Filing
[ADVENTRX PHARMACEUTICALS, INC. LETTERHEAD]
Gregory P. Hanson CMA
Senior Vice President and CFO
Senior Vice President and CFO
SENT VIA FACSIMILE: 202-772-9217
AND VIA EDGAR
AND VIA EDGAR
July 27, 2007
Mr. James Rosenberg
Senior Assistant Chief Accountant
United States Securities and Exchange Commission
Mail Stop 6010
Washington, D.C. 20549
Senior Assistant Chief Accountant
United States Securities and Exchange Commission
Mail Stop 6010
Washington, D.C. 20549
Re: | ADVENTRX Pharmaceuticals, Inc. File Number: 001-32157 Form 10-K for the Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2006 Filed March 15, 2007 |
Dear Mr. Rosenberg:
Subsequent to discussions that we have held with both your staff and the Office of the Associate
Chief Accountant, and following our initial response on June 11, 2007 to your comment letter of May
10, 2007 on our Annual Report on Form 10-K (the Form 10-K) for the year ended December 31, 2006
(the Comment Letter), we submit the following additional comments. For your convenience, we have
repeated the Commissions comments only in the areas that we are providing you with supplemental
information to our initial response dated June 11, 1007.
Item 7. Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, page 43
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates, page 44
Clinical Trial Expenses, page 45
1. | Please clarify if the 3% variance in your estimate of the work completed is the reasonably likely change in the estimate and if so, please provide to us, using disclosure-type format, a discussion of the reason management believes it is reasonably likely. Otherwise, propose revisions to include the change in estimate that is reasonably likely with a discussion supporting it. |
Response:
We have revised our initial response submitted to you on June 11, 2007, based on subsequent
discussions with your staff. To improve our disclosure in future filings, we will include
substantially in the following form the revised disclosure in the critical accounting policies in
our Form 10-Q to be filed for the quarter ending June 30, 2007 and subsequent periodic reports:
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Historically, we have had no material changes in our clinical trial expense accruals that
would have a material impact on our consolidated results of operations or financial
position. Our clinical trials are often conducted under contracts with multiple research
institutions and clinical research organizations that conduct and manage clinical trials on
our behalf. The financial terms of these agreements are subject to negotiation and vary
from contract to contract and may result in uneven payment flows. Generally, these
agreements set forth the scope of work to be performed at a fixed fee or unit price or on a
time-and-material basis. Payments under these contracts depend on factors such as the
successful enrollment of patients or the completion of other clinical trial milestones.
Expenses related to clinical trials are accrued based on our estimates and/or
representations from service providers regarding work performed, including actual level of
patient enrollment, completion of patient studies, and clinical trials progress. Other
incidental costs related to patient enrollment are accrued when reasonably certain. If the
contracted amounts are modified (for instance, as a result of changes in the clinical trial
protocol or scope of work to be performed), we modify our accruals accordingly on a
prospective basis. Revisions in scope of contract are charged to expense in the period in
which the facts that give rise to the revision become reasonably certain. Because of the
uncertainty of possible future changes to the scope of work in clinical trials contracts,
we are unable to quantify an estimate of the reasonably likely effect of any such changes
on our consolidated results of operations or financial position.
Index to Consolidated Financial Statements, page F-1
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, page F-2
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, page F-2
3. As your auditor has relied on the report of another auditor, please provide us a copy of
the manually signed report of the other auditor provided to you as part of your preparation of your
December 31, 2006 Form 10-K, as it should have been included in your filing. Please refer to Rule
2-05 of Regulation S-X. Further, please ensure that it makes reference to the standards of the
Public Company Oversight Board of the United States as the basis for the audits performed as the
reports will have been reissued subsequent to the issuance of PCAOB Auditing Standard No. 1.
Response:
Subsequent to receiving your comments, we contacted the Office of the Associate Chief Accountant in
the Division of Corporation Finance to request a waiver to Rule 2-05 of Regulation S-X regarding
the requirement that we file a separate report of our predecessor accountant. The Office of the
Associate Chief Accountant would not waive the requirements of Rule 2-05, but stated that given our
facts and circumstances, would not object if our principal independent accountants report does not
make reference to either the cumulative amounts since inception required by SFAS 7, paragraphs 11b
and 11c or to the statement of stockholders equity disclosure required by SFAS 7, paragraph 11d
for the periods from June 12, 1996 (date of inception) to December 31, 2001. Our principal
independent accountant has agreed to revise its report to exclude such references, and is included
for your reference in Attachment A.
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Note 7, Warrant Liability, page F-21
5. Please tell us why it is appropriate to record negative additional paid in capital in
connection with the 10 million shares of stock issued so that essentially none of the proceeds are
allocated to the common stock.
Response:
In our initial response dated June 11, 2007, we provided references to the accounting literature
that supports the accounting treatment for the fair value of the liability of the registration
payment arrangement in the July 2005 financing transaction, including references to EITF Issue No.
00-19, Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments Indexed To, and Potentially Settled in a
Companys Own Stock (EITF 00-19). Further, we explained that because the fair value of the
contingent obligation was greater than the net proceeds from the financing, we reclassified the
entire net proceeds received at the closing date from additional paid-in capital to current
liabilities and recognized the excess of the fair value of the liability as a loss on the July 2005
financing transaction in our consolidated statement of operations. Also part of the accounting for
the transaction, we re-classified $10,811 from additional paid-in capital to common stock par
value, to account for the issuance of the shares of par value common stock for essentially no net
consideration.
Subsequent to our discussion with your staff, and after our review with outside counsel, we are
supplementing our response to confirm that we believe that Delaware General Corporation Law (we are
incorporated in the State of Delaware) does not prevent us from reducing additional paid-in capital
to offset the par value of $10,811 associated with shares issued in connection with the
transaction.
Additionally, per the Comment Letter, the Company acknowledges:
| the Company is responsible for the adequacy and accuracy of the disclosure in its filings with the SEC; | ||
| staff comments or changes to disclosure in response to staff comments do not foreclose the Commission from taking any action with respect to the filings; and | ||
| the Company may not assert staff comments as a defense in any proceeding initiated by the Commission or any person under the federal securities laws of the United States. |
If you have any further questions or wish to discuss the responses we have provided above, please
call me at 858-768-6316 at your convenience.
Sincerely,
/s/ GREGORY P. HANSON
Gregory P. Hanson CMA
Senior Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
Senior Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer
Cc: | Mark N.K. Bagnall, Audit Committee Chair Patrick Keran, Vice President, Legal and General Counsel |
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Attachment A
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders
ADVENTRX Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
ADVENTRX Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of ADVENTRX Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and
Subsidiaries (a development stage enterprise) as of December 31, 2006 and 2005, and the related
consolidated statements of operations, stockholders equity (deficit) and cash flows for each of
the three years in the period ended December 31, 2006 and for the period from January 1, 2002 to
December 31, 2006. These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Companys
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 audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. 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, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects,
the financial position of ADVENTRX Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Subsidiaries (a development stage
enterprise) as of December 31, 2006 and 2005, and the results of operations and their cash flows
for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2006 and for the period from
January 1, 2002 to December 31, 2006, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted
in the United States of America.
We also have audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board (United States), the effectiveness of ADVENTRX Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Subsidiaries
internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2006, based on criteria established in
Internal Control Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the
Treadway Commission and our report dated February 23, 2007 expressed an unqualified opinion on
managements assessment of internal control over financial reporting and an unqualified opinion of
the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting.
/s/ J.H. Cohn LLP
San Diego, California
February 23, 2007
February 23, 2007
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