Thank you, Diane, and thanks to all for joining us today. As we communicated just a few weeks ago at our Investor and Analyst Day, we made significant progress across our pipeline in the third quarter. Most importantly, we completed the rolling submission and submitted our new drug application to the FDA for aficamten. This is an exciting milestone for Cytokinetics as well as the physician and patient communities, and it brings us one step closer to hopefully bringing aficamten to patients suffering from obstructive HCM. It reflects a tremendous amount of work from our colleagues for which we're especially grateful. While we have requested priority review of the submission, our base case is standard review. The next step will be the expected announcement of filing acceptance and assigned PDUFA date. During Q3, we also supported CORXEL, formerly Ji Xing, in filing the NDA in China for aficamten for obstructive HCM, which we're pleased to announce today was recently accepted for filing. Meanwhile, our commercial preparations for the potential approval and launch of aficamten in the United States are dialing up according to plan. As Andrew will elaborate, we're executing pre-launch activities, including recently launching an HCM disease awareness campaign for health care professionals. In addition, we selected third-party external partners to support education, distribution and patient support, altogether forming a bespoke patient experience. And we refined sales territory configurations, as well as sales training and recruiting programs in the United States, while we also concurrently hired our initial geographic and functional team leaders in Europe. During the quarter, we continued to present and publish additional data from SEQUOIA-HCM, further strengthening the evidence supporting its potential next-in-class safety and efficacy profile. As Fady will elaborate, the additional analyses show that treatment with aficamten is associated with improvements in exercise capacity, gradients, symptoms, biomarkers, cardiac structure and function, as well as favorable cardiac remodeling. Together, these analyses expand in meaningful ways on the overall profile of aficamten and are enabling of the positioning that we foresee for a next-in-class cardiac myosin inhibitor that we believe can expand the category and activate broader adoption. Beyond aficamten, we prepared to start 2 new clinical trials from within our emerging specialty cardiology franchise, COMET-HF, the confirmatory Phase III clinical trial of omecamtiv mecarbil and AMBER-HFpEF, the Phase II clinical trial of CK-586. As Stuart will share, each of omecamtiv mecarbil and CK-586 offers an opportunity to expand our specialty cardiology franchise by targeting underserved populations at opposite ends of the spectrum of heart failure, those with severely reduced ejection fraction and those with supernormal ejection fraction. Finally, while our specialty cardiology franchise remains our top priority, our research dedicated to novel muscle-directed therapies has continued within our labs in South San Francisco, and our long-standing innovation in muscle biology continues with another promising drug candidate called CK-089, readying to begin a first-in-human study. CK-089 is a fast skeletal muscle troponin activator, which we believe may have potential therapeutic application to a specific type of muscular dystrophy. You'll be hearing more about how we have applied lessons learned with prior fast skeletal troponin activators to our next level plans for CK-089, as it will soon begin clinical development in this fourth quarter. Where we stand today at Cytokinetics is a reflection of thoughtful planning, strategic positioning and prudent capital deployment, all in service of realizing the full potential of our muscle biology platform. We are not a company expecting to simply build for the success of a single drug candidate. Instead, we're focused on building momentum across our pipeline and planning for our future by prosecuting a portfolio of multiple muscle-directed drug candidates designed to address diseases of high unmet need. By doing so, we hope to impact the lives of both patients, as well as return meaningful value to shareholders in enduring ways. With that, I'll turn the call over to Fady, please.