Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. We are in an exciting period with a lot of progress on multiple fronts. We've discussed our strategy and efforts more comprehensively on previous calls, so I'll keep today's remarks focused on a few key commercial and innovation updates. Our commercial activity can be viewed as 2 primary efforts: first, to scale robotic system sales with continued adoption of Genesis and the initial launch of GenesisX; and second, to build a robust, high-margin recurring revenue business with our portfolio of novel catheters. These 2 efforts are independent, but obviously synergistic and together support an attractive razor-razorblade business model that can deliver substantial long-term growth. On the capital side, we were pleased to receive hospital orders for 2 Genesis robots since our last call. Both orders came from European hospitals establishing entirely new robotic programs. We expect both robots to be installed and to begin clinical use in the first half of 2026. These Genesis orders are reflective of the healthy pipeline and continued interest we see across our regions particularly in Europe, where we are slightly ahead in having a more complete product ecosystem approved and commercialized. These orders add to our existing system backlog, which had over $10 million, supports a study baseline of robotic system revenue as demonstrated by our results over the last several quarters. The launch of GenesisX significantly enhances our system opportunity by removing structural barriers that limited physician interest from translating into tangible adoption. We're delighted yesterday to announce FDA approval for the GenesisX system. This is a landmark approval for Stereotaxis. There are very few companies that can successfully develop, gain regulatory approvals and deploy complex surgical robots that operate reliably in daily clinical use. This is Stereotaxis' second such robot in 5 years and a reflection on our unique expertise and our capacity and commitment to significant innovation. We are initiating a limited launch of GenesisX, while we await approval for the MAGiC catheter work to enhance compatibility of the robot with various x-rays and refine our supply chain manufacturing, installation and commercial processes for a full launch. While we are pleased with the steady demand for Genesis, we expect GenesisX orders to outpace the tempo of Genesis orders following full launch. Turning to our recurring revenue. The key driver of growth over the coming years will be our budding portfolio of proprietary catheters. Stereotaxis' recurring revenue has to date been predominantly driven by service contracts and a small single-use disposable with relatively little revenue per procedure. Catheters are the primary disposable in any procedure and Stereotaxis did not previously benefit from this revenue stream. The dearth of robotically steered catheters reduced interest in our technology and limited our revenue opportunity and razorblade business model. Over just the past year, we have started to demonstrate the tangible reality and commercial impact of our catheter portfolio, with growing sales of Map-iT catheters following our acquisition of APT last year, adoption of the MAGiC ablation catheter in Europe, following CE Mark in the first quarter and over just the past 2 months, adoption of the MAGiC Sweep high-density mapping catheter in the U.S. following the FDA approval this summer. MAGiC Sweep has been a particular recent highlight. On our last call, we described the importance of high-density mapping in the EP field and have the introduction of robotic HD mapping promised several clinical and workflow benefits. It is also important to note that MAGiC Sweep is Stereotaxis' first catheter launch in the U.S. and the first catheter innovation that allows our robot to be used in new ways, enabling clinical care that was previously not possible. We began commercial launch of sweep in late August and have had a very exciting reception to date. Physicians have shared multiple examples of MAGiC Sweep allowing them to better diagnose the source of arrhythmia safely and efficiently in areas of the heart that were otherwise inaccessible with manual mapping catheters. The clinical interest in the catheter has translated into a strong commercial start with over $300,000 in sweep revenue in the first 2 months of launch. We are still in the earliest innings of the launch with only about 1/4 of robotic accounts in the U.S. ordering the catheter to date as we work through multiple hospital approval processes. We are excited to see the catheter continue to scale this impact in the U.S. as well as gain approval and launch in Europe. The commercial impact of MAGiC Sweep, measured in direct revenue and as importantly, in the halo effect it creates for robotics in our field demonstrates the significant impact of innovation. We have a robust pipeline of innovation efforts that will continue to strengthen our commercial results. These include multiple products in the late stages of regulatory review development projects approaching submissions and earlier-stage efforts that haven't yet been disclosed. They span technologies, including robotic systems, software solutions and several EP and vascular catheters and devices. I'll add a few brief updates and comments on 3 specific projects most impactful in the short term, MAGiC in the U.S., post-field ablation and the Synchrony digital cath lab system. MAGiC is our proprietary robotically navigated ablation catheter that will replace the older J&J catheter used with our robot. We received CE Mark and launched the catheter in Europe earlier this year, have been working through manufacturing ramp-up and country-by-country commercial processes and are working diligently with FDA to advance U.S. approval. Late in the third quarter, we responded fully to a body of questions that represented FDA's outstanding questions upon a comprehensive review of all modules in our submission. We maintain regular dialogue with FDA and appreciate their collaborative effort during the review. Post-field ablation, PFA, has been a dramatic impact -- has had a dramatic impact on the electrophysiology field over the last couple of years, driving billions of dollars in market growth and significant share shift among the large med tech players. On previous calls, we described having a few earlier-stage PFA collaborations with different partners working through the preclinical testing process. Last month, we were pleased to announce successful completion of preclinical testing and entering into a collaboration agreement with CardioFocus to their PFA system with our magic catheter. The agreement provides a framework for how we will advance this first-ever robotic PFA solution or a first-in-human clinical study, regulatory approval and commercialization. CardioFocus' PFA generator and our MAGiC catheter both already have regulatory approval in Europe. And so the effort to add compatibility to our label is expected to be relatively contained. We are preparing formal regulatory documentation to initiate first in human testing, expected to perform these procedures in the coming few months and believe it's possible to see MAGiC approved for PFA use in Europe before the end of next year. Finally, let me make a brief comment on Synchrony and SynX, our digital solution that streamlines modernizes and introduce secure remote connectivity to the cath lab. In October, we announced that we obtained CE Mark in Europe and had submitted technology for FDA approval. The technology has received less attention than most of our other innovation efforts but it holds significant promise as an entirely new business pillar. We have spent over 6 years and many millions of dollars developing Synchrony and SynX, benefiting from our previous experience with our Odyssey system but completely rearchitecting it with an improved technological foundation. Synchrony and SynX are central to our digital surgery efforts to modernize the interventional lab with enhanced workflow and remote connectivity and smart AI capabilities. The technology improves the robotic cockpit, but we believe all cath labs tend to benefit from improved workflow, connectivity, collaboration and intelligence. We have the opportunity recently to leading EPs and technology administrators to evaluate the system. The feedback was very positive, describing it as the most well-designed cath lab display technology they have seen. We expect Synchrony to contribute at least a couple of million dollars of revenue in the first year of launch, and a growing installed base will provide the foundation for an attractive software-as-a-service revenue stream from our SynX connectivity app and future AI features. Kim will now provide additional commentary on our financial results, and then I will make a few financial comments as well before opening the call to Q&A. Kim?