Thanks, Brian. I am thrilled to announce today that we have begun the filing process with the FDA for approval of our Anaphylm epinephrine sublingual film application. We will complete this application process over the next several weeks and expect the next major milestone for this program, the acceptance of the NDA sometime in June. This puts us on track to launch Anaphylm if approved by the FDA right on schedule in the first quarter of 2026. Today represents the achievement of a major milestone for our company, colleagues, and stakeholders. This achievement was years in the making by scores of dedicated people who have focused their energy on making an impact on patients' lives. I am incredibly proud of and humbled by the achievements of these individuals. For almost three years, you've heard me talk about what we believe patients need in order to be better prepared for a severe allergic reaction including anaphylaxis. We believe an epinephrine product that is carried more often will save lives. We believe epinephrine that is orally administered may be more likely to be used and used quickly and will save lives. We believe that speed matters when it comes to epinephrine absorption, and fast and significant absorption will save lives. Anaphylm was built to meet these needs. And because of this, we believe patients will ultimately choose Anaphylm as their preferred product. Our plan is that less than a year from now, Anaphylm will be approved and available for patient use. This is truly an exciting time for the company. I am also pleased to announce today that our pediatric study for Anaphylm has progressed as expected. Our NDA will include the necessary pediatric data to support the product label that if approved by the FDA would mirror the weight and age parameters of the existing 0.3 mg EpiPen auto injector. Our pediatric data is in line with expectations and we are wrapping up the final pediatric study activities over the coming days. We believe that this will conclude all the information that will be necessary for filing our NDA for Anaphylm. In addition, we have begun preparing for a potential advisory committee meeting for Anaphylm. As you may remember, our FDA pre-NDA meeting notes from November indicate that the FDA may decide to hold an advisory committee meeting. If this were to happen, we would expect it to occur in the second half of 2025. We have hired an experienced regulatory communications firm to aid us in our preparations and we expect to be ready well in advance of the potential meeting. Now let's turn to our sales and marketing preparations for Anaphylm. We recently conducted an awareness trial and usage or ATU study regarding anaphylaxis and Anaphylm. While this work is always a critical component of preparing for launch, we felt it was especially important since a non-needle nasal spray became available to the public over five months ago. In the study, on an aided basis, 92% of the 125 physicians that were interviewed were aware of the FDA approved nasal spray product. Roughly 65% percent of these physicians had already written a prescription for the nasal spray. Yet when asked to allocate the potential future prescribing habits between auto-injectors, nasal sprays and sublingual film, film received a higher percentage than both the auto-injectors and nasal spray. While I generally view survey data as just directional, I believe it is powerful that physicians who are aware of and have prescribed the existing nasal spray would still list sublingual film as their preferred, most prescribed product under the theoretical premise that film was FDA-approved and available to patients. This is before we have done the significant awareness work in marketing efforts that occurred after approval. Now let's turn to commercialization. We believe there are multiple pathways to commercializing Anaphylm if approved by the FDA. We continue to prepare for launching Anaphylm on our own and most recently hired in house market access expertise to further drive our ongoing discussions with payers. This is in addition to the medical affairs awareness work we have been conducting, including increasing our medical publications, posters and presence at regional and national medical conferences. This work will intensify in the coming quarters as will our commercial preparation. As a reminder, our plan remains to obtain FDA approval prior to hiring a sales force. Another pathway for us to commercialize Anaphylm if approved by the FDA would be to augment our commercial capabilities with a larger, more established sales and marketing organization. This is something that we are actively contemplating, but will only do if the conditions are right for our company. These conditions, at a minimum, include working with a company that has the size and scale to truly expand our engagement efforts and a true commitment to patients in this therapeutic area. Only time will tell what the right path is for Anaphylm. Once we have completed our Anaphylm submission to the FDA, we will also begin focusing on international markets and partnerships. Our initial focus will be to submit applications in the EU, UK and Canada. We are exploring partnerships for ex-U.S. Commercialization of Anaphylm and expect these ex-U.S. Partnerships would contribute significantly to the company. We are also actively planning for our future. In the next quarter, we will open our investigational new drug application or IND for AQST-108, our topical gel formulation of epinephrine. As previously discussed, we believe that AQST-108 could be extremely meaningful to the millions of patients managing alopecia areata or AA as well as other dermatological conditions, we expect to start our Phase 2a trial for AQST-108 in the next quarter and have some level of clinical data available to share with you before the end of this year. This timing is dependent on patient recruitment as well as our final protocol design. As a reminder, an estimated 6.7 million people in The US are affected by AA. Of those affected, 43% are considered severe. The existing therapies for AA are Janus Kinase or JAK inhibitors. These systemic treatments with known side effects come with a black box warning and are expensive for patients. Even with these limitations, the current estimated market opportunity for JAK inhibitors is over $1 billion. As Anaphylm comes to market, if approved by the FDA, we expect AQST-108 to become our lead pipeline opportunity. Now let's turn to Libervant. We were obviously disappointed by the recent federal court ruling that held the FDA's rationale for granting Libervant approval and orphan drug market exclusivity for underserved patients aged between two and five years was not acceptable and we have appealed this ruling. Let's keep in mind that Libervant currently treats young vulnerable children who have in their case recently been diagnosed with epilepsy, are on maintenance medication and are still at risk of seizure clusters. We remain committed to doing everything we can to keep Libervant on the market for these young patients. We will continue to engage the FDA and the court system to protect these patients. We will keep you informed as we learn more. However, it is important to remember that in less than two years, we expect to be able to provide Libervant to all age groups regardless of any outcome in the courts. In conclusion, this is a remarkable time for Aquestive. We have more levers of growth than ever before in the history of the company. We expect to realize the following milestones in the coming months: FDA acceptance of our Anaphylm NDA submission, opening of our IND for AQST-108 and the start of our Phase 2A clinical trial, engagement with international regulatory bodies for expanding Anaphylm filings to ex-U.S. Territories, continuing to build towards the commercial launch of Anaphylm if approved by the FDA and continuing to fight for patient access to Libervant. With that, I will turn the call over to Ernie.