Thank you, Maria, and good afternoon, everyone. In 2023, we made significant progress advancing development of gedatolisib, while strengthening our balance sheet and adding to our leadership team. Our Phase 3 VIKTORIA-1 trial remains on track to report top line data from the PIK3CA wild-type patient subgroup in the second-half of this year and top line data for the PIK3CA mutated patient subgroup in the first-half of 2025. We were also excited to begin development of gedatolisib for patients with metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer this past year. Enrollment has begun in our Phase 1b/2 trial evaluating gedatolisib in combination with darolutamide, and we look forward to sharing preliminary data from this trial in the first-half of 2025. Our VIKTORIA-1 Phase 3 clinical trial is designed to evaluate gedatolisib in combination with fulvestrant with and without palbociclib in patients with advanced hormone receptor positive HER2 negative breast cancer, whose disease has progressed after treatment with a CDK4/6 inhibitor. We're seeking to improve outcomes for this patient population, which today receives only limited benefit from current second-line standard-of-care therapies. We estimate that this initial potential target population represents over 100,000 breast cancer patients globally on an annual basis. Current standard-of-care for these patients includes endocrine therapies, such as fulvestrant and regimens that combine fulvestrant with an mTOR-specific or PI3K-alpha specific targeted therapy. These therapies only offer modest progression free survival periods, and in the case of the approved PI3K-alpha inhibitor, a very challenging safety profile. Significant unmet need for these breast cancer patients has led to development and subsequent investigation of a significant number of new therapies, an oral SERD for patients with an ESR1 mutation, an AKT inhibitor for patients with a PIK3CA or AKT mutation was recently approved. Median Progression Free Survival or PFS for these two new therapies ranged from 3.8 to 5.5 months respectively, in the same patient population our Phase 3 trial is enrolling. While the availability of new drug alternatives for patients is always good news, based on the results reported for these drugs, the unmet need for these patients will still remain. To further elucidate the different therapeutic effects of gedatolisib versus other PI3K, AKT, mTOR or PAM inhibitors, we performed a series of non-clinical studies using breast cancer cell lines. We presented the results of these studies during a poster session at the 2023 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. In a panel of 28 breast cancer cell lines, gedatolisib was found to be more cytotoxic, and at least 300-fold more potent on average compared to the single-node PAM inhibitors. Mechanistically, gedatolisib decreased cell survival, DNA replication, protein synthesis, glucose consumption, lactate production, and oxygen consumption more effectively than the other PAM inhibitors. In vivo studies confirm that pan-PI3K/mTOR inhibition by gedatolisib reduced tumor cell growth more effectively than single-node inhibitors in breast cancer patient-derived xenograft models with and without PAM pathway mutations. We believe gedatolisib's highly differentiated mechanism of action as an equipotent pan-PI3K/mTOR inhibitor is uniquely suited to most effectively address this unmet need, especially since gedatolisib has demonstrated activity independent of the PIK3CA or ESR1 mutational status of a patient's tumor. The results from our Phase 1b study and patients receiving the Phase 3 dosing schedule for gedatolisib in combination with palbociclib and fulvestrant, was very promising. Median PFS was 12.9 months, and the objective response rate was 63%, both of which compares very favorably to published data for current standard-of-care regimens. Another important goal for us in 2023 was to begin development of gedatolisib in a new tumor type. In the fourth quarter, we initiated a Phase 1b/2 clinical trial to evaluate gedatolisib in combination with darolutamide, which is a potent androgen receptor signaling inhibitor, in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. We enrolled our first patient in the study in February, and we expect to report preliminary data in the first-half of 2025. Treatment options for these patients are limited, and there's an urgent need for new drugs to treat them. Numerous preclinical studies have demonstrated interaction between the androgen receptor and PAM pathways, suggesting that combining a PAM inhibitor with an androgen receptor inhibitor may induce a synergistic anti-tumor effect in patients with prostate cancer. There's also compelling clinical evidence with an earlier generation PAM inhibitor providing a proof of concept of our hypothesis that combining gedatolisib with an androgen receptor inhibitor may be efficacious. And finally, as we get closer to having data for the PIK3CA wild-type patients in our Phase 3 breast cancer study, we need to begin laying the commercial and marketing groundwork necessary to bring gedatolisib to the clinic. To head up our commercialization efforts, Eldon Mayer joined our management team as our chief commercial officer in February. Eldon has over 30 years of biopharma commercial experience in companies ranging from early-stage biotechs to full-scale pharmaceutical companies across many therapeutic areas, including oncology. Eldon's an exceptional leader with a proven track record of building commercial organizations from the ground up to support the launch of a biotech company's first drug. And with that, I'll turn the call over now to Vicky Hahne, our Chief Commercial Officer, to review our financial results.