Thank you very much, Taylor. And good afternoon, everyone. First of all, it's my pleasure to be here today to discuss some of our recent operating highlights. First, we surpassed 200,000 cumulative CytoSorb treatments across 75 countries after achieving the 100,000 treatment milestone less than three years ago. As of the end of the first quarter of 2023, the number was more than 203,000 cumulative treatments worldwide. Next, the pivotal STAR-T trial achieved its second milestone of 80 patients enrolled on schedule after achieving the first milestone of 40 patients enrolled in November of 2022. This triggered a second Independent Data and Safety Monitoring Board review that is expected to initiate shortly and be completed in the next few months. The first quarter of 2023 was a solid quarter with total revenue of $9.4 million, including product sales of $7.9 million, representing sequential growth from both Q4 last year and from a year ago on a currency adjusted core basis. This was the first time in the past five years that first quarter core sales exceeded a typically strong Q4. We also ended Q1 2023 with a healthy cash balance of $20.7 million. Next, Al Kraus, our board chairman, announced his retirement at the end of his term next month after 20 years of leadership with the company. Michael Bator, our current board director, will succeed him as board chairman, pending the results of the upcoming annual meeting in June. Next, we recently highlighted a key publication in critical care definitively underscoring the power of CytoSorb to reduce cytokine storm during systemic hyper inflammation caused by a key toxin called endotoxin that is responsible for inflammation in half of sepsis cases in a well-controlled human study. And finally, we hosted a successful and highly attended research symposium at the International Symposium of Intensive Care Medicine and Emergency Medicine, or ISICEM 2023, one of the premier and most influential critical care conferences in the world, highlighting data using CytoSorb to treat cytokine storm and inflammation in diseases such as sepsis, shock, and ARDS. As we discussed in the shareholder letter at the beginning of the year, in 2023, we are focused on three major objectives. The first is opening the US and Canadian markets. The second is a return to sales growth, and third is a reduction of our cash burn with a tight control over expenses. For the sake of today's call, we will keep our prepared remarks limited to each of these three areas. However, we're happy to take questions on any subject in the Q&A session. First, allow me to provide a little more color on our objective to open the US and Canadian markets with DrugSorb-ATR. As many of you are aware, DrugSorb-ATR and STAR-T remains the core focus of our clinical efforts and the vehicle expected to open the US and Canadian markets. We've received two FDA breakthrough device designation for DrugSorb-ATR to remove blood thinning medications that can increase the risk of perioperative bleeding in patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery. STAR-T enrollment is now in the last third of the trial. Enrollment has been brisk and has recently outpaced our own internal projections. Since recently announcing the achievement of 80 patients enrolled, the study continues to enroll well. Nearly all trial sites are enrolling with strong contribution by both US and Canadian centers. And there's high enthusiasm for the study by all trial centers. We're pushing to complete STAR-T enrollment by the summer with top line data expected as soon as possible and before the end of the year. If positive, this would trigger regulatory submissions to both US FDA and Health Canada. In parallel to the clinical program, we're also executing on our regulatory strategy that at this stage includes strengthening the regulatory team, planning for regulatory future submissions to both US FDA and Health Canada, and driving interdepartmental alignment and responsibilities to meet our regulatory objectives and timelines. Finally, we're waiting on an update from CMS on their Transitional Coverage of Emerging Technologies, or TCET, proposal that can provide four years of coverage to relevant approved breakthrough devices, such as DrugSorb-ATR. Although we discussed the rationale deciding to forego the interim analysis of 80 patients in the last earnings call, and again in the recent press release on achieving the second enrollment milestone of 80 patients in the STAR-T trial, allow me to give some additional color. As discussed recently, the rapid pace of enrollment of STAR-T led us to elect to forego a formal interim analysis on the first 80 patients. To fully understand this decision, it's important to clarify that the original intent of this interim analysis was to provide the opportunity to stop a trial early, an important option if enrollment was expected to be slow or delayed. However, the current enrollment pace is brisk, and our projection suggests that the trial will likely be completed by the time of formal interim analysis that, by the way, requires fully monitored, clean locked and adjudicated data, would have been completed. Accordingly, a trial that is fully enrolled cannot be stopped early, making an interim analysis of no value. And because of that, we are now focusing our efforts on the final analysis. We believe it's also important to emphasize that there are no other considerations or information underlying this decision, and that the STAR-T study data remains fully blinded. The next milestone for STAR-T is the second independent Data Safety Monitoring Board safety evaluation after the first 80 patients which we expect to be completed in the next few months. As previously disclosed, the DSMB recommendation after the safety evaluation of the first 40 patients was to continue to study as planned without modification. Now let's switch to the second key milestone for 2023, which is a return to sales growth. We witnessed sequential growth in the first quarter of 2023 in terms of product sales compared to the fourth quarter of 2022 and an 8% quarterly core product sales growth year-over-year, which we believe is an encouraging sign. We're seeing strong customer engagement, excellent feedback on our most recent clinical and scientific data, and a trend of improvement in our hospital markets in core countries, although healthcare workers staffing continues to remain an issue. In Germany, for example, which accounts for roughly 40% to 50% of our total product revenue, the number of ICUs reporting normal operating conditions is now higher than those under full restrictions which has fallen by about 25%. Meanwhile, COVID-19 admissions to the ICU have dropped significantly, raising the prospect that ICU beds reserved for COVID-19 patients will be released, adding to ICU capacity. This is expected to translate into the ability to admit more non-COVID patients to the ICU and to do more surgical operations where patients need to recover in the ICU, such as cardiac surgery. These are all drivers of our business. And among many of our growth initiatives, we've also increased the number of accounts in German private hospital networks by 50% in 2022 compared to 2021 based on our preferred supplier agreements. Finally, in the first quarter of 2023, demand for CytoSorb was brisk. Working down our finished goods inventory, we are currently now ramping production out of the new manufacturing facility, which is in full mode production, with the goal of meeting demand and replenishing inventory. With that, I'd like to turn it now over to Kathy to discuss our financials and our third key objective. Kathy?