Thanks, Dan. The clinical data from the ongoing CUE-101 trial continues to demonstrate robust metrics of clinical benefit for heavily pretreated recurrent metastatic HPV positive head and neck squamous cell carcinoma patients treated with monotherapy and for newly diagnosed patients with recurrent metastatic HPV positive head and neck cancer treated in combination with pembrolizumab. As shown on Slide 5, data from the ongoing clinical trials with CUE-101 as monotherapy and in combination with pembrolizumab have provided clinical proof-of-concept in derisking of our Immuno-STAT platform. The latest data generated to date in 2023 continues to support prior observations and further enhances our confidence in CUE-101 as a potential therapeutic for patients battling HPV-positive head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. As previously and consistently stated, we believe CUE-101's mechanism of action, as evidenced by the ongoing data generated to date, provides effective and tolerated dose levels, enabling selective expansion of targeted tumor-specific T cells directly in the patient's body. Recurrent metastatic HPV positive head and neck cancer is a tough incurable disease. The data we have observed throughout the monotherapy trial bolsters our position and enhances our confidence that CUE-101 is in fact stimulating the targeted cancer-specific T cells within a subset of these patients, resulting in demonstrable antitumor effect. Furthermore, and importantly, we continue to observe an evolving pattern of enhanced survival in the monotherapy trial. We believe this enhanced survival is due to the persistent expansion of tumor-specific T cells given CUE-101's mechanism of action. As shown on Slide 6, CUE-101 demonstrates well-behaved pharmacokinetics with low inter-patient variability at the recommended Phase 2 dose of 4 milligrams per kilogram. The exposure pattern is consistent throughout multiple cycles of treatment without any attenuation of PK parameters, supporting the premise that there is no evidence of clinically relevant immunogenicity. Regarding its pharmacodynamic or PD profile, CUE-101 treatment also results in a consistently observed sustained increase in natural killer cells or NK cells a positive attribute associated with an antitumor response as NK cells are known to assist in tumor killing. Importantly, we observed only a modest and transient increase in regulatory T cells. Regarding the intended PD effect, i.e., activation of targeted tumor-specific T cells, we have observed, as shown in the middle panel, robust expansion of tumor-specific E7 reactive T cells in their peripheral blood of patients as early as one week after administration of CUE-101, paired and post-treatment biopsies demonstrate an increase in tumor infiltrating T cells and associated tumor necrosis. In addition to the favorable PK and PD just described in patients with advanced HPV-positive head and neck cancer are experiencing intriguing patterns of clinical benefit. Three examples are shown on Slide 7. Patient A, experienced a durable partial response with an approximate 60% reduction in tumor burden evident at six weeks after two cycles of CUE-101. This response lasted close to one year. This patient demonstrated a significant reduction in HPV cell-free DNA that coincided with the initiation of the partial response and the HPV cell-free DNA was undetectable for most of the time on treatment. Patient B, who remains on treatment at the present time for approximately 1.5 years has had stable disease with tumor burden reduction of approximately 20% observed at week 48 and maintained to the present time at greater than 75 weeks. Notably, this patient has also had complete disappearance of HPV cell-free DNA in the blood since week six. And the undetectable HPV cell-free DNA, which is an increasingly recognized biomarker of disease activity is suggestive of a pathologic complete response, i.e., a potential cure in this patient who we expect may have surgical resection of the lesion for histopathological analysis. Patient C has experienced tumor reduction after a prolonged period on drug where no resist based objective response was initially observed by imaging. In this patient treated with CUE-101 at 2 milligrams per kilogram, we can see that the first several months appear to demonstrate gradual tumor growth even beyond the 20% threshold used by RECIST criteria. However, based upon the overall clinical status, the patient continued treatment. After approximately six months, the tumor began to shrink and the patient remained on therapy for greater than 18 months after starting treatment with CUE-101. This observation consistent with observations made by others, demonstrates that kinetics of T cell antitumor activity may manifest over a long period of time. The next slide, Slide 8, conveys our ongoing survival swimmer plot for the 20 patients dosed the recommended Phase II dose of 4 milligrams per kilogram. The swimmer plot for the 20 patients dosed at the RP2D of 4 mgs per kg demonstrates a trend of increased survival of approximately 12 months median overall survival compared to the historic reported survival of approximately eight months observed in patients treated in the second line in the KEYNOTE-040 trial of pembrolizumab. As any experience oncologist understands the survival with third-line treatment is expected to be less as the disease has further developed and become more unstable. Our evolving data continues to support the premise that treatment with CUE-101 stimulates the patient's immune system and results in what appears to be a meaningful increase in survival for patients with advanced recurrent metastatic HPV positive head and neck cancer. This monotherapy data has encouraged our principal investigators and offers a potential path forward to a registrational trial. As shown on Slide 9, CUE-101 and checkpoint inhibition have complementary mechanisms of action and preclinical studies have demonstrated enhanced response and survival when both are given in combination. In this aggressive HPV-positive mirroring tumor model shown in the right panel, the survival curves demonstrated survival of 90% for mice treated with combination of CUE-101 in anti-PD-1 compared to the 0% and 20% and end-of-study survival for anti-PD-1 and CUE-101 monotherapy, respectively. The demonstration of monotherapy activity in patients bolsters our beliefs that we should have observed complementary mechanistic effects in combination with pembrolizumab. As a reminder, the data from patients treated in the CUE-101 monotherapy trial. Clearly, this approach supports the 2101 increases the number of tumor-specific T cells in the patient's body. In the combination study with pembrolizumab, it appears that these activated T cells have greater capacity to kill cancer cells when coupled with the inhibition of the PD-1 pathway, a major mechanism used by cancer cells to prevent immune-mediated killing. As reported at SITC in November of last year and as shown on the waterfall plot on Slide 10. Four of the first 10 evaluable patients treated at the recommended Phase II combination dose of CUE-101 at 4 milligrams per kilogram plus pembrolizumab have experienced partial responses, i.e., at least two consecutive scans demonstrating a cumulative reduction of tumor burden of minus 30% or greater. Notably, three of the four partial responses have been observed in tumors with low PD-L1 expression as evidenced by CPS scores of 20 or less. -- as has been indicated by other studies, tumors that had CPS scores greater than 20 have been more responsive to PD-1 blockade and exhibit higher objective response rates compared to tumors with CPS scores less than 20. The overall response rate of greater than 40% observed with CUE-101 in combination with pembrolizumab to date compares favorably to the historical objective response rate of 19% and observed with pembrolizumab monotherapy in the KEYNOTE-048 study. The follow-up data on these first 10 patients as well as new emerging data on additional patients treated with combination therapy continues to strengthen, and we look forward to providing an update on the cumulative data at an upcoming oncology meeting. Key observations in patients treated with CUE-101 monotherapy in the third line and beyond include as detailed on Slide 11 demonstration of single-agent antitumor efficacy evidenced by RECIST based partial response and durable stable disease in third line and beyond recurrent metastatic head and neck cancer patients and a median overall survival benefit emerging from survival follow-up in the RP2D cohort. As previously announced, the robust data on CUE-101's activity in monotherapy and in combination with pembrolizumab enabled the granting of Fast Track designation for the treatment of patients in both the first and third line setting. The cumulative data from these ongoing trials with CUE-101 have provided us with clear evidence of targeted expansion of HPV E7-specific T cells with antitumor activity as a single agent and as a complementary mechanism with checkpoint inhibition for what we believe will broaden patient reach and enhance efficacy of checkpoint blockade therapy. As such, we believe CUE-101 as our first biologic therapeutic from our CUE-100 series represents a potential therapeutic breakthrough for patients, and we look forward to providing you with updated additional data at an upcoming oncology conference. Furthermore, we believe the data from CUE-101 has provided a derisking and mechanistic validation for additional biologics from the CUE-100 series beginning with CUE-102 as shown on Slide 12. Regarding our progress update pertaining to CUE-102, which targets Wilms Tumor 1, positive tumors in a trial that is enrolling patients with advanced colorectal, gastric, pancreatic and ovarian cancers. We anticipate completing the dose escalation portion of the trial by midyear -- the treatment has been well tolerated with no DLTs observed to date. We plan to present preliminary data from the dose escalation portion of this trial at an upcoming oncology conference. As a reminder, CUE-102 and CUE-101 tiered 99% amino acid sequence identity. This enabled us to significantly decrease the development time and cost of CUE-102 as we were not required by the FDA to repeat IND-enabling toxicology studies for CUE-102, and we were also able to initiate the Phase I dose escalation study at 1 milligram per kilogram a dose at which we observed clear signs of biologic activity with CUE-101. As Slide 13 shows, we are conducting the CUE-102 dose escalation study in colon, gastric, pancreatic and ovarian cancers. This design offers us the ability to perform monotherapy expansion studies any or all of the indications being evaluated in the dose escalation phase of the trial. This trial is actively accruing and will be open at 15 sites throughout the United States. We plan to present additional data at an upcoming oncology conference and look forward to presenting the corresponding data. I will now turn the call over to Ken. Ken?