Thank you, Bruce, and thanks to everyone for joining us for our Third Quarter 2024 BioAtla Earnings Call. Additional details related to what we will share today are available in today's press release and our updated company presentation, which are available on our website. Also, the slides from the oral presentation given at the Society for Melanoma Research in September is available on our website and the upcoming poster, which will be presented tomorrow at the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer, SITC, will also be available on our website at the conclusion of the poster session. Now on to our ongoing clinical program updates. Beginning with our CAB-ROR2-ADC ozuriftamab vedotin, being evaluated as a monotherapy in treatment for refractory head and neck cancer patients who received a median of three prior lines of treatment. We shared last quarter that out of our 29 evaluable patients, we have observed a total of 11 responses, 6 of which were confirmed responses, including an ongoing complete response, which underscores our assets activity in this difficult-to-treat patient population. We also shared that given the strength of the data and the profound unmet medical need, the drug candidate was granted Fast Track designation by the FDA. In September, we presented an earlier data cut at ESMO that demonstrated meaningful antitumor activity with manageable tolerability. As part of today's update, we have additional data from these heavily pretreated patients, showing that the median duration of response for all confirmed responders is now at 4.4 months with the median overall survival now at approximately 9 months, which is ongoing. These are meaningful results in view of this being one of the first reported studies in head and neck cancer to evaluate a patient population with a median of 3 prior lines of therapy. Based on cross-trial comparisons of current standard of care monotherapy agents, methotrexate docetaxel or cetuximab used to treat the second line plus head and neck cancer patients ORRs range from 6% to 13% and the median overall survival range is 5.1 to 6.9 months. Notably, these results were in less heavily pretreated patients with only 1 to 2 median prior lines of therapy. We believe the clinical profile emerging for ozuriftamab vedotin monotherapy in head and neck cancer is very competitive and has the potential to position our CAB-ROR2-ADC as a standard of care in the second line plus population. We recently received actionable feedback from the FDA regarding our proposed pivotal trial for ozuriftamab vedotin monotherapy versus investigator's choice among patients with recurrent or metastatic head and neck cancer with disease progression on or after platinum-based chemotherapy and PD-1 antibody therapy. We are pleased to report that the FDA is supportive of our proposed prospective randomized trial design investigator choice treatment options and endpoints that have the potential to support a possible accelerated marketing authorization followed by confirmation of clinical benefit in the same trial with additional follow-up. At the current dose of 1.8 mg per kg of ozuriftamab vedotin, the FDA supported a limited randomized evaluation of the Q2W and 2Q 3W dosing schedules, which is underway. As part of the overall pivotal trial design, we believe we now have a seamless path to confirming the dose schedule leading into the Phase III trial in second line plus head and neck cancer. Moving now to our CAP CTLA-4 antibody of evalstotug, which was generated from ipilimumab or IPI, for the important conditionally active binding activity. We recently presented preclinical and clinical data at the Society for Melanoma Research in September, showing that evalstotug is similar to IPI with respect to epitope, affinity and half-life. However, also differs from it with respect to the absence of binding in the normal tissue environment, and we believe this feature will continue to demonstrate considerable safety benefits enabling patients to receive higher and extended tumor-specific CTLA-4 exposure. We will also be presenting a poster at SITC annual meeting tomorrow, highlighting our Phase II study in first-line unresectable or metastatic melanoma. The poster will be available on our website following the conclusion of that presentation. However, since the embargo has lifted for SITC, I'd like to share the summary of our initial first-line Phase II melanoma patient data. All 8 patients treated with evalstotug plus PD-1 achieve tumor reduction. To briefly review ipi is typically dosed at either 1 milligram per kilogram or 3 milligrams per kilogram in routine clinical practice. With our approach, considerable CTLA-4 inhibition was safely achieved using relatively high evalstotug dosing. Five patients received a 350-milligram dosing level that represents 5 milligrams per kilogram ipi equivalent; and 3 received at least 700 milligrams representing 10 milligrams per kilogram ipi equivalent dosing. We have now observed four responders, including three partial responses and one complete response with acceptable tolerability and no disease progression observed to date. The safety profile in our Phase II study continues to suggest a relatively low incidence and severity of immune-related AEs. Two patients treated with prior adjuvant immunotherapy experienced Grade 3 immune-related AEs that readily responded to standard treatments and continue to show tumor reduction without progression. Notably, several patients with decreasing tumor volume stable disease are early in their treatment courses and have the potential to also respond with additional follow-up. In addition, intrapatient dose escalation to higher doses that have been shown to be acceptably tolerated is permissible based on an investigator's decision. We now report several instances where increasing evalstotug exposure has directly led to reattainment of disease control with acceptable tolerability. Specifically, a cutaneous melanoma patient who is dose escalator from 70 milligrams to 210 milligrams and eventually to 350 milligrams achieved a confirmed PR at the higher dose. And another cutaneous melanoma patient was dose escalated from 700 milligrams to 1,000 milligrams, experiencing decreasing tumor volume stable disease. Additionally, on recurrent metastatic melanoma patient whose dose was escalated from 210 to 350 milligrams also reattained disease control with stable disease. Consistent with prior observations with ipi in randomized trials, we are observing a relationship between exposure and antitumor activity, which is made possible due to the tolerability of higher evalstotug doses relative to that of ipi. We recently received FDA guidance on ongoing dose optimization and control arm to enable a Phase III registrational trial in first-line patients with metastatic or unresectable melanoma with anticipated initiation next year. Based on our evolving data, we continue to believe that evalstotug has the potential to be the best-in-class CTLA-4 that holds the commerce to be used as often as the PD-1 antibody and potentially expand the indications where combined immune checkpoint inhibition can be effective. Now on to our CAB-AXL-ADC, mecbotamab vedotin. Last quarter, we announced encouraging findings in non-small cell lung cancer patients expressing mutant KRAS or M-KRAS. Among the 18 evaluable patients with known KRAS mutations, we observed 5 responders including 1 responder whose tumor expressed the KRAS G12C variant and had experienced prior failure of [inaudible]. In addition, we have a patient with a complete response that has been maintained now for over 2 years, demonstrating encouraging anti-tumor activity in patients with MK-RAS variants. Importantly, our initial finding supports a trend for improved overall survival among treated patients with tumors expressing M-KRAS variants compared to the KRAS wild-type genotype. With today's update, we continue to observe antitumor activity with multiple confirmed responses among 21 evaluable patients with tumors expressing MK-RAS, now across the 9 different MK-RAS variants. Additionally, we continue to see an overall survival benefit among treated patients with mutant KRAS variants compared to KRAS wild type with a median overall survival of 12.6 months compared to 8.7 months, respectively, and which is still ongoing. Furthermore, a manageable safety profile continues with no new safety signals identified in this patient population. As an update on our evaluation of patients with mutant K-RAS non-small cell lung cancer, we continue to observe a high correlation of AXL and MK-RAS expression. We believe this, coupled with the improved overall survival that we are seeing across 9 different mutant KRAS variants supports a potential pan-KRAS strategy in non-small cell lung cancer. Currently, we are determining the most efficient path for a future pivotal trial. Details will be forthcoming as they are available. Our Phase I/II dose escalation study for the CAB-EpCAM CAB-CD3 T cell engager is progressing well. The maximally tolerated dose has not yet been reached, and we are actively dose escalating. We have implemented a priming dose to modulate cytokine release syndrome that is commonly observed with T cell engagers and can also occur in patients with heavy tumor volume. To date, we have observed multiple patients with antitumor activity with tumor volume reduction, including a colorectal patient with ongoing stable disease for one year. Given our continued dose escalation, we now anticipate data readout of the Phase I study around the middle of next year. We continue to be pleased with the progress of this program and the potential of our CAB-EpCAM TCE to treat patients with a wide range of metastatic tumors, including cancers of colon, lung, breast, pancreas, and prostate, among others. Finally, we recently announced a worldwide license agreement for the preclinical CAB neck and for bispecific T cell engager. With the successful out-licensing of this preclinical asset to context therapeutics, we continue to focus on execution of our lead clinical care programs, while ensuring the potential advancement of the neck and for bispecific TCE now referred to as CTO 202. In addition, we are engaged in multiple active discussions regarding collaboration with 1 or more of our Phase I assets. Given the continued progress in these discussions, we are maintaining our guidance for a potential near-term collaboration for at least one of our Phase II assets. We continue to prioritize increasing shareholder value through non-dilutive means, while advancing our assets through key value-creating inflection points. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Rick to review the third quarter 2024 financials. Rick?