Yeah, thanks, Tom. So I'd like to first start by providing an overview of the trials we have going on in Stargardt disease. We have two studies, as Tom mentioned, we have an ongoing open-label Phase II study. It is a two-year study, which is just about ready to end in October. I'll give you some more information about that as we move forward, but we've got 18-month data to share with you and I'll provide that in a moment. There's also the Phase III data, which as Tom mentioned, has recently stopped enrollments. We've met our target. In fact, we've exceeded our target by about 10 subjects. We've got 100 subjects in there. Both of these studies are two-year studies. They're both looking at the primary endpoint, which is the growth of atrophic lesions that is DDAF and I'll explain what that is in a moment. So there's a lot of similarities between these designs. The differences are as follows. In the open-label Phase II, there's only 13 subjects, and these subjects came in with only autofluorescent lesions and I'll show you some of the biology on how the autofluorescent lesions turn into this atrophic lesion that we call DDAF. So that's one of the differences. The other difference, of course, is it's an open-label study. We're looking at the same efficacy measures, are the same assessments by imaging modalities, such as fundus fluorescent auto photography to look at the lesion growth and you can see here at the bottom what the key inclusion criteria were. The Stargardt Phase III study is also a two-year study in design. Of course, it's global. There'll be a two-to-one randomization favoring Tinlarebant and you can see there the various inclusion criteria at the bottom of the slide. Next slide, please. So I want to show you first, as Tom mentioned, this agent, Tinlarebant, is a retinol binding protein 4 antagonists. And so the first biomarker, if you will, that we will see is reduction in the retinol binding protein 4 levels in serum and that's what's shown here from the Phase II data out to 18 months, you see the very first point which is shown there to 100% that's before the patient's got dose and you can see over the period of 18 months, we've achieved about 80% reduction from baseline of retinol binding protein 4. You see here, this target threshold of greater than or equal to 70% reduction. This number has been determined in a clinical study in Geographic Atrophy with a different retinol binding protein 4 antagonists. I'll share that data with you as well. But this has become our market because we believe that you need to achieve at least this level of RBP4 reduction to affect a change in lesion growth. And by the way, the daily oral dose these kids are getting, these 13 adolescent Stargardt kids, is five milligrams per day, and study out to 18 months, I'll go over the safety data as well. Next slide. A little bit about the biology. So early in the disease course, there are only autofluorescent lesions and that's shown on the left hand side here, the left side image. These lesions are called occasionally decreased autofluorescence by ophthalmologists. Basically what they do they represent cells laid in with autofluorescent entities. These autofluorescent entities are bisretinoids. These are the agents that we're trying to reduce because these bisretinoids are formed from vitamin A. We've reasoned that by reducing the amount of retinol going into the eye, we can have effect on reducing the accumulation of these bisretinoids and slow the growth of these autofluorescent lesions. So these autofluorescent lesions are amenable to rescue. But if left alone, which of course they have to be because there's no treatment, they will transition into atrophic retinal lesions, which is shown on the right hand side, you see that black demarcated image, that basically is irreversible photoreceptor cell loss, those cells are never coming back. That atrophic area is what ophthalmologists refer to as definitely decreased autofluorescence and stopping the growth of that lesion type is the primary endpoint. But of course, ophthalmologist look at the combined lesion growth rate because both of these lesions are pathologic, and so in one study conducted in 2020 by Georgiou and co-workers, they found in 53 adolescents Stargardt kids, the growth rate of the combined lesion was roughly about 0.7 millimeters square per year. When we look at that same anatomical feature in our 18-month data and annualize it up to a year, we see a growth of only about 0.28 millimeter square per year. So that represents about a 60% reduction in the combined lesion growth rate based upon comparison to this very well conducted natural history study, which by the way, at that time, was the largest natural history study conducted in adolescent patients. But we're very concerned about comparing the atrophic lesion growth because that is after all the endpoint. And for that comparison, we had to go to the largest natural history study of Stargardt's conducted today called ProgStar. This study enrolled hundreds of patients with Stargardt disease, many of them were adult patients. But among these patients, there was a small group of 20 subjects that had the exact same baseline characteristics as our subjects in the open label Phase II, that is they were 18 years or younger, and they had no atrophic lesion at baseline, only autofluorescence. So we were able to compare the combined legion growth rate in that ProgStar group to ours, as well as the atrophic nation growth. The combined legion growth is shown on the left hand side. This is called DAF or Decreased Autofluorescence. So it represents the QDF area plus the DAF area. And you can see here out to 18 months, we're getting about a 50% reduction in the combined lesion growth rate. And you remember the slide previously showed you at 60% reduction. So it's pretty good comparison between these two separate and independent natural history studies. When we look at the atrophic lesion growth as the DDAF, we see at 18-months about 60% reduction in that atrophic lesion growth rate, and noticeably, not many subjects are converting. In fact, there seems to be a slowing of the conversion in our treatment group, transitioning from the autofluorescent lesion to the atrophic retinal lesion type. And that is all very consistent with our hypothesis that we would first effect a change on the autofluorescence and then subsequently a change in the atrophic lesion growth, and we believe that's what these data are showing us. And I should have mentioned that the investigators from both the previous study by Georgiou and this study ProgStar, which was Hendrik Scholl, commented that we are seeing a definite bonafide treatment effect in these natural history study comparisons, so it's very promising for us to see. Next slide. This is showing you the visual acuity data. We're showing you both eyes, the steady eye and fellow eye. Of course both eyes are going to get the same treatment because this is an oral systemically applied drug. We're showing you this because in clinical studies, you do have to designate a study eye and then the other eye just becomes a fellow eye. We just want to show you that across 18 months, we're having a stabilization of visual acuity in these subjects. And this is a very promising trend because typically these subjects lose anywhere from four to six letters per year, so the fact that we've stabilized over 18 months is a very promising trend. That combined with a slow lesion growth tells us we're affecting exactly what we want to do, stop the lesion growth and eventually have an effect on preserving or improving vision. And you can see there the letters lost is roughly within the noise of the variability of the visual acuity assessment. Next slide, please. So now we want to get into the safety data. I should start by saying there have been no systemic toxicities or AEs noted to date. So, no clinically significant findings in relation to vital signs, physical exams, cardiac health, or organ functions. What we are seeing are two expected features of this therapy and they're expected because we are reducing the amount of vitamin E going into the eye. So we expect effects on rod and cone photoreceptors, which are the two photoreceptor cell types in your retina. The first AE we're finding is a form of Chromatopsia called Xanthopsia. This is mediated by cone photoreceptors and it typically happens when patients transition suddenly from a very dark light to a very bright light, or, for instance, from waking after sleeping and being exposed to very high room light or sunlight. And so basically, cone photoreceptors are activated, they will demand chromophore. Under our treatment regimen, that chromophore doesn't get there quite as quickly, so there'll be a delay in the timing for these cone photoreceptors to fill up with chromophore and during that time, they will misfire and produce these artificial electrical mediated hues of color in the visual field; in this case, Xanthopsia is yellow. But you can see here the majority of subjects are experiencing Xanthopsia, but no one is leaving study because of it and in fact, we are seeing some recovery over time and we're not taking subjects off drug, they are recovering while still getting dosed. The second ocular AE is known as Delayed Dark Adaptation. This is mediated by rod photoreceptors and, again, when rod photoreceptors -- when you transition to suddenly from a very bright light to a very dim light, rod photoreceptors activate, they require chromophore, there will be a delay in the timing of that chromophore to fill up the rod photoreceptors and during that time, these rod photoreceptors will not have maximum dim light sensitivity, so there was a delay in the accommodation to dim light. This is not night blindness, I want to make that very clear. This is simply a delay, sometimes 8 to 12 minutes. In cases where it's very severe, up to 20 minutes in this one subject, it's called night vision impairment. But overall, we're very satisfied with these findings. We basically lost one subject to follow up at 12 months. So out of 13 subjects, we are now at 12 subjects at 18 months, but this is still very, very promising safety profile. Next slide, please. So now I want to talk about that proof of concept study I told you about the 70% marker, how did we get there. Well, this was a study I conducted approximately 12, 13 years ago when I was with another company. I always had this idea that reducing retinal delivery to the eye might have an effect on slowing lesion growth. I didn't have a drug to do that with but I did find an anti-cancer drug called Fenretinide, which had a side effect of reducing retinol binding protein 4 in the blood. As I said before, it was developed as an anti-cancer drug, but in all the cancer studies, what investigators noted was a dose dependent reduction of RBP4. So I repurposed Fenretinide into a two-year Phase II proof-of-concept study enrolling 246 GA patients to see if this drug would have any effect on slowing lesion growth. There were two treatment arms and placebo; 100 milligram, 300 milligram and of course placebo. I want to show you the lesion growth data just from the high dose arm and placebo because the middle dose of 100 milligram had absolutely no effect on lesion growth. What you're seeing here on this histogram shown on the left hand side, the black bars is the lesion growth in the placebo group expressed as a percent increase from baseline. So we're getting about a 50% increase over 24 months in the placebo subjects. In the 300 milligram group, there was something very interesting. There was a group of subjects who had a very profound reduction of retinol binding protein 4 at least 70% or more. In those subjects there was about a 25% slowing of lesion growth over two years. In the subjects that did not have this reduction of retinol binding protein 4 of 70% or more, there was absolutely no effect on the lesion growth rate. So we're pretty convinced, especially in GA, that this is the level of reduction that would be required to affect a change in lesion. And of course, this is the same sort of approach that we're applying to Stargardt disease. An interesting thing about this lesion growth reduction, you'll notice it started right about the 12 month time point and it's stabilized between 18 and 24 months. But when we look at the visual acuity loss in these subjects, we also notice in these subjects had a preservation of lesion because there was a reduction of lesion growth, there was also a stabilization of visual acuity loss, right about the same time; 12 months there was a six letter loss and there was no further loss after 24 months, meanwhile, the placebo group and the patients or the subjects that did not get that profound reduction of RBP4 continued to lose vision up to about 11 or 13 letters over the two years. So we have a very significant visual acuity game and a very significant lesion reduction that has never been observed before in a GA study. The problem with this Phase II study was that only one in three subjects actually achieved this profound reduction of RBP4 in the 300 milligram group and the reasons for that are twofold. One, Fenretinide has terrible bioavailability, so we asked subjects to take this drug with a high fat meal at dinner to increase exposure into the blood. Many patients complied out to that one year, but after one year, we had a lot of patients falling off with that compliance and we knew that because the RBP levels in these patients would inflect upward indicating in fact that they're no longer having suppression of RBP4. The second problem was the low potency of Fenretinide. Fenretinide is a terrible drug for RBP4 antagonist, possess the same affinity for the target as a native ligand vitamin A. With Tinlarebant, we have designed a drug that specifically overcomes those deficits of Fenretinide. So it has greater bioavailability and 100-fold greater potency than does Fenretinide. So we're convinced with this better purpose designed RBP4 antagonists, we can achieve at least this benefit, and probably even greater, because again, we'll have better compliance, and we'll have greater potency of the drug on target. Next slide, please. So now a little bit about our Phase III study in Geographic Atrophy. This is important to know. So we were concerned that with a higher age and higher BMI of patients that have GA versus Stargardt disease, we would have to do a dose higher than five milligram. So we did a PK/PD study with both five milligram and 10 milligram and what we found was a five milligram dose produces the same pharmacokinetic profile as it did in younger subjects. So in these healthy adults, we're seeing about an 80% reduction of RBP4 across the dosing period with this five milligram dose and it's also important to note and we see this in the adolescent subjects as well. Once you withdraw the treatment, the RBP4 levels start bouncing back upward, showing a nice reversibility of the pharmacodynamic effect, which of course is a nice safety feature in the event of any untoward AE or you want to return the patient back to baseline status. Now a little bit about the clinical design overview for a Phase III study we call PHOENIX. This study design is going to be nearly identical to the Phase III trial designed for Stargardt's, that is it's two years in duration, it has the same randomization frequency two-to-one favoring Tinlarebant, it has the same endpoint measure. So we're still looking at the same DDAF measure as a primary measure for efficacy. And of course, we're looking at other measures such as DCBA looking at the autofluorescence. There are two major differences; one, of course is the indication, Geographic Atrophy, not Stargardt's; and the second one is that we'll be enrolling up to 430 subjects instead of the 90 that we targeted for the Stargardt disease study. This, of course reflects the higher prevalence of GA in the population. But otherwise, these studies are essentially identical. And I think Tom mentioned that we've actually kicked off this study, we've enrolled our first patient, I believe it was last week, and we continue to get more interest and more patients rolling into this Phase III study as we move forward. With that, I believe I can turn it back to Hao-Yuan, so we can discuss the 2023 Q2 financial results. Thank you.