Thank you, Geoff. As I review key development milestones, I'd like to turn your attention to the new corporate presentation posted in the Investor Relations section of our website. Approximately one-third of LBCL patients who initially respond to R-CHOP will likely relapse. Unfortunately, until recently, there has been no way to know which patients would be cured by front line R-CHOP versus those who would experience a disease recurrence and require second -- who would require treatment in second line or beyond. Because of this inability to give an accurate prognosis after the conclusion of front line treatment, the standard of care after front line treatment has for decades been to watch and wait for the disease to relapse. In January, we announced a partnership with Foresight Diagnostics, who is developing a novel and potentially practice-changing test for minimal residual disease, or MRD. This investigational test, when administered following completion of front line treatment for LBCL, has the potential to offer a highly-accurate prediction of future disease relapses. We believe this test could provide us with the ability to identify those patients who are most likely to relapse after front line and to take action to potentially prevent that relapse, namely a consolidation dose of cema-cel delivered immediately following the discovery of persistent MRD. ALPHA3 is designed with the specific attributes of cema-cel in mind. First and foremost, it maximizes the allogeneic advantages of cema-cel as a one-time, off-the-shelf treatment that can be administered immediately upon discovery of MRD following six cycles of R-CHOP. If ALPHA3 is successful, cema-cel could become the standard seventh cycle of front line treatment available to all eligible patients with MRD. Additionally, ALPHA3 builds on the growing understanding that administering CAR T therapies to patients with low disease burden can improve safety and efficacy outcomes. Cema-cel's Phase 1 safety profile with low rates of CRS and ICANS already permits its use in the outpatient setting in relapse/refractory patients and may further improve in patients with no radiological evidence of disease. The outcome of this pivotal trial could allow cema-cel to be embedded in the front line setting where autologous therapies are far less feasible. Consolidating response following an MRD positive result post-R-CHOP requires immediate and definitive action to prevent an impending relapse. Relapses tend to happen quickly after completion of R-CHOP, in many cases within weeks to a few months, making the speed to treatment a critical factor in the success of a consolidation strategy like ALPHA3. Cema-cel treatment could begin within days following MRD test results. As we have seen, autologous CAR Ts have had difficulty penetrating community cancer centers and accessing earlier line patients. Use of cema-cel won't rely on the complex logistics that have hindered CAR T adoption, nor will there be a reliance on referrals as the intent is for CAR T to be available in these community cancer centers. These doctors have been waiting for an allogeneic-like cema-cel to use CAR T in their centers. We believe autologous CAR Ts, bispecifics, or any other treatment modality cannot reproduce the differentiated attributes of cema-cel. You can see what this journey looks like across modalities on Slide 8. Slide 14 provides greater granularity regarding what to expect during the ALPHA3 pivotal trial. Startup activities for ALPHA3 are well underway and are nearing completion at several sites. In fact, we have completed the selection of nearly all clinical trial sites that include community-based cancer centers. The study will randomize approximately 240 patients who are MRD positive at the end of front line therapy to either consolidation with cema-cel or the current standard of care, which is observation with serial clinic visits, blood draws, and CT scans. With a primary endpoint of event-free survival, the design will initially include two treatment arms that differ in the lymphodepletion regimen used. One arm will feature standard fludarabine and cyclophosphamide plus ALLO-647, and the other, fludarabine and cyclophosphamide alone without ALLO-647. The first indication of how the trial is proceeding will be when we announce the selection of the lymphodepletion regimen we will continue to the end of the trial. That announcement is expected in mid-2025. The next study milestones will come less than a year later. First, we expect to complete enrollment in the first half of 2026. And second, because the prognosis of patients who are MRD positive at the end of front line therapy is quite poor, study events are expected to come in quickly. So, we expect to perform efficacy analyses in 2026 as well. This will include an independent data safety monitoring board interim efficacy analysis in first half of 2026 and the data readout of the primary EFS analysis in second half of 2026. If the trial is successful, we expect to follow these data readouts with a biologic license application, or BLA, submission targeted for 2027. The outcome of this pivotal trial could allow cema-cel to improve cure rates and become the only treatment approved for the consolidation of front line treatment, potentially reducing the need for CAR T in the later lines and simplifying the decision for front line treatment. Knowing an effective consolidation option exists could abrogate the need for complex regimens of five, six, or even more agents in newly diagnosed patients. On Slide 19, we briefly look at the next key milestones for the ALPHA2 CLL cohort. There is strong scientific rationale to believe that an AlloCAR T product derived from healthy donor cells could create a clinically meaningful advance for these late-stage patients with a one-time dose and simpler administration and logistics. The Phase 1 cohort will include 12 patients treated with cema-cel and is now enrolling patients. We expect to complete Phase 1 trial enrollment and have an initial data readout by the end of this year. Based on the outcome of this trial, we would expect to move into a pivotal Phase 2 trial in 2025. The bar for this trial is modest, given that an autologous CAR T therapy was recently approved with an overall response rate of 45% and a complete response rate of 20% in patients who received infusions at the target dose. Considering all those who underwent leukapheresis, the response rate and the complete response rate fell to 37% and 14%, respectively. Importantly for an off-the-shelf CAR T product candidate like cema-cel, virtually all enrolled patients who have met all trial criteria are expected to receive infusions. I want to turn your attention to Slide 27 and our autoimmune program next. ALLO-329 is our wholly-owned next-generation site-specific integration-based dual targeting CD19/CD70 AlloCAR T. Our design is centered on both scalability and reducing or even eliminating lymphodepletion, which we believe is absolutely critical for rapid clinical development and future commercial success. We are currently working on our IND-enabling manufacturing process and analytic assay development. We expect to file an IND in Q1 2025 and begin enrolling that trial in the first half of 2025. As a result, we expect to have proof of concept in this trial by the end of 2025. We recognize that highest clinical proof of concept is in lupus, but as we have noted earlier, we also recognize the importance of differentiation, so we are considering other indications with unmet need. Lastly, Slide 30 reviews our Phase 1 TRAVERSE trial timeline for ALLO-316. This quarter, we plan to detail what we believe will -- to be a fundamental discovery, the algorithm that may mitigate the treatment-associated hyperinflammatory response without compromising the CAR T function needed to eradicate solid tumors. The manuscript is currently undergoing peer review. A Phase 1 data update from approximately 20 patients with CD70-positive renal cell carcinoma is planned by year-end 2024. In totality, and as shown on Slide 32, we have meaningful data flow between now and through 2026 that will demonstrate the potential of our programs. We look forward to answering any additional questions you have on our pipeline during the Q&A. We'll now open the call for questions.