Thanks, Troy. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us for BioLife's first quarter 2024 earnings call. In addition to Troy Wichterman, our CFO, I've invited Garrie Richardson, our Chief Revenue Officer, who will provide additional granularity on our Q1 revenue numbers and end market dynamics. He will also speak to our expertise and our strategy to continue to grow our market-leading franchise in biopreservation. To begin, I'm pleased to report another quarter of sequential revenue growth in our core cell processing business and increased confidence in our full year outlook of 95.5 million to 100 million in revenue. While early in the year, it's an encouraging start and helps substantiate our belief that we are now beginning to experience an easing macro environment, particularly in the bioproduction subsector we operate in. With the strategic shift away from our legacy freezer products largely behind us, going forward our revenues will be primarily from our high margin cell processing platform and our biostorage and services platform, and our full year guidance does not include any revenue from freezer product lines. Our strategic return to focus on recurring revenue was a thoughtful one, as navigating a capital-constrained market like this one is hard to do with low margin capital equipment and working capital intensive products. Further, with this renewed focus, we have set out streamlining our operations, freeing up resources to apply in areas in which we win and where we are the clear market leader, which is at the forefront of the fast-evolving CGT industry with a critical enabling consumable. As a reminder, this April, we announced the divestiture of our GCI freezer unit, also known to many as Stirling. This divestiture was a substantial endeavor that required considerable time and effort to complete, but is strategic and immediately enhances the financial profile and operations of the company. First quarter pro forma results, excluding GCI, clearly illustrate that by demonstrating an almost instant and significantly positive impact on our financial metrics. Specifically, excluding GCI from BioLife in Q1, our adjusted gross margin would have been 53% instead of 40% and our adjusted EBITDA in absolute terms would have been a positive 3.6 million instead of negative 1.2 million. And further, these pro forma results set a new baseline from which we anticipate further margin expansion throughout the year based on operating leverage realized as our high margin self-processing platform continues to grow as a percentage of total sales. Turning to the last of the freezer assets, CBS, which represented approximately 11% of Q1 sales and has been a historical drag on our profitability. We remain fully committed to exiting this business as swiftly and efficiently as possible. We are in the middle of this process, and given the sensitivities around the transaction, we are unable to share further details at this time, but we will provide an update as soon as it becomes appropriate to do so. As we work through this process, we recently implemented a reduction in cash operating expenses at CBS, totaling 1.2 million per year. Assuming CBS revenue remains relatively constant, which we do, these cuts immediately allow CBS to generate positive adjusted EBITDA. While I'll let Garrie speak to Q1 revenue in more detail, I'll briefly address what we're seeing on a more macro level. The initial easing of industry-wide headwinds that began to emerge in Q4 of last year continued into Q1. For BioLife, this meant less inventory destocking pressure from our larger direct customers and continued improvement in sequential distributor revenue, which we view as a proxy for the earlier stage research-focused market segment. As mentioned earlier, this allowed us to post a 10% sequential increase in our cell processing revenue, which followed on the 11% increase we saw from Q3 to Q4 of last year. Our biostorage and services platform also realized sequential improvement, posting 7% revenue growth over Q4 of last year. Overall, we expect to see these trends continue to some degree throughout the remainder of this year. The fundamental drivers for our cell processing revenue growth, specifically our biopreservation media revenue, include our market-leading share of commercially-sponsored clinical trials and the overall regulatory environment for CGT. We believe that we have a market share in excess of 70% of the relevant commercially-sponsored clinical trials in the U.S., with approximately 45 Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials utilizing CryoStor. In Q1, the CGT regulatory environment continued to carry forward the momentum that started last year, with our biopreservation media embedded in two newly-approved therapies, bringing the total approved commercial therapies we support to 15 at the end of the quarter. In addition, and equally important relative to driving biopreservation media revenue in the future, there were two new indications, one new geographic area and four earlier lines of treatment approved for BioLife's supported therapies. We see an additional 11 similar approval opportunities over the next 12 months. The above market share clearly confirms that BioLife has evolved into the industry standard in biopreservation media and has established itself as a leading provider of premium bioproduction tools and services, the critical picks and shovels that need to be frequently replenished and which support the fast-growing CGT industry. As we continue to take the steps necessary to optimize our business to focus on our cell processing platform, I'm convinced more than ever that BioLife is in pole position to benefit as industry headwinds continue to ease and this space further matures, expanding upon our already dominant share of the market and offering diversified exposure to this nascent industry, which has an expected CAGR of 20% to 25% through 2033. Now I'll turn the call over to Garrie, who will provide some additional insight on Q1 revenue as well as our sales organization and go-to-market strategy.