Thanks, Mike, and thanks, everyone, for joining us. I'll begin today's call by providing a brief overview of our first quarter performance. Then since this is my first call as the CEO of CVRx, I'd like to share a summary of my background and tell you what I've been doing since joining the company in mid-February. I will then provide you with some of my initial observations on the business and a little more color on our quarterly performance. Jared will then provide a review of our financial results, and I will conclude with our thoughts for the rest of the year before turning to Q&A. Starting with an overview of our performance during the first quarter. Total revenue was $10.8 million, an increase of 35% over the first quarter of 2023. This was below our guidance of $11 million to $12 million. The lower-than-anticipated revenue was due primarily to the performance of our U.S. Heart Failure business, where there was some disruption within our sales organization at the time of the CEO transition, which led to decreased productivity and some sales force turnover. While stabilizing the team and returning active territories to full productivity will take some time, I'm encouraged that some of the early actions we have taken have led to solid performance in our U.S. Heart Failure business in March. In addition, as I will discuss more fully later, we have made the decision to make a change in sales leadership. By way of background, I've been in the medical device industry for over 30 years, and most of my focus has been spent commercializing novel therapies around the globe. I began my career at Medtronic and spent 16 years there in commercial roles in the CRM, neuromodulation and cardiac surgery businesses in both the U.S. and Europe. Subsequent to Medtronic, I served as President and CEO for a series of privately held early to mid-stage high-growth companies. Several of which were in the neuromodulation and cardiovascular fields. Many of these roles both at Medtronic and subsequently involved the introduction of novel therapies for the treatment of chronic conditions for which there were historically limited treatment options. The ultimate goal of these efforts was to move these therapies to standard of care. I learned through these experiences that reaching standard of care requires a rigorous assessment of the specific barriers to adoption and a systematic approach to addressing and eliminating each of them. Although I have only been in my current role for 2 months, many of the opportunities and challenges that I've observed here at CVRx are familiar to me. Later, I'll go into more detail about some of my early observations and our initial plans for addressing them. Apart from my operating experience, I've also served on a number of public and private company Boards, including the Board of CVRx, which I joined in December of 2022. While my time on the Board provided me with knowledge of the business and market, I needed to get a deeper understanding to effectively lead the day-to-day operations of the company and to develop our long-term strategy. Upon joining CVRx, I began a series of listening tours with our customers and our commercial teams in the U.S. and Europe in order to understand the opportunities and challenges that we face driving adoption of Barostim as well as to gain a better understanding of future opportunities to leverage our therapy platform. I also conducted a systematic review of the company's operations to understand the stability and scalability of our business. My overwhelming takeaway after collecting this wide array of feedback is that Barostim is a remarkably effective and highly impactful therapy for patients suffering from heart failure for whom there are extremely limited treatment options today. I also validated my observation that CVRx is a well-run company with a team of highly committed and patient-focused employees. My conversations with over 50 heart failure physicians at 2 recent international heart failure congresses and numerous visits in the field have cemented my belief that Barostim can indeed fill the gap that exists in today's treatment continuum for heart failure and that we are only scratching the surface of the population of patients that we can help and the value that we can create. My conversations with these physicians and advisers have led me to believe that in the near term, we need to more fully support our commercial efforts in our existing HFrEF indication. With last year's label expansion for Barostim, we now have a $2.2 billion annual market opportunity in the U.S. alone, and we've only penetrated 2% of this market. This highlights the massive opportunity to drive increased adoption of Barostim in the HFrEF indication where we have limited device competition. Based on my initial assessment of the barriers of adoption for Barostim, I have asked our team to explore the value and potential impact of increased investment in clinical evidence, therapy awareness and patient access initiatives. Any investment in these areas will come from a reallocation of existing resources as we remain focused on keeping overall spending in check. I will be working with our team over the coming quarters with this in mind as we refine our go-to-market strategy. As noted, our first quarter revenue performance was below expectations. As a high-growth commercial stage company, the effectiveness of our sales organization is critical. Based on my assessment of our sales team and the disruption that we saw in Q1, I've determined that a change in leadership is needed to maximize the opportunity in front of us. As a result, our Senior Vice President of Sales will be departing the company. We have initiated a thorough search to identify a candidate who can scale this business to reach its full potential. In the interim, we have asked Paul Verrastro, currently our Chief Marketing and Strategy Officer, to head up our sales efforts until the new sales leader is in place. Paul is a highly respected medical device sales and marketing leader with over 30 years of experience, including senior leadership roles at Guidant and Medtronic Importantly, much of Paul's experience involved the introduction of novel therapies and technologies such as ICDs and CRT. Paul has been a key member of the CVRx leadership team for over 3 years and is highly respected by our sales organization and physician customers. It probably goes without saying, but I will actively support Paul in his interim role until our new sales leader is identified. In addition to my listening tour, I've spent significant time with the team assessing our go-to-market strategy. Based on my initial observations and my experience introducing novel therapies, we've identified 3 near-term priorities to move Barostim towards standard of care. The first key priority is to increase awareness among clinicians and patients as to the appropriate role for Barostim in the treatment continuum for heart failure. Building this awareness through comprehensive physician outreach and education will be crucial. The second is the need to further bolster the clinical evidence supporting the efficacy and safety profile of Barostim therapy within the current indication. We are increasing our focus on the generation of robust post-market evidence within HFrEF. Finally, as with many novel therapies, we face potential hurdles related to coding, coverage and payment, which can limit patient access in the short term. While we have been proactively addressing these issues, we will be making additional investments to facilitate patient access. To address these market development priorities, we are actively building out the leadership team with new roles specifically designed to drive initiatives in these areas. We believe that bringing in seasoned leaders to build out these core functions will help us reach more patients who can benefit from Barostim therapy. The first of these roles is a Chief Medical Officer. This role will spearhead our efforts to drive awareness and appropriate use of our therapy among clinicians. The CMO will guide comprehensive medical education, outreach and guideline integration to drive our therapy towards standard of care. The second is a Senior Vice President of Clinical Affairs. This position will oversee the development and execution of our clinical evidence generation strategy, including designing and optimizing a pipeline of robust post-market studies within the current indication. As you may have noticed, subsequent to the end of the first quarter, we announced the publication of the results of the post-market phase of the BeAT-HF trial in the European Journal of Heart Failure. This long-term data set will be an important input to our future evidence development plan. Lastly, the third role is the Senior Vice President of Patient Access. This role will be important in further expanding access to Barostim therapy. You may have seen that we recently made progress in this area through the proposed inpatient DRG reassignment, which is expected to take effect on October 1, 2024. The proposal has Barostim mapped to a higher paying reimbursement code for inpatient care. The searches for these 3 key roles are well underway. We're seeking to fill these roles as soon as possible. With these leaders in place, we will be even better equipped to address the awareness, evidence and patient access hurdles to widespread adoption. This increased near-term focus on commercialization in our core business does not mean that we will not pursue indication expansion and product optimization of the Barostim therapy platform. My conversations with clinicians have highlighted the unique platform nature of our technology and the potential to help additional patient groups. We will carefully and appropriately balance this investment in the future with a significant commercial opportunity that exists today in HFrEF. We will be conducting a thorough review of our R&D and clinical portfolios to narrow our focus on those select few high-impact projects that we believe will ultimately drive value for both the company and patients. We look forward to sharing the findings of both our updated go-to-market strategy and our R&D portfolio review with you later in 2024. On a related note, we've elected to stop enrollment in the BATwire trial. This change was not due to safety concerns, but rather due to the realization that many patient candidates elected the commercially approved procedure as opposed to participating in the trial. This suggests that the current procedure is widely acceptable to patients and physicians and therefore, not a barrier to adoption. We intend to continue following the patients enrolled in the BATwire trial until study completion. Overall, I'm tremendously optimistic about our technology and market opportunity and the strength of our organization. I have already started to implement changes in the business that will improve the execution in the near term. In addition, I'm in the process of working with our leadership team to develop our long-term vision and strategy for the business, which we look forward to sharing with you when our analysis is complete. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Jared for a financial review.