Thanks to everyone on the line for the time, and welcome to our first earnings call. We're grateful to open up another dimension of our dialogue with our investor partners. You collectively allowed us to deliver for the patients we serve, and we look forward to your feedback on how to continually improve our discussion in this setting. Today, we know the star of the show is the Attruby launch. And the good news is that the brand is delivering for patients and the business, $36.7 million in revenue this past quarter suggest that clinicians and patients are resonating with our differentiated clinical efficacy, safety and accessibility. We continue to educate on our therapeutic impact, which comes as early as three months with a 42% relative risk reduction on cardiovascular hospitalization and mortality at 30 months, including a 50% reduction in cardiovascular hospitalization at that same time point. All these best-in-class point estimates are available at the lowest price point in the marketplace. There is much to like there and we're aware that there is much work yet to be done. You'll hear about some of that work today as it pertains both to commercial tactics and further development work. We add to Attruby good news to continued progress across our pipeline of three additional blockbuster products. Our trials in limb-girdle muscular dystrophy 2I, achondroplasia and ADH1 remain on track with low dropout rates, frequent data collection and positive site audits, all in preparation for an efficient NDA submission should the data be positive. Furthermore, key additional markets are being opened up. Our hypochondroplasia trial enrolled with incredible speed, and we now have first patient in there. Our work with encaleret in the hypoparathyroid setting positions it well for a registrational trial which if successful could pave the way for the first oral compelling solution in that space. Before we move to discussion into further specifics regarding the business and since this is our first time hosting this type of call, I wanted to briefly address how we measure the performance of our business on an ongoing basis. It's nice that this quarter was a success, but there will be harder quarters, I am sure. And through it all, you should expect for us to communicate consistently and in terms of net gains or losses in NPV. For instance, in this last quarter, our NPV increased by 9%, given changes in the following variables: number one, the time factor of money, especially given the late stage of our portfolio; number two, a higher-than-anticipated revenue driven by a faster uptake of Attruby than we anticipated and likely a slightly higher peak year share by volume than our market research had projected; third is the success of our small study in HP and other sponsors setbacks in the space of oral HP medicines; fourth, the early enrollment of our run-in of our hypochondroplasia study, moving our time lines in for that program; and fifth, a slight decrease in our model cost of capital given our recent convertible offering. There were NPV drags, most prominently including tariffs. However, these have a close to negligible effect at less than 1% of our overall NPV. Stepping back from NPV and as a reminder, our overall objective here at BridgeBio is simple, to maximize the positive change we can have in terms of quality-adjusted life years for the patients that we serve as quickly as possible. We do so by creating as many meaningful medicine as possible – as quickly as possible within three constraints. The first is that each program must have beautiful science, which in our vernacular means a high POTS driven by understanding of mechanism of disease optimally paired with a therapeutic mechanism of action that targets a well-described genetic condition at its source. These types of programs historically have a 3x to 4x higher probability of technical success than all-comer drug R&D efforts over time, in many programs, this elevated probability of technical success moves us from being a speculative lottery ticket to being something akin to an engineering company. The second constraint is that we strive for each medicine that we make to be first-in-class or best-in-class. Determining best-in-class can be tricky in the absence of double-blind head-to-heads, but we approach this using as a straightforward basin approach. For instance, in TTR, if faced with decision as to what drug to use, a logical person would first interrogate the salient endpoint, death and hospitalization at a common time point. In this case, at 30 months, a relative risk reduction of 42% is a better point estimate as compared with any of the other products in this marketplace. You would then ask, how quickly does each drug take action. And you would find that the three-month beginning of separation between placebo and active is the earliest point estimate of timing of impact in this field. So logically, Attruby is at worst, to no worse than other medicines. You would then look at safety. Here, you would find a little difference between small molecules, but would observe that they do not have the safety signals some knockdowns have, vitamin A deficit, which, by the way, turns knockdowns into a once-daily pill regimen, injection site reactions, the absence of impact on Afib whereas both small molecules had meaningful reductions there. The imbalance of cardiac SAEs is observed in the Onpattro study and the as of yet unexplained imbalance in death on the vutrisiran trial. You couple that with the overall finding that across multiple studies, TTR is a cross-species conserved protein and that ever higher levels of TTR lead to ever longer lives and less disease over time. So logically, small molecule stabilization from these data is the safest approach. Finally, the logician might look at price only to discover that Attruby has the lowest price point. We believe given all of that, the choice is clear. We apply similar reasoning in other competitive spaces like achondroplasia. Our final constraint is that each program we work on should be NPV positive to ensure firm level sustainability. We use all available levers during the R&D stage to optimize NPV, including time, cost, cost of capital and probability of technical success. The better our model is generating economic value from projects the further we can push into markets where others cannot extract adequate value in addition to being a better owner of obviously NPV-positive projects. The fact that we will spend well under $100 million per program to get each one of our potential blockbusters from the preclinical stage through proof of concept, sets us up well for future growth that is economically attractive. Okay. So that's our overall objective function with its intended constraints. You heard the first and most important frame that we used to think about the business, which is NPV. There are other frameworks that we also use to look at the business, understanding the business by stage and capability, research, development and commercial, understanding the business in the context of the overall ecosystem and understanding the business program by program. Using the buy stage framework first, and as I mentioned earlier, we are pleased with the ongoing progress of our commercial launch and the building of a sustainable competitive advantage there, which means, of course, that our group is able to extract more profit from the asset than another would be able to. I've also touched already on our ongoing development wins. On discovery, our bread and butter, we continue to advance programs in genetic dilated cardiomyopathy and ADPKD. We also hold significant stakes in BridgeBio Oncology Therapeutics and GondolaBio. In the latter, we expect Phase 3 data in our EPP program later this year, and we expect to generate up to six development candidates in 2025. From an ecosystem framing, the substrate from making genetic medicines remains incredible. We see that in the progress Gondola is making and more broadly with the depth of genetic disease starting points being produced and accessible at low price points. Finally, at a program level, Matt will have more to say about our commercial launch of Attruby. Our goal there, as a reminder, is $4.3 billion in peak year sales or about 30% of a $15 billion marketplace. That gets delivered against approximately $380 million of spend on the brand per year. Almost 25% of current spend is on further research and development activities like ACT-EARLY, which we think can continue to improve our medicines positioning and its ability to help patients in later years. The product of this spend also includes salient results like our variant data, where we obtained a hazard ratio of 0.41 with a p-value of less than 0.02 in the sickest of patients. And new work we are doing regarding Afib, which is an emerging marker of disease progression, the first results of which we plan to present at ESC later this year. For infigratinib, a first-in-class oral FGFR3 inhibitor in development for both achondroplasia and hypochondroplasia the pivotal PROPEL 3 Phase 3 is fully enrolled, and we expect last participant last visit by the end of this year. We have also reached regulatory alignment with the FDA on our clinical development plan for infigratinib in children with achondroplasia from ages zero to 3, and we expect to initiate clinical development in this important age range by the end of the year. Excitingly, we have also enrolled the run-in for our Phase 2 hypochondroplasia trial well ahead of benchmarks. For encaleret a negative allosteric modulator of the calcium sensing receptor, our Phase 3 CALIBRATE study is fully enrolled. We expect last patient last visit and top line results in the second half of this year. In parallel, encaleret is also being studied in hyperparathyroidism and we announced today positive POC data for encaleret in this key expansion indication. Preliminary evidence in the ongoing POC study has demonstrated that 78% of the first nine study participants were able to achieve normal blood and urine calcium levels within five days of encaleret administration. Moving to BBP-418, an oral first-in-class disease-modifying therapy in Phase 3 development for treatment of individuals living with liberal muscular dystrophy type 2I. We have fully enrolled FORTIFY a Phase 3 registrational placebo-controlled study evaluating the safety and efficacy of BBP-418. The study includes a planned interim analysis of 12 months focused on assessing a surrogate endpoint biomarker, glycosylated alpha-dystroglycan to support accelerated approval in the United States. We anticipate top line readout from that Phase 3 interim analysis second half of this year as well. Finally, BBP-812 is an AAV9 gene therapy in development for Canavan disease, an ultra-rare neurodegenerative disease that usually leads to death in the first two decades of life. Here, we are pursuing an accelerated approval approach using a single seamless registrational trial to bring this potential therapy to children with Canavan as quickly as possible. A meeting this month would the FDA reinforce the validity of our approach, which centers around the use of urine NAA in tandem with other clinical measures and the suggested BLA filing that we have laid out by end of 2026. While this is not a very prevalent disease, we believe it’s a great example of our model, targeting the disease at its source and operating leanly to enable us to go after a well-validated condition in an NPV positive manner. Okay. That’s the final framing. To wrap up my comments, BridgeBio is executing well and importantly possessed of a tremendously strong foundation for the future. Number one, an unmatched collection of late-stage genetic disease businesses with favorable economic prospects; number two, a cadre of outstanding managers that are dedicated to their specific assets business and to BridgeBio; number three, a diversity of stakes, including wholly owned assets and significant stakes in GondolaBio and BridgeBio Oncology Therapeutics; number four, first choice ranking with many academics, one seeking a partner to discover and develop new medicines; and number five, a culture that is distinctive for most biotechs I have seen and that is decentralized independent thinking and live the value that every minute count for the patients we serve. We’re excited to work with you, our investors, to continue to build this company and to keep you up-to-date on our progress for patients. With that, I’ll hand it over to Matt to walk through Attruby’s commercial performance in more detail.