Thanks, Danilo. The second quarter of 2023 was a record quarter for ClearPoint Neuro, with $6 million in sales, driven by 40% plus growth in our biologics and drug delivery business, which is where the majority of our hiring and investment has taken place in 2023. Let's start the conversation with that first pillar of growth, biologics and drug delivery. We continue to gain traction and earn business from more than 50 pharma and academic partners who are using our ClearPoint Neuro products and services. We expect these partnerships to not only grow in number, but in scale and sophistication. A perfect example of this is a recently signed agreement for a multi-platform gene therapy program. This is a blueprint strategic partnership, whereby ClearPoint Neuro will earn a cash payment for milestones tied to the clinical and regulatory success of the drug product itself. Importantly, these milestones do not begin a commercial approval of the drug, but throughout the drug development process where ClearPoint Neuro specialists play an integral role. This agreement is a clear and concrete example of how a drug candidate successfully navigating the regulatory process can contribute meaningfully to our results. This would only be possible because of our focus and our investment in a preclinical touch point that starts very early in the drug development process and is yielding terrific results thus far. While delays or even cancellations of some programs are expected, we believe our unique product portfolio and our expanded yet neuro service offerings make us the premier partner for drug companies in the space. For perspective, one partnership could generate more than $10 million per program in potential revenue to ClearPoint in products, services and milestones before the drug is ever commercially available. If all 50 current partners were to progress through Phase 3 trials for their drug candidate, then the potential for ClearPoint Neuro could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars over the next 10 years just from preclinical and clinical work. The key message here is that we are not depending on commercial drug approval to reach operational cash flow breakeven and can achieve that key milestone prior to any large incidence drug approvals. One example of this progression through the regulatory pathway is the announcement earlier this morning from one of our clinical stage partner companies, Aspen Neuroscience, who are based here in San Diego. They announced IDE approval from the FDA for their Phase 1/2a clinical trials to treat moderate to severe Parkinson's disease. We are thrilled to be working with them on this important clinical study. Now in the event that a drug company achieves commercial approval, then the potential is much greater, we do remember that the goal of many of these advanced gene and cell therapies is not only to address symptoms, but to sometimes cure the underlying disease itself. If a onetime administration of a drug could safely cure these debilitating diseases like Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, et cetera, then the demand for these treatments will be much greater than for the device and surgical interventions used today that sometimes simply control the symptoms. As an example, there are over 1 million patients in the United States alone living with Parkinson's disease and yet only about 7,000 are treated annually with deep brain stimulation to control the symptoms. That is less than 1% of the total population struggling with this disease. We believe that proven drug alternatives that are endorsed and even prescribed by a more common neurologist and not just the neurosurgeon will dramatically expand the number of patients seeking or even demanding treatment. The neurologist is key to driving that education and demand. Hiring a commercial team focused on neurologists is a very expensive endeavor and difficult to scale. ClearPoint Neuro has the benefit of many pharmaceutical partners that already have a neurology channel to get the face time and presence we need to build awareness and build the market itself. The commercial economics of ClearPoint Neuro can change as well in a commercial setting. This is due not only to our expertise, our experience and our intellectual property, but also for regulatory reasons. When the PTC drug Upstaza was granted CE Mark approval for commercialization, the ClearPoint Neuro SmartFlow Cannula was written directly into the label of the drug as part of the European marketing authorization. To say it differently, our SmartFlow is the only cannula that is to be used for delivery of Upstaza into the brain in the European Union. The regulatory reason for this is the battery of bench preclinical and clinical testing that is done to show drug compatibility with the delivery device, all of which we gather and organize for the notified body or for the FDA. This is not a small task and is essential to documenting the safety and predictability of the drug and device interaction. Here's where ClearPoint Neuro has over a decade of experience gathering this data, refining our product and even adding to our portfolio and IP as you saw with our recent announcement of a cell therapy version of our delivery technology. In the future, you will see ClearPoint Neuro with multiple routes of administration to diverse targets in the brain, spine and central nervous system, which will unlock new pharma partners that are prioritizing these alternative targets to the deep brain as we do today. So why is ClearPoint investing so heavily into the biologics and drug delivery space. We believe our technology, our expanse in neurosurgery navigation and our significant head start puts us in a unique position that is worthy of maintaining and even expanding that lead. It is also very beneficial to have a more diverse customer base where we are not just depending on the hospitals themselves to purchase our products. We are often working with large and well-capitalized pharma companies that are already investing hundreds of millions into the space. Temporary downtrends in hospital procedures or capital spending can be offset by development and service revenue from pharma who value our head start and have access to capital even in a challenging environment. If we think about the true potential of this strategy, let's imagine that ClearPoint Neuro's existing partners, not new ones, but the 50 or so that we have today achieved commercial approval for their drug. That would be 50 different gene and cell therapy drugs available, treating more than 30 different neuro indications. Patients around the world would be speaking with neurologists who have been educated by their pharma sales reps about getting treated. Now imagine that each of these drugs is co-labeled with one of our multiple different cannulas, so we have become an essential part of the pharma company supply chain. The very high switching costs necessary to move to a different delivery device because of the significant testing and clinical work necessary is a barrier for new entrants. And because of this essential nature, we are able to not only protect pricing of our devices and navigation systems, but even expand commercial ASPs and which even at several times our current ASPs would be a fraction of the overall cost of the procedure. We would be in a position to earn not only milestones as already announced, but potentially also royalties, increased commercial device pricing and even package sales to pharma companies that want to kick the delivery device along with the drug itself and take the hospital out of the procurement equation for that procedure. If this future is real, then every leading neurosurgery center will need a ClearPoint Neuro relationship and our installed base will further expand. We will grow roots and be an essential part of this new standard of care. We believe many hospitals will start working not only for commercialization, but for participation in the clinical trial work itself, which is why we feel confident in our ability to reach an installed base of 100 surgical sites by the end of 2025. That is the rationale as to why we continue to invest in the space, which you saw in Q2 relative to R&D spending and a temporarily lower gross margin. On the R&D side, we have continued development not only for these new routes of administration, catheters, cannulas and needles as already discussed, but we have also continued development on new head frames like our Orchestra frame, new advanced drug delivery software to add to our Maestro platform and other technologies designed to make the procedures faster, simpler and more affectable like MRI conditional drills and dedicated infusion pump solutions. On the gross margin side, in an effort to build our presence and reputation in the preclinical space, we performed a projects at lower margins to show the value and responsiveness we bring to our partners. As we look ahead, we believe that this too has been the right investment and is giving us valuable experience as we jump start this exciting part of our business that leads directly to strategic partnerships mentioned before and is already yielding results. Now that was a lot of detail, but let's move on to our second growth pillar of functional neurosurgery navigation. This part of the business was relatively flat year-over-year as the growth we saw in deep brain stimulation navigation procedures was somewhat offset by the navigation of laser procedures, particularly laser ablation for epilepsy. We have spoken about a high cancellation rate of procedures that increased during COVID due to illness, staff shortages and supply chain issues. It seems that the cancellation rate has come down for many of our navigation procedures, but it has remained elevated or even increased for these laser epilepsy procedures. This seems to be stemming from reimbursement denials for procedures in this half of the laser ablation market. The appeal process is common and sometimes successful. However, the denial often takes place a couple of days before the surgery itself and it is often not possible to find another suitable patient to fill that scheduled MRI time. The result is that we missed out on the case for that day. This is something we're certainly paying attention to as we look to build our own laser business in the future. where it seems laser cancellations for tumor cases has not been nearly as common and the number of procedures continues to grow. The other delay on the neurosurgery part of the business is that one of our brain computer interface partners had to place our co-development programs on pause due to their internal constraints, which also negatively impacted revenue in the quarter and likely for at least the next couple of quarters, depending on the timing and availability of additional funds. Similarly, our capital revenue for the quarter was down, which can happen from quarter-to-quarter based on timing and installation date. What I will mention of note is that we have launched a new capital subscription process as another tool for capital placement. This tool allows a hospital to sign up for a multiyear commitment that spreads the investment out over five years. The economics are very similar. However, there is a delay in revenue recognition in the first year as it acts as more of a service or rental agreement than a capital purchase, which would all be recognized day one of the placement. We have now had five hospitals sign up for the subscription service as part of our pilot, and we believe this will be a popular option in the years ahead. As a result, the capital line of our earnings will likely be flat or maybe decrease in the future where these subscriptions or rentals will increase the service line of the capital business. On another positive note, we have had success on multiple new navigation technologies that we plan to submit to the FDA before the end of the year. These technologies will not only improve workflow for MRI procedures, but also represent our first navigation tool that is designed to be used start to finish in the operating room and not require the MRI at all. As a reminder, more than 95% of all DBS and laser procedures are performed in the operating room and not the MRI suite today. This tool will allow us to compete where the vast majority of procedures are already taking place and not rely on moving users from the operating room into the MRI, which is often a completely new environment for the physician and for the hospital. We see this as a potential product transition to ClearPoint that can be fast and with fewer barriers because the more familiar workflow deployed today. For our third pillar of growth, therapy and access products, we have made progress with the new installs of PRISM as part of the limited market release for our first laser therapy system. We currently have five systems installed worldwide, and expect up to five more by the end of this year as part of the limited market release, where we test our system on multiple MRI scanners and software types as well as in multiple indications, including epilepsy and tumor. These cases give us experience and help us build educational materials for a broader launch in 2024. We have identified and began the training of our dedicated clinical specialist team, which will be able to support complete laser cases, including both navigation and therapy by the end of this year. While we are very early in the limited release, we are pleased with the ease of use and the capability of our system. Of all the installations performed to date, the clinician feedback has been very encouraging, and we expect higher utilization of the system in the future. Laser ablation for neuro applications represents an approximately $30 million market today. The PRISM product combined with the capability of our team and our platform should give us a competitive advantage and we have multiple applications supported, including deep brain stimulation, biopsy, laser ablation, brain computer interface and biologics and drug delivery. The exciting part of these first three pillars is that we plan for each pillar to be a growth driver in the next two to three years. Biologics and drug delivery will drive most of the growth in '23 and '24 and neuro navigation, especially in the operating room as well as laser therapy will contribute more substantially in 2024 and 2025. If all three of these pillars achieve our development milestones and modest expectations for market growth, we expect to exit Q4 of 2025 at operational cash flow breakeven, which again would represent about 50 hospitals doing 50 cases a year plus the contribution of our biologics and drug delivery services. This really represents pillar number four of achieving global scale and profitability, which is something we think about frequently and prioritize. While we do have $26.5 million in cash available, we want to make sure that we hit that inflection point and move toward profitability. As mentioned earlier, we have made substantial investments in our quality system, regulatory capabilities and our operations, including a new manufacturing facility in Carlsbad, California. This investment was for a clear purpose as well, ensuring that all of our sophisticated pharma companies see us as a reliable partner and supplier. With more than 50 active pharma partnerships, you must understand that we are audited by these companies on a monthly, if not weekly basis. Having a strong team and manufacturing facility in place to pass these audits with flying colors is another advantage we have when working with the pharmaceutical industry that can separate us from the competition. Similarly, we've expanded our global regulatory footprint to include multiple countries beyond only the United States and the European Union. The investment is real, but it is also a powerful tool with pharma customers when they see this capability to expand to broader and sometimes underserved market, it is one more reason to choose the ClearPoint offering. I'm happy to report that Carlsbad facility is ahead of schedule, and we actually completed construction of the new clean room here in the second quarter. We believe that we will be able to produce sellable and inspected product by the end of this year and winds down our redundant operations in Irvine, California by the end of 2023. As seen in 2022, based on the timing of some larger cash events, we expect the operational cash burn in the second half of 2023 to be lower than in the first half. While our margin dipped down in Q2, we do not expect this to be a long-term issue but more of a reflection that we are currently launching new products and services in biologics and drug delivery, laser therapy, access devices and operating room navigation. All new product introductions have some level of ramp-up efforts at launch that take some time to scale. We believe we have a portfolio of products that can achieve 70% plus gross margin in aggregate in the years ahead, especially when the growth of products once again overtakes services with all of these new product introductions. We continue to see an exciting opportunity in front of us and have worked incredibly hard getting all the puzzle pieces in place over the past couple of years. Now our focus is putting our existing strategy and resources to work to gain scale and leverage. As mentioned, we have $26.5 million in cash at the end of the quarter and expect our operating burn to meaningfully decrease in the second half of this year as the vast majority of our head count is already in place and we will wrap up the transition to our new manufacturing facility. We remain focused on executing our key value-creating milestones over the next six to 12 months, including new strategic biologic partnerships, initiation of new drug clinical trials, submission of the first BLA using ClearPoint technology to the FDA for commercial approval, expansion into the operating room and exiting the limited market release for our PRISM laser therapy system. And that's a lot to digest. So let's take a break and open up the floor to any questions.