Thanks, Jeff. Our clinical development and regulatory strategy for FIRDAPSE continues to focus on expanding access to all LEMS patients, enhancing the FIRDAPSE patent to state to maximize its commercial potential and integrating the newly acquired FYCOMPA and Vamorolone products into Catalyst organization. First, I would like to discuss our development efforts to increase the indicated maximum dose of FIRDAPSE from 80 milligrams per day to 100 milligrams per day. Catalyst has now submitted a supplementary NDA to the FDA for this change to the maximum daily dose. While there can be no assurance of acceptance or approval of this sNDA buying any significant issues with the submission, Catalyst anticipates completion of the agency's review in the first quarter of 2024. Currently, there are a number of LEMS patients, who are already being treated at 100 milligram daily dosage of FIRDAPSE after their physician worked with the pharmacy and insurance providers to justify the higher dose. Other patients on the current indicated maximum dose of 80 milligrams per day and their physicians have expressed a desire to increase the patient's daily doses to 100 milligrams to optimize therapy. And this supplement, if approved, will help those patients. Based on our Type C meeting with the FDA in May of this year, we believe that our submission strategy constitutes an acceptable basis for seeking a 100 milligram maximum daily dosage for FIRDAPSE. Regarding our global expansion, we anticipate that DyDo Pharma our partner in Japan, will submit their NDA for FIRDAPSE to the pharmaceuticals and medical devices agency or PMDA by the end of 2023. We estimate that there are about 1,200 to 1,300 LEMS patients in Japan. Submissions of this type typically take about 10 months to review by the PMDA, but there can be no assurance that such a submission will be found approval within this 10 month period. As previously reported, Catalyst acquired U.S. rights to FYCOMPA or perampanel, which is the first and only approved AMPA receptor antagonist or inhibitor. FYCOMPA is approved as an anti-seizure medication to treat partial onset seizures with or without secondarily generalized seizures and people with epilepsy, who are four years of age or older and with other medicines to treat primary generalized tonic chronic seizures in people with epilepsy who are 12-years of age or older. As previously reported in March, an article published in epilepsy has showed that perampanel effectively reduce the seizures in patients with eight different rare genetic epilepsies. In the second quarter, researchers published four abstracts highlighting FYCOMPA that were subsequently presented both at the 2023 AAN meeting in Boston this quarter and virtually. These are -- were on core presentation sponsored by [ASI] (ph), who continues to hold the rights to FYCOMPA in countries and regions outside the U.S. The published abstracts detailed the results from four independent clinical studies further documenting the uses of perampanel and both focal and generalized epilepsy across a diverse range of patients, including those with the history of psychiatric and behavioral events, underage patients and patients with seizures linked to lennox-gastaut syndrome or LGS. Just this month, researchers published three papers summarizing studies of the first safety and efficacy of FYCOMPA in pediatric patients. Second, a study on the use of IV FYCOMPA, as an alternative to oral FYCOMPA and epilepsy patients. And third, a global pooled real world extension study focusing on perampanel efficacy and safety by age group when treating focal and generalized epilepsy. Taken as a whole, all this academic research activity highlights the interest in FYCOMPA’s unique mechanism of action, its potential to treat a variety of rare and refractory epilepsies and the ongoing evolution of the epilepsy field toward precision medicine and identification and treatment of rare epilepsies in an area of great interest to Catalyst. Next, I would like to discuss our recent in-licensing of Vamorolone for the treatment of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy or DMD from Santhera for the North American territory. Vamorolone is a promising dissociative anti-inflammatory steroid treatment for DMD in clinical studies Vamorolone demonstrated efficacy with a significant reduction of corticosteroid associated side effects and benefits for bone health, growth, and behavior, offering the potential to address an important unmet medical need in DMD patients. Vamorolone has received FDA orphan drug and fast track designations and has been granted by PDUFA action date of October 26, 2023. The FDA has also granted Vamorolone rare pediatric disease designation. DMD is a rare genetic disorder occurring in about 600 male newborns each year. The prevalence is about 11,000 to 13,000 patients and is gradually increasing as the available treatments continue to increase the survival of the patients suffering from this tragic disease. DMD is a condition that weaken skeletal and heart muscle that quickly gets worse with time and is the most common form of muscular dystrophy. It is an excellent genetic defect to the dystrophin gene and like virtually all excellent diseases almost exclusively affects males. Approximately 30% of the patients are amenable to one of the approved exon skipping therapies with the other 70% needing other treatments like corticosteroids. However, even the patients treated with exon skipping treatments continue to need other treatments like corticosteroids at some level. The majority of DMD cases are inherited from her mother, who is the defective gene carrier, but approximately 30% of the cases are due to new spontaneous genetic mutations that happen randomly and are not inherited. The Parent Project for Muscular Dystrophy or PPMD reported just this month that an average age of diagnosis is 4.2 years and the average initiation of corticosteroid use is 5.9 years, with 83% of patients taking corticosteroids daily and the remainder taking corticosteroids on a less frequent basis, presumably for safety reasons. This report was based on a registry of 5,498 patients spanning 15-years of treatment. It is anticipated that Vamorolone may be a safer in routine clinical use and may lead to earlier initiation of therapy closer to the time of diagnosis and more regular use during therapy. Earlier this year [Indiscernible] in a meta-analysis have published clinical data for Vamorolone hypothesized how Vamorolone makes it a better safety profile than other corticosteroids. Vamorolone is a first-in-class steroidal anti-inflammatory drug in that it lacks an oxygen functional group at the 11 position of the steroid ring system. This omitted oxygen functionality is one of five molecular interaction sites with the glucocorticoid receptor, thus altering Vamorolone’s interaction with this receptor type. This difference sets it apart from all other approved and research medications in the corticosteroid class. In animal models, Vamorolone retains the anti-inflammatory properties of steroid medications, but lacks its side effects such as growth retardation, bone morbidities and muscular atrophy as a result of this difference. Furthermore, numerous corticosteroids such as prednisone and deflazacort, act as agonist of the mineralocorticoid receptor, raising blood pressure and volume via the renin angiotensin system. In contrast, in preclinical models Vamorolone has the same activity as the approved eplerenone or spironolactone drugs, which are bot potent antagonist of the mineralocorticoid receptor, thus eliminating mineralocorticoid side effects in Vamorolone therapy. In summary Vamorolone may optimize traditional steroidal anti-inflammatory activity, while eliminating most of the glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid side effects, due to its unique binding and agonism or antagonism of the various corticosteroid receptors. Overall, Vamorolone has the potential to be a differentiated treatment for DMD with a desirable profile in comparison to the current standard-of-care options, addressing an important unmet medical need for DMD patient starting at an early age. Moving on to our medical information function, Catalyst neuromuscular, medical science liaisons, or MSLs are continuing to reach out to oncology healthcare providers to build relationships to provide education about the importance of testing their patients for LEMS in order to expand the use of FIRDAPSE by those patients. Oncologists that already treat LEMS in their practices have found that patients treated with FIRDAPSE maintain muscle strength, improving the patients and physician's perception of well-being and the patient's ability to maintain functional mobility. All these domains are critical for the patients quality of life. As previously reported, Catalyst has also onboarded the new FYCOMPA MSL team and their new director, all with prior epilepsy experience to support FYCOMPA. FYCOMPA is a mature product for which extensive published information and real world data is available,, including the publications and abstracts I previously mentioned. The MSL team will bring this information to healthcare providers that treat epilepsy and also address any questions that those physicians may have about using FYCOMPA. Additionally, Catalyst FYCOMPA MSL team attends epilepsy conferences like AES and IEC in order to keep FYCOMPA in the minds of epilepsy treaters as a potential option for epilepsy treatment. With the in-licensing of Vamorolone, Catalysts will be adding four new MSL specializing in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, due to the unique mechanistic features of Vamorolone, it has and continues to be an active area of research that will result in an ongoing stream of useful medical information that should be disseminated to doctors, so that they can continue to optimize the treatment of their DMD patients. Future updates will be provided as medical information programs are developed and implemented for Vamorolone. As a service to the physician community Catalyst provides support for the development of continuing medical education or CME programs that are part of the formal ongoing educational of healthcare providers. Catalyst has over the past three years provided support for three CME program for various aspects of the diagnosis treatment and management of LEMS. Over this period of time, thousands of healthcare providers have utilized a CME program's learning modules and hundreds of them are taking CME tests each quarter in order to be granted CME credit toward maintenance of their medical licenses. In the fourth quarter of 2022, we sponsored a new CME program that targeted oncologists that treat small cell cancer, due to the correlation between mis-cancer and associated LEMS. In just over four additional months, since the use of this course was last reported, almost 100 additional oncology healthcare providers have taken the CME test for credit. In short, these programs are popular with LEMS treaters, and based on the CME test taking frequency appear to be a valuable part of their ongoing medical education. At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Alicia Grande, our CFO.