Good morning, and thank you all for joining us. 2025 is an important year of execution at Amylyx as we advanced 3 potential therapies across 4 clinical trials, each targeting diseases with high unmet need Already this year, we've achieved several meaningful milestones. Last month, we dosed the first participant in our pivotal Phase 3 LUCIDITY clinical trial of avexitide in post-bariatric hypoglycemia, or PBH. We also dosed the first participant in our Phase 1 LUMINA clinical trial of AMX0114 in ALS. In addition, we strengthened our financial position by raising approximately $65.5 million at the start of the first quarter, which extends our anticipated cash runway through the end of 2026. Now I'd like to briefly walk through each of our programs. Starting with our lead asset, avexitide, an investigational GLP-1 receptor antagonist with FDA breakthrough therapy designation for post-bariatric hypoglycemia, PBH is a chronic and often progressive condition that affects approximately 160,000 people in the United States. However, there are no approved treatment options. We believe avexitide has the potential to fill that gap. We are encouraged by the level of engagement from the clinical trial sites participating in our pivotal Phase 3 LUCIDITY trial. We continue to expect enrollment completion in 2025 and top line data in the first half of 2026. In addition, we are preparing diligently to be launch ready and if approved, we anticipate a commercial launch in 2027. Later during the call, Camille will share more details about avexitide and the lucidity trial. Turning to AMX0035, which is an oral small molecule therapy designed to target endoplasmic reticulum or ER stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. AMX0035 is currently being evaluated in Wolfram syndrome and progressive Supranuclear Palsy, or PST. Wolfram syndrome is a monogenic progressive neurodegenerative disorder with premature mortality and no approved treatment options. This disorder is caused by mutations in the WFS 1 gene. The WFS 1 gene encodes protein called wolframin that spans the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum and mutations in wolframin directly cause ER stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. We believe AMX0035 has the potential to address the urgent unmet need for the approximately 3,000 people living with Wolfram syndrome in the United States. Last year, we reported positive top line data from the 12-person Phase 2 open-label HELIOS trial in adults with Wolfram syndrome. Participants showed improvement or stabilization across all measured outcomes at week 24. In addition, longer-term data for the subset of participants who had reached treatment through Lead 48 showed sustained improvement over time. We continue to follow participants in the HELIOS trial and plan to present full week 48 data at the upcoming Joint Congress of the European Society for Pediatric Endocrinology and the European Society of Endocrinology which is this coming weekend. The poster will be made available on the Presentations page of our website next Monday, and those findings, along with our ongoing discussions with the FDA, will inform the design of a Phase 3 trial. Now I'd like to turn to AMX0035 as a potential treatment for progressive supranuclear palsy. PSP is a rare, progressive and fatal neurodegenerative disease that affects an estimated 23,000 people in the U.S. and is no currently approved treatments. PSP is a tauopathy, which is defined by the buildup of tau protein in the brain. Based on this prior effect in reducing tau in cerebrospinal fluid in people with Alzheimer's disease, we believe AMX0035 is the first brain and cell penetrant agent that has demonstrated a significant tau reduction in CSF to be tested in PSP. We completed enrollment in the Phase 2b portion of the ORION trial in January of this year with a total of 139 participants randomized. We expect to report data in the third quarter of this year. Those results will guide our decision about whether to advance into the Phase 3 portion of the trial. Next in our pipeline is AMX0114 our investigational antisense oligonucleotide targeting knockdown of CAPN2 for the potential treatment of ALS. This is a novel program built on decades of academic research, linking the protein CAPN2 to axonal degeneration an early and destructive driver of ALS progressing. In preclinical studies, AMX0114 showed potent and durable reductions in CAPN2 levels, improved neuron survival and reduced neurofilament light chain levels, a well-established biomarker of axonal degeneration. We are excited to have dosed the first participant in our Phase 1 LUMINA trial last month. LUMINA is a multinational, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multiple ascending dose trial, evaluating the safety tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of AMX0114 in people living with ALS. We look forward to early cohort data from LUMINA later this year. With strong scientific rationale, clinical momentum and a clip path ahead, we believe we're well positioned to execute across our clinical programs. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Camille to share more about the LUCIDITY trial and our work with avexitide.