Thank you, Apoorva, and good afternoon, everyone. We continue to make great progress advancing the clinical development of gedatolisib this quarter. Overall enrollment in VIKTORIA-1, our Phase III clinical trial evaluating gedatolisib plus fulvestrant with and without palbociclib in the second-line setting remains robust and on track. We are very excited to announce that the PIK3CA wild-type cohort is 100% enrolled, an important milestone. It reflects the excellent execution by our clinical development and operations teams, and great support from the investigators at our sites. And enrollment in the PIK3CA mutant cohort is on plan. Our VIKTORIA-2 Phase III clinical trial that will be evaluating gedatolisib plus fulvestrant and a CDK4/6 inhibitor in the first-line setting, remains on track to enroll its first patient in the second quarter of 2025. And our Phase Ib/II trial evaluating patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer is ongoing and remains on track to report preliminary data in the second quarter of 2025. The primary endpoints for the VIKTORIA-1 clinical trial are progression-free survival or PFS and per RECIST 1.1 criteria as assessed by Blinded Independent Central Review. The study is designed to independently evaluate a PIK3CA wild-type patient cohort and a PIK3CA mutant patient cohort. With the PIK3CA wild-type cohort, there are two primary endpoints that will be tested hierarchically, whereas, the PIK3CA mutant patient cohort has a single primary endpoint. Primary analysis for each patient cohort is triggered upon reaching a predefined number of progression events. With a PIK3CA wild-type patient cohort, the threshold number of events for both primary endpoints must be achieved before the primary analysis is triggered. Based on our current forecast of reaching the event thresholds that will trigger primary analysis, we expect to report top line data for the PIK3CA wild-type cohort sometime in late Q1, 2025 or Q2, 2025. And to report top line data for the PIK3CA mutant cohort in the second half of 2025. If the results from the PIK3CA wild-type patient cohort are positive, we would expect to file a new drug application or NDA with this data and follow-up with a supplemental NDA, or sNDA, if the results from the PIK3CA mutant cohort are also positive. Obviously, the foundation of gedatolisib’s potential future positioning will require the gedatolisib report a clinically meaningful median PFS benefit. Current median PFS benchmarks for patients pretreated with a CDK4/6 inhibitor are modest. Published reports of median progression-free survival for the SERDs range from two to 3.8 months and in patients with PIK3CA mutations ranges between 5.5 and 7.3 months for the AKT and PI3K alpha inhibitor, the two most recently approved therapies for this patient population reported between two and 3.5 months of incremental PFS benefit, the threshold KOLs generally considered to be clinically meaningful. In addition, we've consistently heard from oncologists that they greatly prefer to delay use of chemotherapy or ADCs until the benefit from endocrine backbone regimens is exhausted. We also think to get gedatolisib safety profile may also favor its potential positioning in a future treatment landscape. Gedatolisib treatment-related discontinuation rate was only 4% in the Phase 1b arm with the Phase 3 intermittent dose schedule, which is comparable to the 6% to 8% discontinuation rates for the CDK4/6 plus fulvestrant regimens. These results compare favorably to the treatment-related discontinuation rates reported in the Phase 3 studies for alpelisib plus fulvestrant where 26% of patients discontinued and everolimus plus exemestane, where 24% of patients discontinued. The results we get at ilisibarre [ph], especially encouraging given that patients in the Phase 1b study do not receive prophylactic treatment for stomatitis. Since we are prescribing stomatitis prophylaxis in our Phase III trial, we would expect fewer stomatitis related as worst events, which would further enhance gedatolisib's already promising safety profile. We recognize that the treatment landscape is evolving with new potential therapies under development. Our view is that the underlying biological drivers of HR-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer will ultimately determine which regimens become standard of care, three interconnected signaling pathways, estrogen, cyclin D1 CDK4/6 and PI3K, AKT mTOR promote this disease, and we believe that simultaneous blockade of all three of these pathways is required to optimize antitumor control. And this suggests that a triplet regimen that addresses these disease drivers, whether in the first or second line setting may have a long-term advantage versus a doublet regimen or regimen or monotherapy that addresses just one or two of these signaling pathways. Additionally, a triplet that could treat all patients regardless of PIK3CA ESR1 status would have an even greater advantage. We believe that a triplet regimen that includes gedatolisib is well positioned to establish this new standard of care, and we're optimistic that the VIKTORIA-1 data from our PIK3CA wild-type and mutant cohorts can live up to this potential. Feedback we're receiving from oncologists and market access stakeholders in conjunction with our preliminary commercial launch-related activities further reinforces our optimism about the potential for gedatolisib. Of particular note is the encouraging feedback received regarding gedatolisib IV route of administration. This preliminary research suggests that IV administration will not be a barrier to utilization of gedatolisib, and in fact, likely offers important advantages, particularly from a market access and adherence to therapy perspective. If gedatolisib ultimately does receive FDA approval for both the PIK3CA wild-type mutant populations -- we estimate peak revenue potential for the second line and delayed indication alone could exceed $2 billion. Turning to our VIKTORIA-2 study. Our site qualification activities to support activation of up to 200 sites across North America, Europe, Latin America and Asia are on track. We're very pleased with the interest we're receiving from our current VIKTORIA-1 sites as well as new sites that have expressed interest in participating in this study. We expect these activities will allow us to enroll our first patient in the second quarter of 2025. The VIKTORIA-2 study is a global Phase III open-label randomized clinical trial, evaluating the efficacy and safety of gedatolisib in combination with fulvestrant plus a CDK4/6 inhibitor. As a first-line treatment for patients with HR-positive HER2-negative advanced breast cancer who are endocrine therapy-resistant. Prior to the initiation of the Phase III portion of the trial, the safety run-in study will be conducted in 12 to 36 participants to assess the safety profile of gedatolisib in combination with rivociclib and fulvestrant. Earlier this year, we dosed our first patient in our Phase Ib/II trial that is evaluating getezelisib in combination with darolutamide in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. This study is ongoing, and we are on track to report preliminary data from this study in the second quarter of 2025. Just recently in October, the Journal Cancers published results of our non-clinical studies in gynecological cancer cell line models, highlighting the differences between single node inhibitors of the PI3K-AKT inventor pathway and gedatolisib. The published manuscript is available online and on public -- on the Publication section of Celcuity's website. Results from these studies are consistent with the non-clinical studies we published earlier this year that evaluated breast and prostate cancer cell line models in all three tumor types gedatolisib demonstrated superior potency in cytotoxicity compared to single node PI3K-AKT-mTOR inhibitors. In this December, we're looking forward to presenting 1 clinical poster and 2 no-nclinical posters at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium. Our clinical poster will present overall survival data from our Phase Ib clinical trial that evaluated gedatolisib in combination with palbociclib and endocrine therapy. The two non-clinical posters will present data to further characterizes the mechanism of action of gedatolisib and its effect on key breast cancer cell metabolic functions. Overall, we're very pleased with the progress we made this quarter advancing the clinical development of gedatolisib. I'd like now to turn the call over to Vicky, who will review our financial results.