Thank you, Vipin. We are approaching an important milestone in our MASH program. The top line data from the IMPACT Phase 2b trial, which are expected in the second quarter. We are pleased to report that the trial enrolled a total of 212 participants with biopsy confirmed F2/F3 MASH, which increased the study power over the original target. As a reminder, the dual primary endpoints are MASH resolution or fibrosis improvement at 24 weeks. We also plan to provide data on key secondary endpoints, including weight loss, non-invasive tests of fibrosis, such as FibroScan and ELF, liver fat reduction, and serum lipids. We also look forward to reporting an adverse event profile that confirms the safety and tolerability of pemvidutide. As Vipin mentioned, if successful, pemvidutide would become the only incretin to achieve statistical significance on MASH endpoints at only 24 weeks of treatment. Further, it will be the first therapy of any kind to combine these effects with clinically meaningful weight loss at this early time point. While the top line efficacy data readout will be at 24 weeks of treatment, we are continuing to treat patients for a total of 48 weeks. This will allow us to estimate the effect of pemvidutide or MASH biopsy endpoints using non-invasive tests and determine the additional weight loss achieved by these patients at this time point. We are now on the final stages of rereading the biopsies. The baseline patient demographics and characteristics, including age, sex, body weight, BMI, diabetes status, ratio of F2 to F3, liver fat content, non-invasive measures of fibrosis, and liver function are consistent with our expectations and closely approximate other studies in MASH. To maximize the integrity and robustness of our histology readout, both baseline and end of treatment biopsies for all subjects are being reread in a blinded fashion using independent reads from three pathologists and a modal approach to scoring, similar to recent successful studies in this indication. Precedent has shown that re reading both the baseline and end of treatment biopsies significantly reduces the placebo response rate in MASH trials and implementing this procedure will add to the likelihood of trial success. Finally, the most compelling reason we are confident heading into the IMPACT readout is that our Phase Ib MASLD study demonstrated a dose dependent liver fat reduction of up to 76.4%, which is greater than that associated with other successful trials and is class leading for MASH therapeutics. Recall that liver fat reduction has been shown to be the principal driver of MASH resolution and fibrosis improvement in MASH clinical trials. Given our confidence in the upcoming data, we are preparing for the initiation of a Phase 3 trial in NASH and intend to hold the end of Phase 2 meeting with the FDA in the fourth quarter of this year for this indication. This timeline would allow us to initiate a registrational program in early 2026. Turning now to two additional indications that we unveiled at our March R&D day event, Alcohol Use Disorder, or AUD, and Alcohol Liver Disease, or ALD, we are progressing towards Phase 2 trial initiations in these indications in Q2 and Q3, respectively. The Phase 2 trial in AUD will evaluate pemvidutide versus placebo in approximately one hundred patients over a 24-week period. Patients in the pemvidutide arm will receive the 2.4 milligram dose titrated over eight weeks to maximize tolerability in this patient population. The primary efficacy endpoint is the patient reported change in heavy drinking days with the timeline follow back method as established by FDA guidance, with key secondary endpoints of changes in alcohol consumption by PEF and weight loss. Similar to our AUD trial, the Phase 2 ALD trial will evaluate pemvidutide versus placebo in approximately 100 patients, but over a 48-week treatment period. We will employ a 2.4 milligram dose of pemvidutide with the same dose titration method as in AUD. The key endpoint, change in liver stiffness measurement by FibroScan, will be assessed at 24 week and 48 weeks, along with key secondary endpoints of change in alcohol consumption and weight loss. Both AUD and ALD are large patient populations with treatment options that either have proven ineffective in clinical practice in the case of AUD or don’t exist in the case of ALD. Our market research suggests the drug with the target profile of pemvidutide, one that reduces alcohol consumption, liver inflammation, and body weight would be well received by patients and physicians. Furthermore, obesity is recognized to be a key risk factor for poor outcomes in both AUD and ALD, and not unexpectedly, with these conditions have a high incidence of metabolic abnormalities, including hypertension and hyperlipidemia. If these efficacy trials are successful in AUD and ALD, we believe that pemvidutide has the potential to redefine the approach to the treatment of these serious conditions. MASH and ALD are the two most frequent conditions leading to liver transplantation in the United States. So the long term potential benefits of pemvidutide, if positive, are significant. We are excited to initiate the trials and look forward to sharing our progress along the way. With that, I’ll now turn it over to Greg Weaver, our Chief Financial Officer, to review our financial results for the first quarter. Greg?