Thank you, Lisa and thank you everybody for joining us today. We really appreciate your interest in Arbutus Biopharma. At this moment, we issued a third quarter financial and business update press release, which highlights the significant progress we've achieved this year towards our goal, which is to develop a proprietary portfolio of products with different mechanisms of action that when used in combination results in a functional cure for patients living with chronic hepatitis B. We're taking a three pronged approach that's intended to; one, reduce HBV surface antigen; two, suppress HBV DNA; and three, boost the host immune system. And intend to accomplish this with our RNAi therapeutic 729, oral capsid inhibitor 836 and our oral PDL-1 program where we recently commenced IND enabling studies. So I'd like to start by walking through the clinical advancements we've made with this approach starting with reducing surface antigen with our lead compound 729, the RNAi therapeutic. As you know, 729 is specifically designed to reduce all hepatitis B viral antigens, including hepatitis B surface antigen, and we're seeing this activity in our ongoing Phase 1a/1b clinical trial. In fact, data to date has shown that AB-729 consistently provides a mean 1.8 log reduction in hep B surface antigen, which is sustained over time in patients with chronic HBV. In addition, 729 continues to show a favorable safety and tolerability profile. Also in addition to reporting significant drops in S-antigen, some 729 patients have shown increased HBV specific immune responses, which further supports our rationale for combination therapy to include an immunomodulatory agent. Now next week at AASLD, we will report additional data from additional cohorts of patients in this clinical trial in a poster presentation. And in that presentation, among other things, we will show that 729 repeat dosing remains generally safe and well tolerated. We'll show that robust mean declines in surface antigen was sustained with repeat dosing of 729 with no meaningful differences observed today between 60 milligram or 90 milligram doses or dosing intervals, which included every four, eight or 12 weeks. And we'll also show that S-antigen suppression to levels below 100 international units per ML, which is a clinically relevant threshold which could inform when to stop therapies, is maintained in some subjects up to 20 weeks following the last dose of 729. As we continue to involve more data with 729, we continue to believe that the drug has the potential to be a cornerstone agent in future HBV combination regimens. Our strategy is to evaluate 729 in combination with our own novel agents and with other approved or investigational agents with complementary mechanisms of action to set the foundation for future trials. Now we've made great progress in advancing 729 in clinical trial development. This quarter, we initiated and dosed the first patient in our own Phase 2a randomized open label proof of concept clinical trial to evaluate 729 in combination with ongoing standard of care, new therapy and short courses of peg-interferon in 40 patients with chronic HBV infection. Based on clinical data from our Phase 1 program, we selected 60 milligrams every eight weeks as the dose and dosing schedule for this trial and other trials. We're currently in the process of opening sites, screening patients and we will provide further updates on this trial when appropriate. And then from a collaboration standpoint, 729 is being evaluated in an ongoing Phase 2a triple combination trial with Assembly Biosciences lead HBV core inhibitor and the nucleoside analog. Assembly is conducting this trial and expecting to see data in 2022. Also activities to initiate separate Phase 2a clinical trials with Antios and Vaccitech are ongoing. We expect that the arm that will include 729 in the Antios clinical trial will commence this quarter and that the Vaccitech clinical trial will initiate in early 2022. Both trials are designed to evaluate the triple combination of 729 and nucleoside analog and either the Antios or Vaccitech proprietary agent. I'd now like to move on to the second arm of our approach that's to suppress HBV DNA with our next generation oral capsid inhibitor 836. Now 836 is specifically designed to completely block viral replication in infected cells by preventing the assembly of functional viral capsids. Preclinical data suggests that 836 may have the potential for increased efficacy and an enhanced resistance profile compared to previous capsid inhibitors. Preliminary data from healthy volunteers and HBV patients in our Phase 1a/1b clinical trial is on track to report out by the end of this year. And these data may support the initiation of a Phase 2 combination clinical trial with our own proprietary compounds. The third arm of our approach is to boost the immune system, which we hope to do with our oral PDL-1 program for which we recently commenced IND enabling studies. And after my prepared remarks, I'll turn the call over to Mike Sofia to provide more details about this exciting compound. Now ultimately, we strive to have a convenient or oral combination treatment for hepatitis B patients. And to achieve that, we're progressing our research efforts with an oral RNA destabilizer program and look forward to providing updates on our lead optimization efforts in 2022. In addition to our efforts in HBV, our internal research program to identify new antiviral small molecules to treat COVID-19 and future coronavirus outbreaks continues to make progress. So as you can see, despite the challenging impact of the pandemic, the team at Arbutus has been relentless in their efforts to continue the advancement of our clinical and research programs to meet our corporate goals, to address the needs of patients and to increase shareholder value. I really am very grateful for the team's commitment and dedication to finding a cure for hepatitis B and for the treatment of coronaviruses. So with that, I'll turn the call over to Mike Sofia for an update on our PDL-1 program. Mike?