Thank you, Leiv, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our update call. I am excited to be joining you from San Diego, site of the Society for Investigative Dermatology Annual Meeting, or SID. Data from our Phase 1 trial with soquelitinib in patients with atopic dermatitis will be presented in a poster later today and on Saturday in an oral session given by Dr. Albert Chiou from the Department of Dermatology at Stanford University Medical Center. We view the data as very encouraging with all treatment cohorts demonstrating a favorable safety and efficacy profile compared to placebo. Cohort 3 data is especially interesting, demonstrating earlier and deeper responses compared to Cohorts 1 and 2. In addition, the latest biomarker data from the trial continues to support the ITK inhibition mechanism of action including the potential induction of anti-inflammatory T regulatory cells. I will review the details of the data being presented at SID, along with an overview of the ongoing trial and our future plans for the Phase 1 trial and the planned Phase 2 trial in atopic dermatitis. Slide 6 shows the design of the Phase 1 clinical trial. Eligible patients have met the Hanifin & Rajka criteria and have moderate to severe atopic dermatitis who have failed at least one prior systemic or topical therapy regimen. There are four cohorts that are sequentially enrolled, and we have completed enrollment in the first 3 cohorts of the trial. 16 subjects are enrolled in each cohort, four placebo and 12 actives. The study is double blind. Neither the patient nor the doctor know the treatment assignment, the placebo and active tablets are indistinguishable. The company is not blinded, and we are able to evaluate the data as the study progresses. We wanted to maintain the ability to adjust or amend the trial based on available data as the study progressed since this is a novel agent with a mechanism of action not studied previously in this indication. Patients received study drug or placebo for 28 days, and then they are followed for an additional 30 days off of therapy for a total of 58 days on study. We designed the study in this way to evaluate safety and efficacy while on the drug and to identify the possibility of persistent effects after the drug is discontinued. The endpoints of the trial are safety and efficacy measured by EASI, Eczema Area and Severity Index scores and IGA, Investigator Global Assessment. Each of the cohorts examines a different dosing regimen. The four cohorts are: first, 100 milligrams oral twice a day for a total dose of 200 milligrams per day; second, 200 milligrams oral once a day, a different schedule, but also a total dose of 200 milligrams per day; the third cohort, 200 milligrams oral twice a day for a total dose of 400 milligrams per day; fourth cohort, 400 milligrams oral once a day. These doses were selected based on our experience in T-cell lymphoma patients. We have shown that these doses result in significant or complete ITK target occupancy. 200 milligrams twice a day is the dose we are evaluating in our ongoing Phase 3 registration lymphoma trial. The next slide shows the characteristics of the 48 patients enrolled and treated in Cohorts 1, 2 and 3. The placebo and soquelitinib groups are shown as well as the combined cohorts. There are a few characteristics to point out. The mean baseline EASI scores in Cohort 3 for both the soquelitinib and placebo groups was about 27 to 28, significantly higher than Cohorts 1 and 2, which were in the range of 17 to 20. This indicates that Cohort 3 patients had worse disease at baseline. Consistent with this is that Cohort 3 patients also had a higher percentage of patients who failed prior systemic therapies. In fact, two treated patients had disease that was refractory or resistant to DUPIXENT. There is a high percentage of African-Americans in all cohort groups. Such patients are reported to have worse prognosis. Generally, the soquelitinib and placebo patients are very well balanced with regard to patient characteristics. The Cohort 3 placebo patients are younger, but age is not a prognostic variable. Now let's move on to the efficacy results, which are shown in the table on Slide 8. This table shows the results at day 28 for patients in the soquelitinib and placebo groups. Cohorts 1 and 2 are combined since the characteristics and results were very similar. The left side shows results for the combined Cohorts 1 and 2 and the right side shows the results for patients in Cohort 3 that have completed 28-day follow-up, eight active and four placebos. Four additional patients in Cohort 3 receiving active drug have completed day 15 follow-up but have not yet completed the 28-day follow-up. For Cohorts 1 and 2, the mean reduction of EASI score in the placebo group is 30.6% and is 54.6% for the soquelitinib group, an absolute difference of 24.0%. For Cohort 3, the mean percent reduction of EASI score in the placebo group is 42.1% and a 71.1% for the soquelitinib group, an absolute difference of 29.0%. Looking at EASI 50, we see that both placebo and soquelitinib-treated patients often achieved EASI 50. The situation is much different for EASI 75, EASI 90 and IGA 0 or 1, which are the endpoints considered to be clinically meaningful. No placebo patients reached EASI 75, EASI 90 or IGA 0 or 1. In the soquelitinib group for Cohorts 1 and 2, 29% achieved EASI 75 and 4% achieved EASI 90, while in Cohort 3, 63% achieved EASI 75 and 13% achieved EASI 90. 21% of the patients in the Cohort 1 and 2 soquelitinib groups achieved IGA 0 or 1, while in Cohort 3, 25% in the soquelitinib group achieved IGA 0 or 1. The next slide shows the kinetics of response for the patients treated with soquelitinib in each of the Cohorts 1, 2 and 3 and the combined placebo patients from all three cohorts. The orange line represents placebo. You can see that Cohorts 1 and 2 represented by the blue and red lines, respectively, begin to separate from placebo at day 15 and show continued separation at day 28. This separation is maintained during the 30-day post-treatment period. The curves for Cohort 1 and 2 are nearly overlapping, indicating that there are no differences in the twice per day compared to the once per day dosing regimen. It appears that QD dosing is possible for this drug. The green line, which represents Cohort 3, shows earlier and deeper separation from placebo at day eight with EASI score improvement continuing through day 15 and 28. Cohort 3 data includes all 12 soquelitinib-treated patients in the cohort through day 15 and then for eight patients at day 28 as there are four patients that have not yet reached their 28-day follow-up. Of note, those four patients in the soquelitinib group are demonstrating results at day 15 that are consistent with the other patients. So we should expect that trend to continue to day 28. All placebo patients have reached the day 28 follow-up. I would like to point out that the downward slope of the curves in all treatment cohorts at day 15 to 28 suggests that longer treatment duration could potentially deepen responses further. On Slide 10, we show the same analysis as the prior slide, but with the data for Cohorts 1, 2 and 3 combined shown in the blue line. This is the data from all patients. Separation from placebo begins by day 15, and by day 28, it is statistically significantly better than the placebo with a p equal to 0.03. The next slide summarizes the efficacy for each treatment cohort and for the combined placebos. No placebo achieved EASI 75 or IGA 0 or 1. Significant differences are seen for the treatment groups compared to placebo with Cohort 3 appearing to be better than the other cohorts. Data from the combined soquelitinib cohort is statistically significantly better than placebo. Now let's review the safety. As shown on this slide, there were no significant safety issues observed with soquelitinib with no differences between treatment and placebo groups. Only one treatment-related adverse event was seen in a patient receiving soquelitinib, a Grade 1 nausea. No clinically significant laboratory abnormalities were seen. The total treatment experience with soquelitinib now involves over 100 patients with T-cell lymphoma or atopic dermatitis, representing approximately 9,000 patient treatment days. In our lymphoma trial, some patients have been on continuous daily therapy for up to two years. Based on these results, we have amended the Phase 1 trial protocol as outlined on Slide 13. At the bottom of the slide in purple, we show that the previously planned Cohort 4 is being replaced with an extension cohort that will evaluate an additional 24 patients at the 200-milligram twice per day dose given for eight weeks with an additional 30-day follow-up without therapy. Based on our studies of occupancy and pharmacokinetics, we determined that Cohort 4 would not likely provide more useful information. And by replacing the cohort with a new cohort, we don't expect to lose any time. The 24 patients will be randomized in a blinded fashion 1:1 with placebo, 12 active and 12 placebo. We believe this amendment gives us the opportunity to evaluate the potential for greater efficacy with longer treatment duration. We anticipate data from the extension cohort will be available in the fourth quarter of this year. This additional experience should help optimize the design of our Phase 2 trial, which we are working on in parallel and remain on track to initiate before the end of this year. Phase 2 will likely evaluate different doses and durations of therapy, including once per day administration of the drug. In conclusion, we continue to be encouraged by the results from the trial, which show a favorable safety and efficacy profile with a convenient oral tablet. Key highlights from the data include all three cohorts showed a significant reduction in EASI score at 28 days of treatment with clear separation from placebo Cohort 3 with 200-milligram twice per day dose showed earlier and deeper responses than Cohort 1 and 2, data that is consistent with our pharmacokinetic analysis. Cohort 1 and 2 results evaluating 200-milligram once per day versus 100-milligram twice per day dosing showed no differences in activity, suggesting that QD dosing is possible. Post treatment, all three cohorts showed a sustained benefit for 30 days, potentially due to increased Treg cells. No rebound events such as seen with JAK inhibitors was observed. The safety profile across all three cohorts show soquelitinib is very well tolerated. Based on the results to date, we are adding a new extension cohort that will evaluate longer 56-day or 8-week treatment duration. More broadly, the safety, mechanism of action and other properties suggest that soquelitinib could be an important new treatment for a broad range of immune diseases. Now for a brief business update for the quarter. We continue to enroll patients in our registrational Phase 3 trial of soquelitinib in patients with relapsed peripheral T-cell lymphoma, driving towards interim data in late 2026. The first patient has been treated in our Phase 2 trial of soquelitinib in patients with ALS or autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome. Depending on enrollment trends, it is possible we could see initial data from the Phase 2 ALPS study in late 2025 or early 2026. In closing, the soquelitinib results in atopic dermatitis further underscore its broad potential for a range of oncology and immune disease indications. This includes our clinical programs for PTCL, atopic dermatitis and ALPS, our planned study for solid tumors and a long list of immune diseases that we have the potential to address with soquelitinib or our next-generation ITK programs. We are delighted with the early exercise of warrants announced today, which results in an additional $31 million and enables us to advance soquelitinib on multiple fronts, including key data from the next 24 patients in the atopic dermatitis trial, which we expect to have in the fourth quarter of 2025. Current cash takes us to late 2026. We look forward to providing updates on our programs in the coming quarters. I will now turn the call over to the operator for a question-and-answer period. Operator?