarter 2025 conference call as it is currently observing a quiet period in connection with the anticipated SOL-1 clinical trial data readout. The Company plans to resume quarterly earnings calls for its first quarter 2026 financial results.
Recent Achievements and Upcoming Milestones:
- SOL-1 (Phase 3, wet AMD) superiority trial on track for topline data in the second half of February 2026. Week 52 results for the SOL-1 trial are expected to be presented at the 49th Macula Society Annual Meeting, taking place between February 25 – 28, 2026. The SOL-1 superiority trial, conducted under a Special Protocol Assessment (SPA) agreement with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), has the potential to support the first label with a superiority claim over a single dose of aflibercept (2 mg) for any wet AMD product. All subjects have completed their Week 52 visit and have been re-dosed according to their baseline treatment assignment. The trial continues to maintain an exceptional rate of patient retention and per protocol-defined treatment rescues. To date, the SOL-1 trial results remain masked.
- Pending positive results, Ocular plans to submit a New Drug Application (NDA) for AXPAXLI in wet AMD based on SOL-1 52 Week data. Pending the receipt of favorable topline results and planned interactions with the FDA, Ocular intends to submit for approval with data from the single registrational SOL-1 trial. The Company further intends to leverage the 505(b)(2) approval pathway, which could potentially shorten the NDA review timeline for AXPAXLI by up to two months.
- SOL-R (Phase 3, wet AMD) non-inferiority trial completed randomization in December 2025, accelerating expected topline data to 1Q 2027. The SOL-R trial randomized 631 subjects, exceeding Ocular’s 555-subject target. The SOL-R non-inferiority trial complements SOL-1 with the potential to provide additional data to support the immediate adoption of AXPAXLI into clinical practice, if approved. SOL-R incorporates a comprehensive 24-week screening and loading phase to exclude subjects with early persistent fluid or significant retinal fluid fluctuations, thereby de-risking the randomized trial population.
- SOL-X (wet AMD) open label extension trial initiation expected in 2Q 2026. Subjects who have successfully completed two-year safety follow-up in either SOL-1 or SOL-R will have an opportunity to enroll in the SOL-X trial for an additional three years of safety follow-up. SOL-X outcomes may further expand AXPAXLI’s potential by highlighting the need to start AXPAXLI treatment early or potentially risk worse long-term visual outcomes due to potential fibrosis and atrophy that may be seen with pulsatile treatments.
- HELIOS-3 (Phase 3, NPDR) randomization is underway for AXPAXLI Phase 3 trial in diabetic retinopathy. HELIOS-3, which the Company initiated in November 2025, is a superiority trial in subjects with moderately severe or severe non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR). The trial is designed to support a broad label in diabetic retinal disease by allowing subjects with non-center-involved diabetic macular edema (non-CI-DME) to be enrolled in the trial. Ocular’s potential second Phase 3 trial in diabetic retinal disease, HELIOS-2, has not yet been initiated. Subject to the results of Ocular’s anticipated discussions with the FDA regarding filing plans for AXPAXLI in wet AMD based on SOL-1 data, the Company may elect to pursue a streamlined development approach in diabetic retinal disease, potentially advancing with only a single Phase 3 HELIOS-3 trial.
- Raised gross proceeds of approximately
$475 million from September 2025 equity offering. Net proceeds from the equity offering of approximately$445.6 million support planned operations into 2028.
Fourth Quarter Ended December 31, 2025, Financial Results:
Total cash and cash equivalents were
Total net revenue was
Research and development expenses for the fourth quarter of 2025 were
Selling and marketing expenses were
General and administrative expenses were
Net loss for the fourth quarter of 2025 was
Overall, the Company reported a net loss of
Outstanding shares as of February 2, 2026, were approximately 217.7 million.
About AXPAXLI
AXPAXLI™ (also known as OTX-TKI) is an investigational, bioresorbable, intravitreal hydrogel incorporating axitinib, a small molecule, multi-target, tyrosine kinase inhibitor with anti-angiogenic properties, being evaluated for the treatment of wet AMD and diabetic retinal disease.
About the SOL-1 Trial
The registrational Phase 3 SOL-1 trial (NCT06223958) is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of AXPAXLI in a multi-center, double-masked, randomized (1:1), parallel group trial that involves more than 100 clinical trial sites located in the U.S. and Argentina. In December 2024, the trial completed randomization of 344 evaluable treatment-naïve subjects with a diagnosis of wet AMD in the study eye.
The superiority trial has an eight-week loading segment prior to randomization. During the loading segment, subjects who have 20/80 vision or better and a central subfield thickness (CSFT) of ≤500 μm receive two doses of aflibercept (2 mg) at Week -8 and Week -4. Subjects who achieve best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) of 20/20 at Day 1 or gain at least 10 early treatment diabetic retinopathy study (ETDRS) letters at Day 1 along with a CSFT of ≤350 μm were then randomized to receive a single dose of AXPAXLI or a single dose of aflibercept (2 mg). At Week 52 and at Week 76, all subjects are re-dosed with their respective initial treatment of AXPAXLI or aflibercept (2 mg). Subjects will be followed for safety until the end of Week 104. Throughout the trial, subjects are assessed monthly. Trial subjects and designated trial personnel will remain masked through the end of Week 104. The clinical trial protocol requires that, during the trial, subjects in either arm meeting pre-specified rescue criteria will receive a supplemental dose of aflibercept (2 mg).
The primary endpoint of SOL-1 is the proportion of subjects who maintain visual acuity, defined as a loss of <15 ETDRS letters of BCVA, at Week 36. Subjects will continue to be evaluated for treatment durability up to Week 52. The trial is being conducted under a Special Protocol Assessment (SPA) agreement with the FDA.
About the SOL-R Trial
The registrational Phase 3 SOL-R trial (NCT06495918) is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of AXPAXLI in a multi-center, double-masked, randomized (2:2:1), three-arm trial that includes sites located in the U.S., Argentina, India, and Australia in subjects who are treatment-naïve or were diagnosed with wet AMD in the study eye within about four months prior to enrollment. Further, to qualify for screening, a subject’s study eye must have had a BCVA ETDRS letter score of ≥34 (~20/200). In December 2025, the trial completed the randomization of 631 subjects.
This non-inferiority trial reflects a patient enrichment strategy over the six months prior to randomization that includes three screening doses of any anti-VEGF therapy, excluding brolucizumab-dbll, and monitoring to exclude those subjects with early persistent fluid or significant retinal fluid fluctuations. Subjects who continue to meet eligibility, defined as a CSFT of ≤350 μm at Week -12 and Week -8 with ≤35 μm CSFT increase from the lowest CSFT at any prior visit, entered a run-in period and received two loading doses of aflibercept (2 mg) prior to Day 1. Subjects in the first arm receive a single dose of AXPAXLI at Day 1 and are re-dosed at Weeks 24, 48, and 72. Subjects in the second arm receive aflibercept (2 mg) on Day 1 and per label every eight weeks thereafter. Subjects in the third arm receive a single dose of aflibercept (8 mg) at Day 1 and are re-dosed at Weeks 24, 48, and 72, aligned with the AXPAXLI treatment arm for adequate masking. Subjects will be followed for safety until the end of Week 96. Throughout the trial, subjects are assessed monthly. Trial subjects and designated trial personnel will remain masked through the end of Week 96. Subjects in any arm that meet pre-specified rescue criteria will receive a supplemental dose of aflibercept (2 mg). The pre-specified rescue criteria include a >5-letter loss in visual acuity plus a ≥75 μm increase in CSFT.
The primary endpoint of SOL-R is to demonstrate non-inferiority in mean BCVA change from baseline between the AXPAXLI and on-label aflibercept (2 mg) arms at Week 56. As per the protocol agreed to by the FDA, the non-inferiority margin for the lower bound is -4.5 letters of mean BCVA when compared to aflibercept (2 mg) dosed every eight weeks. In a written Type C response received in August 2024, and a subsequent written response received in December 2024, the FDA agreed that the SOL-R repeat dosing wet AMD trial, with a primary endpoint at Week 56, should be appropriate as an adequate and well-controlled trial in support of a potential New Drug Application and product label for wet AMD.
About the SOL-X Trial
The SOL-X trial is a multi-center, 36-month open-label extension trial designed to evaluate the long-term safety, efficacy, and disease modifying potential of AXPAXLI in wet AMD for subjects who have successfully completed their two-year safety follow-up visits in either the SOL-1 or SOL-R trials.
According to the planned trial design, all subjects will be given AXPAXLI every 24 weeks, starting at Day 1 (Week 104 in SOL-1, Week 96 in SOL-R), at Week 24, Week 48, Week 72, Week 96, and Week 120. Subjects are assessed at Week 4, Week 12, and then every 12 weeks thereafter. Additional visits can be conducted with supplemental anti-VEGF injection administered based on investigator discretion.
The primary objectives of SOL-X are to evaluate the long-term safety of AXPAXLI; to explore long-term visual outcomes, including visual acuity and the incidence and/or progression of fibrosis and macular atrophy; and to evaluate the impact of delayed initiation of AXPAXLI in patients who initially were randomized to receive aflibercept in either SOL-1 or SOL-R.
About the HELIOS-3 Trial
The registrational Phase 3 HELIOS-3 trial is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of AXPAXLI in a multi-center, double-masked, randomized (1:1:1), three-arm trial. The trial is designed to enroll approximately 930 subjects with moderately severe to severe non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR) without center-involved diabetic macular edema (CI-DME).
Subjects in the first arm receive a single dose of AXPAXLI at Day 1 and are re-dosed at Week 24. Subjects in the second arm receive a single dose of AXPAXLI at Day 1 and sham at Week 24. Subjects in the third arm receive sham at Day 1 and at Week 24, aligned with the AXPAXLI treatment arms for adequate masking. Throughout the trial, subjects are assessed every 12 weeks.
The primary endpoint of HELIOS-3 is the ordinal diabetic retinopathy severity score (DRSS) 2-step change status at Week 52 from baseline (≥2-step improvement, ≥2-step worsening, less than 2-step change in either direction).
About Wet AMD
Wet age-related macular degeneration (wet AMD) is a leading cause of severe, irreversible vision loss affecting approximately 14.8 million individuals globally and 1.7 million in the United States alone. Wet AMD causes vision loss due to abnormal new blood vessel growth and hyperpermeability and associated retinal vascularity in the macula, which is primarily stimulated by local upregulation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Without prompt and continuous treatment to control this exudative activity, patients develop irreversible vision loss. With proper treatment, patients may maintain visual function for a period of time and may temporarily regain lost vision. Challenges with current therapies include pulsatile, repeated intraocular injections, treatment-related adverse events and up to
About Diabetic Retinal Disease
Diabetic retinal disease is an increasingly prevalent global health concern, driven by the rapidly rising number of individuals diagnosed with diabetes each year.
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is the most common category of retinal diseases, affecting over an estimated 103 million people worldwide. DR is a progressive condition in which retinal blood vessels are damaged following a cascade of events triggered by chronically elevated levels of blood glucose. As many as half of all diabetic patients are expected to develop some form of DR in their lifetime. DR can progress from the non-proliferative (NPDR) stages to the proliferative (PDR) stage characterized by the growth of abnormal new blood vessels. Fewer than
Diabetic macular edema (DME) is also a leading cause of vision loss in the working-age population. DME, the result of an accumulation of fluid in the macula that can afflict patients with diabetes, can occur at any stage of DR. In patients with DME, blood vessels in the eyes leak and start to swell, which can cause vision loss or blindness. Anti-VEGF drugs are approved to treat DME, but these treatments typically require frequent intravitreal injections, placing a significant burden on patients and physicians alike.
About Ocular Therapeutix, Inc.
Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. is an integrated biopharmaceutical company committed to redefining the retina experience. AXPAXLI™ (also known as OTX-TKI), Ocular’s investigational product candidate for retinal disease, is an axitinib intravitreal hydrogel based on its ELUTYX™ proprietary bioresorbable hydrogel-based formulation technology. AXPAXLI is currently in Phase 3 clinical trials for wet age-related macular degeneration (wet AMD) and diabetic retinal disease, including non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR).
Ocular’s pipeline also leverages the ELUTYX technology in its commercial product DEXTENZA®, an FDA-approved corticosteroid for the treatment of ocular inflammation and pain following ophthalmic surgery in adults and pediatric patients and ocular itching associated with allergic conjunctivitis in adults and pediatric patients aged two years or older, and in its investigational product candidate OTX-TIC, which is a travoprost intracameral hydrogel that has completed a Phase 2 clinical trial for the treatment of open-angle glaucoma or ocular hypertension. Ocular is currently evaluating next steps for the OTX-TIC program.
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DEXTENZA® is a registered trademark of Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. The Ocular Therapeutix logo, AXPAXLI™, ELUTYX™, and Ocular Therapeutix™ are trademarks of Ocular Therapeutix, Inc.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements of the Company regarding its future expectations, plans, and prospects; statements regarding the development and regulatory status of the Company’s product candidate AXPAXLI (also known as OTX-TKI), including the Company’s intentions, assuming the data are positive, to submit a new drug application for AXPAXLI based on Week 52 data from the Company’s SOL-1 Phase 3 clinical trial of AXPAXLI for the treatment of wet AMD; statements regarding the timing, design, enrollment, randomization, conduct and retention of subjects in the Company’s ongoing and planned clinical trials for AXPAXLI; statements regarding the commercial potential of AXPAXLI; statements regarding the timing of the availability of data from the SOL-1 trial and the SOL-R trial; statements regarding the future commercialization of DEXTENZA; statements regarding the Company’s cash runway and the sufficiency of the Company’s cash resources; statements regarding the potential utility or adoption, if approved, of any of the Company’s product candidates, including AXPAXLI; and other statements containing the words “anticipate”, “believe”, “estimate”, “expect”, “intend”, “designed”, “goal”, “may”, “might”, “plan”, “position”, “predict”, “project”, “target”, “potential”, “will”, “would”, “could”, “should”, “continue”, and similar expressions, all of which constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements as a result of various important factors. Such forward-looking statements involve substantial risks and uncertainties that could cause the Company’s development programs, future results, performance, or achievements to differ significantly from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Such risks and uncertainties include, among others, uncertainties regarding the initiation, design, timing, conduct and outcomes of the Company’s ongoing clinical trials, including the Company’s SOL-1 trial, SOL-R trial, and HELIOS-3 trial, and its planned SOL-X trial and potential HELIOS-2 trial; the timing and costs involved in commercializing any product or product candidate that receives regulatory approval; the risk that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, or FDA, will not agree with the Company’s interpretation of the written agreements under the Special Protocol Assessments for AXPAXLI, including for the SOL-1 trial and HELIOS-2 trial; uncertainty as to whether the FDA will accept a new drug application for AXPAXLI on the basis of a single pivotal clinical trial, even if SOL-1 data are positive; uncertainty as to the minimum clinical data required to demonstrate the safety of a proposed product candidate such as AXPAXLI, even if the FDA recognizes that only one pivotal clinical trial may be required to demonstrate efficacy; the risk that even though the FDA has agreed with the overall design of the SOL-1 trial, the FDA may not find that the data generated by the trial and submitted by the Company, even if positive, are sufficient to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of AXPAXLI to the degree necessary to support marketing approval for wet AMD; the risk that the FDA might not agree to the Company’s design, protocol, and statistical analysis plan of any of its clinical trials for which the Company has not obtained a Special Protocol Assessment; the risk that the Company and the FDA may not agree on the registrational pathway for any of its product candidates, including AXPAXLI; uncertainty as to whether the Company will be able to timely satisfy the FDA’s other requirements for regulatory approval of AXPAXLI, including the FDA’s Chemistry, Manufacturing and Control’s requirements, even if the Company can satisfy the FDA’s clinical requirements to demonstrate safety and efficacy; uncertainty as to what restrictions, if any, may be imposed on the label for AXPAXLI, if approved, pending the receipt of additional clinical data or otherwise; uncertainty as to whether the data from earlier clinical trials will be predictive of the data of later clinical trials, particularly later clinical trials that have a different design or utilize a different formulation than the earlier trials, whether preliminary or interim data from a clinical trial (including masked safety or masked rescue data from the Company’s SOL-1 trial or SOL-R trial) will be predictive of final data from such trial, or whether data from a clinical trial assessing a product candidate for one indication will be predictive of results in other indications; uncertainty as to the Company’s ability to retain regulatory approval of any product or product candidate that receives regulatory approval; uncertainty as to whether data from the Company’s SOL-X trial will demonstrate additional clinically meaningful, long-term benefits; uncertainties regarding the potential commercial advantages and/or position of the Company’s product candidates; uncertainty regarding the implementation and impact of most-favored-nation and other reference pricing regimes on the commercial potential of AXPAXLI, especially in markets outside the United States; availability of data from clinical trials and expectations for regulatory submissions and approvals; the Company’s scientific approach and general development progress; uncertainties inherent in estimating the Company’s cash runway, future expenses and other financial results, including its ability to fund future operations, including clinical trials; the Company’s existing indebtedness and the ability of the Company’s creditors to accelerate the maturity of such indebtedness upon the occurrence of certain events of default; and other factors discussed in the “Risk Factors” section contained in the Company’s quarterly and annual reports on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In addition, the forward-looking statements included in this press release represent the Company’s views as of the date of this press release. The Company anticipates that subsequent events and developments may cause the Company’s views to change. However, while the Company may elect to update these forward-looking statements at some point in the future, the Company specifically disclaims any obligation to do so, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing the Company’s views as of any date subsequent to the date of this press release.
Investors & Media
Ocular Therapeutix, Inc.
Bill Slattery
Vice President, Investor Relations
bslattery@ocutx.com
| Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. | ||||||||
| Consolidated Balance Sheets | ||||||||
| (in thousands, except share and per share data) | ||||||||
| December 31, | December 31, | |||||||
| 2025 | 2024 | |||||||
| Assets | ||||||||
| Current assets: | ||||||||
| Cash and cash equivalents | $ | 737,060 | $ | 392,102 | ||||
| Accounts receivable, net | 30,650 | 32,388 | ||||||
| Inventory | 3,564 | 3,040 | ||||||
| Prepaid expenses and other current assets | 10,855 | 13,457 | ||||||
| Total current assets | 782,129 | 440,987 | ||||||
| Property and equipment, net | 19,676 | 9,389 | ||||||
| Restricted cash | 1,614 | 1,614 | ||||||
| Operating lease assets | 4,638 | 5,945 | ||||||
| Total assets | $ | 808,057 | $ | 457,935 | ||||
| Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity | ||||||||
| Current liabilities: | ||||||||
| Accounts payable | $ | 4,154 | $ | 4,176 | ||||
| Accrued expenses and other current liabilities | 43,835 | 35,117 | ||||||
| Deferred revenue | — | 128 | ||||||
| Operating lease liabilities | 2,817 | 1,933 | ||||||
| Total current liabilities | 50,806 | 41,354 | ||||||
| Other liabilities: | ||||||||
| Operating lease liabilities, net of current portion | 2,815 | 5,345 | ||||||
| Derivative liability | 13,903 | 13,246 | ||||||
| Deferred revenue, net of current portion | 14,000 | 14,000 | ||||||
| Notes payable, net | 71,336 | 68,505 | ||||||
| Other non-current liabilities | 887 | 141 | ||||||
| Total liabilities | 153,747 | 142,591 | ||||||
| Commitments and contingencies | ||||||||
| Stockholders’ equity: | ||||||||
| Preferred stock, | — | — | ||||||
| Common stock, | 22 | 16 | ||||||
| Additional paid-in capital | 1,811,311 | 1,206,412 | ||||||
| Accumulated deficit | (1,157,023 | ) | (891,084 | ) | ||||
| Total stockholders’ equity | 654,310 | 315,344 | ||||||
| Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity | $ | 808,057 | $ | 457,935 | ||||
| Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. | ||||||||||||||||
| Consolidated Satements of Operations and Comprehensive Loss | ||||||||||||||||
| (in thousands, except share and per share data) | ||||||||||||||||
| Three Months Ended | Twelve Months Ended | |||||||||||||||
| December 31, | December 31, | |||||||||||||||
| 2025 | 2024 | 2025 | 2024 | |||||||||||||
| Revenue: | ||||||||||||||||
| Product revenue, net | $ | 13,250 | $ | 17,020 | $ | 51,823 | $ | 63,461 | ||||||||
| Collaboration revenue | — | 63 | 128 | 262 | ||||||||||||
| Total revenue, net | 13,250 | 17,083 | 51,951 | 63,723 | ||||||||||||
| Costs and operating expenses: | ||||||||||||||||
| Cost of product revenue | 1,594 | 1,230 | 6,574 | 5,626 | ||||||||||||
| Research and development | 50,800 | 40,989 | 197,096 | 127,635 | ||||||||||||
| Selling and marketing | 12,957 | 10,840 | 53,922 | 41,590 | ||||||||||||
| General and administrative | 17,659 | 14,600 | 64,376 | 60,653 | ||||||||||||
| Total costs and operating expenses | 83,010 | 67,659 | 321,968 | 235,504 | ||||||||||||
| Loss from operations | (69,760 | ) | (50,576 | ) | (270,017 | ) | (171,781 | ) | ||||||||
| Other income (expense): | ||||||||||||||||
| Interest income | 7,343 | 4,671 | 18,355 | 20,282 | ||||||||||||
| Interest expense | (2,832 | ) | (3,106 | ) | (11,835 | ) | (13,577 | ) | ||||||||
| Change in fair value of derivative liabilities | 595 | 623 | (2,471 | ) | (480 | ) | ||||||||||
| Loss on extinguishment of debt | — | — | — | (27,950 | ) | |||||||||||
| Other gains | — | — | 29 | — | ||||||||||||
| Total other income (expense), net | 5,106 | 2,188 | 4,078 | (21,725 | ) | |||||||||||
| Net loss | $ | (64,654 | ) | $ | (48,388 | ) | $ | (265,939 | ) | $ | (193,506 | ) | ||||
| Net loss per share, basic | $ | (0.29 | ) | $ | (0.29 | ) | $ | (1.42 | ) | $ | (1.22 | ) | ||||
| Weighted average common shares outstanding, basic | 222,921,325 | 168,019,285 | 187,241,483 | 158,265,162 | ||||||||||||
| Net loss per share, diluted | $ | (0.29 | ) | $ | (0.29 | ) | $ | (1.42 | ) | $ | (1.22 | ) | ||||
| Weighted average common shares outstanding, diluted | 222,921,325 | 168,019,285 | 187,241,483 | 158,265,162 | ||||||||||||