Calypso Medical’s New CEO Seeks to Steady Ship After a Rough Couple of Years

some gas buildup in the rectum while he’s lying on the table, technicians can see if the radiation beams are falling off track. If it’s hitting the bladder, they know. That’s important because it means they will likely turn off the machine or adjust the table, which could save the patient from impotence or having to wear adult diapers the rest of his life.

The system uses transponders that are about the size of a grain of rice, which get implanted in a patient’s prostate gland. That transponder sends a signal to a base receiver that processes the precise coordinates of the prostate in real-time, and displays it on a simple user interface for the technician. The base machine costs $400,000 to $500,000, and Calypso sells the implantable transponders for $1,200 apiece.

Calypso’s original technology required technicians to turn off the radiation when the beams fell off track, so they could adjust the patient-which could be a time-consuming process. Time is money at a radiation treatment center, and if you’re spending time adjusting a patient, that’s less time you have to run more patients through the system each day.

Knowing this, Calypso has found ways to integrate its technology into the radiation therapy machines made by companies like Siemens and Varian Medical Equipment. If the whole thing is integrated, then radiation beams can be adjusted on the go to keep them synchronized with the movement of the prostate in real-time. That means there’s no need to shut down the machine, and waste time adjusting patients on the table.

Vertatschitsch came to this job with a technical background; specifically, a doctorate in electrical engineering. He first came to Calypso in 2003 to work on the technical side of signal processing, in which he oversaw teams that made sure the Calypso system sent a wireless signal that was compatible with other equipment in the hospital. It was a whole new industry to him—he used his electrical engineering and physics training in previous career stints at Boeing, and at a small R&D unit in Seattle for Palm, when that company was in its 1990s heyday with the original Palm Pilot.

Why leave aerospace, and then consumer electronics? Palm’s original leadership team had moved on, so that was certainly part of the equation, but Vertatschitsch said he was intrigued by a new challenge in using his technical skills for healthcare. “I consider it noble work,” he says. “It’s great to be able to do something that has such an important impact on people’s lives. It was important to me, and motivates a lot of people who work here.”

Vertatschitsch worked his way up at Calypso on various projects, showing, he says that he could manage three critical parameters of all projects—cost, schedule, and quality. “You need all three to have a successful program,” he says.

Climbing through the ranks of management, he got exposed to the business development side at Calypso, helping work on critical partnerships with Varian and Siemens, the companies that make machines that deliver radiation beams. Soon, investors and members of the board wanted to ask Vertatschitsch questions about those relationships—so he joined Meier in helping raise the last couple rounds of financing.

Calypso’s future, Vertatschitsch says, will depend heavily on its ability to show its system is useful for more than just guiding radiation therapy for prostate cancer patients. Lung cancer is the next major use on the list, since the lungs move a lot when people breathe. Tumors of the liver and pancreas, which also move a lot because they are close to the diaphragm, are also on the list, Vertatschitsch says.

About 100 medical centers have installed the Calypso radiation-pinpointing system around the world, including three or four in Europe, Vertatschitsch says. While Calypso makes money on selling its base machine to each of those accounts, most of the value is in getting them to use the machine regularly and keep buying implantable transponders.

It almost goes without saying that it will be very hard for investors to realize a big return on their investment in Calypso, after 12 years and more than $175 million have gone into its R&D. Meier once talked about the possibility of doing an initial public offering, but given the sorry state of that market, and Calypso’s tide of red ink, that must sound like a distant thought. Vertatschitsch definitely exuded enthusiasm for the new uses of the Calypso system, but even as a 12-year old company, it has a long way to go.

When I asked if Calypso could turn profitable on the basis of its technology for prostate cancer alone, he said it could, but that would be “marginal.” The Calypso system, like most everything else in healthcare, is going to have to prove it is not only effective in helping treat disease, but that it offers a cost-effective solution that can win some of those hard-fought capital budget dollars at your average hospital. That means proving the platform is really versatile. But Vertatschitsch didn’t blink when I asked him if he thinks this company still has potential to become a $100 million-a-year in revenue business.

“Yeah, oh yeah, sure we can,” Vertatschitsch says. “Capital budgets are important to us, especially at this early stage. But we have three big recurring revenue streams. The transponders, the service associated with the system, and upgrades—selling of new capabilities into the installed customer base. In the long run, the business model has a great, high gross margin, and a recurring revenue stream.”

Author: Luke Timmerman

Luke is an award-winning journalist specializing in life sciences. He has served as national biotechnology editor for Xconomy and national biotechnology reporter for Bloomberg News. Luke got started covering life sciences at The Seattle Times, where he was the lead reporter on an investigation of doctors who leaked confidential information about clinical trials to investors. The story won the Scripps Howard National Journalism Award and several other national prizes. Luke holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and during the 2005-2006 academic year, he was a Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT.