Corporate News

Result of AGM

13 June 2017

Concepta plc (AIM:CPT), the pioneering UK healthcare company and developer of a proprietary platform and suite of products targeted at the personalised mobile health market with a primary focus on women's fertility and specifically unexplained infertility*, announces that at the Annual General Meeting held earlier today, all proposed resolutions were passed.

 

Enquiries:

Concepta plc

Adam Reynolds, Chairman

Tel: +44 (0) 7785 908158

 

SPARK Advisory Partners Limited (NOMAD)

Neil Baldwin / Mark Brady

Tel: +44 (0)20 368 3550

 

Beaufort Securities Limited (Broker)

Jon Belliss

Tel: +44 (0)20 7382 8300

 

Yellow Jersey PR Limited (Financial PR)

Felicity Winkles / Joe Burgess

Tel: +44 (0) 7748 843 871

 

About Concepta Plc:

Concepta plc is a pioneering UK healthcare company that has developed a proprietary platform and products targeted at the personalised mobile health market with a primary focus on women's fertility and specifically unexplained infertility*.

Founded in 2013, Concepta has developed a revolutionary flagship product 'myLotus' for home self-testing that helps women with unexplained infertility to conceive.  

myLotus is the only consumer product which allows both quantitative and qualitative measurements of a woman's personal hCG and LH hormone levels in an easy to use home test to facilitate higher conception rates and early diagnosis of any fertility problems.  Competitor products currently only allow qualitative measurement and are based on the 'average woman'.  

Concepta has a defined route to market for its new 'myLotus' product with Regulatory approvals for launch in China in place for H1 2017 and CE-Marking for UK and Europe to follow later in 2017. The revenue potential of the Chinese and EU infertility market is worth c.£600m per annum for the company.

*Unexplained infertility refers to women that have been unable to conceive after 6 months of trying. This highly motivated target group of consumers won't typically be offered medical intervention until 12 months of unsuccessfully trying, with IVF not offered until two years. Research indicates couples start to take positive action ahead of this time and there is little medical support to help them do so.