Thanks, Mercedes, and thanks, everyone, for joining us. It's a pleasure to be here with you today. While this is a little later than we expected to be together, the extra time spent was necessary. We're very pleased that the revisions to our financial statements that we had to work through are not material and they don't impact the value of the company. You'll hear from Ellen shortly, but I want to thank her and her team for the work done over the past several weeks that helped to ensure we are best positioned to maximize value as we approach several important catalysts. First, let's focus on the operational progress that we've made over the past few months, working through towards the potential approval of our second product for patients with kidney disease, vadadustat. We are now on a clear path to potentially gain US approval for vadadustat as a treatment for anemia due to chronic kidney disease or CKD in adult patients on dialysis. In fact, as we shared earlier, we've received the minutes from our recent end of dispute Type A meeting with the FDA, which reflect our productive discussion with the agency and support our optimism that we will resubmit our new drug application or NDA for vadadustat by the end of this quarter. With that timing for resubmission, we would expect a decision from the FDA on the vadadustat NDA in March of 2024. We have Dr. Steve Burke here to answer any questions about our interactions with the FDA or our time line for NDA resubmission at the end of the call. And I'll also discuss initial plans for an anticipated launch next year, if approved. What's especially encouraging for our team at Akebia is that the momentum in the US regulatory discussions follows tangible progress in markets around the globe. Vadadustat is approved in 34 countries. In the past quarter alone, the European Commission, the United Kingdom Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency and Swiss Agency for Therapeutic products approved Vafseo vadadustat for the treatment of symptomatic anemia associated with CKD in adults on chronic maintenance dialysis in the EU, United Kingdom and Switzerland, respectively. Further, Akebia expects a regulatory opinion on vadadustat in Australia this year. I want to credit our team who assumes responsibility for the regulatory processes outside the US mid last year and worked efficiently to secure local approvals to help to enable Akebia to deliver a new therapeutic option to patients in need. To that end, we had previously discussed our priority was to secure a partner in Europe who would bring Vafseo to market. Here again, we met our objective and signed a license agreement with Medice. Medice is a fully integrated pharmaceutical company based in Germany with a strategic focus on the dialysis market. The license agreement grants Medice the exclusive rights to market and sell Vafseo in the European economic area, the United Kingdom, Switzerland and Australia for the treatment of anemia in patients with CKD. The agreement included an upfront payment of $10 million. And in addition, we're eligible for commercial milestone payments up to an aggregate of $100 million and tiered royalty payments ranging from 10% to 30% of Medice's net sales. We believe Medice is situated to maximize the European market potential for vadadustat. They understand the unique country-by-country pricing and access dynamics related to dialysis. They are committed and driven to succeed, and we continue to support their efforts. We expect Medice to launch as soon as possible in 2024. Building on the regulatory success we've had in other markets, we're eager to advance the regulatory approval process for vadadustat in the US. An approval in the US would represent our most significant commercial market opportunity and allow us to target the 550,000 US patients with anemia due to CKD who are receiving dialysis treatment. I'll note that the resubmission is a very focused filing. As part of the resubmission, we'll submit safety data collected since our original submission in 2021, including data from two alternate dosing studies FO2CUS and MODIFY. We'll also submit post-marketing data from Japan, where tens of thousands of patients have received the drug over the past two years. Now working through a potential launch time line, again, we expect to resubmit the NDA by the end of the quarter. Since we're submitting data that was not in the original NDA, our expectation is that our resubmission would undergo a six-month review. And this review period would commence upon submission. As such, we anticipate a new PDUFA date likely in March of 2024. Upon a potential approval, we'll quickly file for TDAPA reimbursement, which is a six-month process. After receiving TDAPA designation, we'd expect the product to be widely available for patients. We're actively preparing for a potential launch of vadadustat and are reengaging around the commercial opportunity. Let me summarize. We estimate that approximately 88% of the nearly 550,000 patients on dialysis are treated with an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent or an ESA for anemia, an injectable that is currently the standard of care. Medications used to treat dialysis patients in the US are paid for as part of a bundled payment made to dialysis providers. Now to promote innovative drug use for Medicare patients on dialysis, CMS created a transitional add-on payment adjustment over TDAPA. The add-on payment would cover the cost of vadadustat when a physician prescribes the drug for two years after receiving the TDAPA designation on top of the regular bundled payment. The TDAPA payment would allow providers to incorporate innovative products like vadadustat into their treatment protocols while still receiving the full bundled payment for treatment of their PPS or prospective payment system, Medicare patients. And we believe that we've created a favorable environment for adoption of the product as we prepare for a potential launch. We have a collaboration with Vifor CSL that provides access to up to 60% of the dialysis market through existing Vifor CSL relationships, which includes Fresenius Kidney Care and most small to midsized providers. Vifor CSL has a relationship with Fresenius for the procurement of therapeutic products used in their network and vadadustat would be made available through that collaboration. We believe Vifor's unique relationship and our experience in the dialysis market will create a favorable environment for pull-through within the dialysis centers. Together, we believe we are well positioned for a successful launch if vadadustat is approved. Our collaboration with Vifor CSL is a profit share, where we retain approximately two-thirds of the profit from vadadustat, net of certain pre-specified costs with Vifor CSL keeping the remaining one-third. For the remaining 40% of the dialysis market that Vifor CSL does not have rights to sell to, we retain 100% of the economics. So one of the most common questions I get these days is on launch costs. I'll note that we are also in a strong position here. The most significant launch expense is related to people and product. But we have the commercial organization in place today with only incremental additions needed and we already have the product on the shelf to launch as soon as we receive approval. We believe our additional costs will be truly incremental. Now to speak more about our financial position, I'm pleased to introduce Ellen Snow, who joined our team as CFO and Treasurer last month. Ellen's impact has been near immediate as she brought vast accounting and financial management expertise into the process to close the quarter and put the organization on the right footing by strengthening our product return reserves accounting process that was described in the press release filed this morning. This financial discipline will be especially important as we prepare to launch vadadustat in the US if approved. Ellen?