Thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. As Mike mentioned, our approach to developing a functional cure for patients with chronic hepatitis B involves reducing surface antigen, suppressing HBV DNA, and boosting the immune system. In our clinical trials conducted to date, imdusiran has been shown to reduce HBV DNA in untreated patients and reduce surface antigen when given both with and without ongoing standard of care nuke therapy. In addition, evidence of HBV specific T-cell reawakening has been observed in some patients undergoing treatment with imdusiran. To further boost the immune system, we designed our Phase 2a trials to evaluate imdusiran in combination with one of three immunomodulatory approaches. Interferon, a therapeutic vaccine, or checkpoint inhibitor targeting the PD-1, PD-L1 axis. Our two ongoing Phase 2a clinical trials, AB-729-201 and AB 729-202, are evaluating imdusiran in combination with interferon and in combination with a therapeutic vaccine, respectively. As Mike said, both of these Phase 2a trials are on track to report end-of-treatment data the EASL Congress in June. Note that we also amended the AB-729-202 trial to evaluate the addition of the PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor antibody nivolumab to the imdusiran and VTP-300 combination. We expect preliminary end of treatment data from that cohort in the second half of this year. Today, we announced that we have initiated patient screening in our third Phase 2a clinical trial, AB-729-203, which is evaluating imdusiran in combination with durvalumab, an anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody. While all of these Phase 3 trials are geared towards finding the right immune modulator to combine with imdusiran, the AB-729-203 trial with durvalumab is specifically intended to evaluate how we can use checkpoint inhibition in combination with imdusiran to boost HBV-specific immune responses. This trial will inform upcoming combinations with our proprietary oral small molecule PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor, AB-101. With that backdrop, I'd like to provide more information regarding the AB-729-203 trial design. AB-729--203 is an open-label, multi-sensor, Phase 2a clinical trial evaluating the safety, tolerability, antiviral, and HBV-specific immunologic activity of imdusiran and ongoing nuke therapy in combination with durvalumab, an approved anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody in patients with chronic hepatitis B. We intend to enroll 30 biologically suppressed patients into three separate cohorts. All patients will receive 60 milligrams of imdusiran every eight weeks with their ongoing nuke therapy for 48 weeks and will receive two doses of durvalumab at pre-specified times during the imdusiran treatment period that will differ by cohort. After completion of treatment, all patients will be assessed for eligibility to discontinue nuke therapy and will be followed for an additional 24 to 48 weeks. The endpoints for this clinical trial include basic and changes in surface antigen from baseline during the treatment and follow-up period. This trial allows us to explore the optimal timing of checkpoint inhibitor dosing in the context of surface antigen reduction during ongoing imdusiran treatment. Now moving on to our proprietary oral small molecule checkpoint inhibitor AB-101 that is differentiated from monoclonal antibodies such as durvalumab and nivolumab in the following ways based on our preclinical testing. First, AB-101 is liver-centric, meaning it preferentially traffics to the liver and has a high liver-to-plasma ratio, thus minimizing systemic exposure and reducing the chance of immune-related adverse events seen with monoclonal antibodies. Second, AB-101 has typical small molecule pharmacokinetics and therefore a much shorter duration of effect than long-acting antibodies, thus allowing for the potential to modify the dose or dosing interval to maximize effect or to stop dosing to quickly mitigate any safety concerns. Third, AB-101 acts through a novel mechanism of action differentiated from antibodies. It binds to PD-L1 on the surface of cells, causing dimerization and internalization of the PD-L1 protein, followed by degradation within hours. The flushing out of the drug results in full reconstitution of PD-L1 on the cell surface and restoration of PD-L1 function within days, unlike antibody therapies where the duration of receptor occupancy and PD effect is maintained for weeks with no ways to reverse it. It is for these reasons that we are excited about the potential of AB-101 and HBV, and are advancing our AB-101 clinical program, which is currently evaluating AB-101 in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled Phase 1a/1b clinical trial, known as AB-101 and 001. This trial is designed to investigate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of AB-101. The trial consists of three parts, starting with single and multiple ascending doses in healthy subjects, and culminating with multiple doses in patients with chronic HBV. In part one, which is the single ascending dose portion of the trial, we have enrolled four sequential cohorts of eight healthy subjects each to date. Within a cohort, six subjects received AB-101 and two subjects received placebo. And after review of safety, PK and PD data, AB-101 dose levels were increased in each subsequent cohort up to 25 milligrams. The data from part one showed that AB-101 is generally well tolerated with evidence of dose -dependent receptor occupancy. In the 25 milligram cohort, five of the six subjects had test samples that were evaluable for receptor occupancy, and all five of these subjects showed evidence of PD-L1 receptor occupancy between 50% and 100%, indicating that AB-101 is interacting with its intended target. One subject in this cohort was excluded from the PD evaluation as their samples could not be analyzed. We are now in part two of this trial, where cohorts of healthy subjects are receiving multiple ascending doses of AB-101. Our goal is to move as quickly as possible into part three, which will enroll patients with chronic hepatitis B. We anticipate announcing preliminary data from part two, the multiple ascending dose portion of this trial on healthy subjects in the second half of this year. We believe that the immune checkpoint pathway plays an important role in HBV-specific immune tolerance and in T-cell activation, and the addition of a checkpoint inhibitor in combination with imdusiran could potentially further enhance HBV-specific immune responses. With that, I'll turn the call over to Dave Hastings for a brief financial update. Dave?