Dr. Jay Duker
Thank you, George. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us to discuss our continued success as we advance first-in-class therapeutics and delivery technologies to provide a brighter future for those at risk of losing their site. First of all, I'd like to say that I'm honored with the name EyePoint CEO and I would like to thank the EyePoint's Board of Directors for their confidence in me. I would also like to thank Nancy and the entire executive team for their partnership, collaboration, and leadership during my tenure at EyePoint. As a physician dedicated to improving outcomes in retinal disease, I'm incredibly passionate about EyePoint's mission of bringing innovative therapies to patients at risk of losing their sight. For the past seven years, I've had the opportunity to work closely with the exceptional team of talented professionals at EyePoint to advance our exciting pipeline of products with the aim of transforming treatment paradigms for patients. I'm committed to continued execution towards this goal. With the recent sale of YUTIQ, we at EyePoint, have completed our transformation to a pure play development stage biopharmaceutical company, and I'm incredibly excited to be stepping into the CEO role at this important juncture. With our compelling clinical pipeline representing multi-billion-dollar product opportunities, our best-in-class sustained ocular delivery systems, along with a strong balance sheet, we're well-positioned to grow as a leader in ocular drug delivery and to bring impactful therapies to patients. With that, I'll now review our recent progress and give an overview of upcoming milestones. Turning to our lead program, EYP-1901 a potentially paradigm shifting maintenance treatment for patients suffering from serious eye diseases. We are now fully enrolled in two oversubscribed Phase II clinical trials. The DAVIO 2 trial for wet age-related macular degeneration or wet AMD and the PAVIA trial for non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy or NPDR. As a reminder, EYP-1901 is an investigational sustained release therapy that consists of Durasert E, the bio erodible formulation of our Durasert technology. With vorolanib, a highly selective small molecule tyrosin kinase inhibitor with unique properties. EYP-1901 brings a new mechanistic approach to the treatment of VEGF mediated chronic serious posterior sigma diseases, such as wet AMD, NPDR, and diabetic macular edema. By acting as a pan-VEGF receptor blocker blocking all VEGF isoforms. Compared to other TKIs, vorolanib features reduced off-target binding and does not inhibit the Tie2 receptor at clinically relevant doses leading to a potentially improved safety and efficacy profile for this differentiated molecule. Additionally, another potential treatment benefit of EYP-1901's mechanism of action is the possibility for neuroprotection and antifibrotic effects. EYP-1901 delivers vorolanib consistently and reliably with steady zero order kinetic dosing for approximately nine months in the eye through the Durasert E technology. At the ARVO annual meeting in April, we presented preclinical data highlighting the potential neuroprotective effect of vorolanib the active drug in EYP-1901 against photoreceptor degeneration in a validated retinal detachment model. The preclinical data highlighted vorolanib's potential new mechanism of action for treating retinal diseases and its potential unique benefits that may set it apart from existing ligand binding biologics. These preclinical data demonstrated that vorolanib significantly reduced the severity of change in baseline visual acuity and improved contrast thresholds in mice treated with vorolanib compared with placebo. Suggesting a neuroprotective effect against photoreceptor degeneration. Should this be reflected in clinical data, it would provide an important new mechanism of action for the treatment of these chronic blinding retinal diseases such as wet AMD, NPDR, DME, and retinal vein occlusion. We are very pleased with the progress of our two key Phase II trials of EYP-1901. In the DAVIO 2 trial, EYP-1901 is being investigated in 160 subjects with previously treated wet AMD with a goal to sustain the treatment effect for the majority of wet AMD patients up to six months or longer following a single injection of EYP-1901. This could represent a significant improvement compared to current standard of care anti-VEGFs, which are dosed on average every two months in the United States. This lifetime of frequent treatment represents a tremendous burden for patients who are at risk for losing sight from wet AMD. By using EYP-1901 is a maintenance therapy following induction treatment with large molecule anti-VEGFs, we aim to provide a sustained delivery of vorolanib, so that patients and practitioners can potentially have the flexibility to reduce the number of visits to their retina specialists without sacrificing visual outcomes. All patients in the DAVIO 2 trial were previously treated with a standard of care anti-VEGF therapy, and were randomly assigned to one of two doses of EYP-1901 approximately two milligrams or approximately three milligrams versus an on-label Aflibercept control. EYP-1901 delivered with a single intravitreal injection in the physician's office similar to current FDA-approved anti-VEGF treatments. Recently, we provided updates at several medical meetings for the Phase I DAVIO and Phase II DAVIO 2 trials. At the OIS Retina Innovation Summit in July, we presented interim, mask, safety and baseline patient demographics from the DAVIO 2 clinical trial in wet AMD. As of July 1, 2023, a mask safety summary found that there were no reported drug related serious ocular adverse events or SAEs or drug related systemic SAEs in the 160 enrolled patients in the DAVIO 2 trial. Additionally, an analysis of the reported baseline patient demographics suggests that the Phase II DAVIO 2 patients have on average, better starting visual acuity and less central subfield thickness than the Phase I DAVIO cohort. Mean BCVA at baseline was 74 letters for patients in DAVIO 2 versus 69 letters for patients in the DAVIO 1 trial. While on OCT evaluation, the mean central subfield thickness was 265 microns for patients in DAVIO 2 versus 299 microns in the Phase I DAVIO trial. Additionally, at this year's American Society of Retina Specialists annual meeting in July, we presented 12-month ocular pharmacokinetic results from a study evaluating EYP-1901's drug delivery through the Durasert platform. We also presented an encore subgroup analysis of the EYP-1901 final 12-month Phase I DAVIO results, which showed that of the nine Phase I DAVIO patients that had no excess fluid at screening, 67% did not require a supplemental anti-VEGF injection for up to six months, and over 50% did not require any additional therapy for up to one year. In June, we presented an encore presentation of 12-month results at the European Society of Ophthalmology Congress 2023 in Prague for the Phase I DAVIO clinical trial evaluating EYP-1901 and previously treated wet AMD. The presentation is significant, because it marks the first time that we presented EYP-1901 clinical trial results outside of the United States. We are very excited by the trial's progress, and we look forward to reading out top-line results for the DAVIO 2 trial in December of this year. Now, let me turn to our second indication, NPDR. In June, we were pleased to report that we completed enrollment in the Phase II PAVIA clinical trial. This is a randomized controlled phase II trial evaluating EYP-1901 as a potential nine-month treatment for moderate to severe NPDR. Similar to DAVIO 2 trial, our PAVIA trial saw significant investigator and patient interest during enrollment and the trial enrolled 77 patients succeeding the 60-patient target. Patients were randomly assigned to one of two doses of EYP-1901 approximately two milligrams or approximately three milligrams, or to the control group that received a sham injection. As in the wet AMD trials EYP-1901 is delivered with a single intravitreal injection in the physician's office for NPDR. As a reminder, NPDR is a very common eye disease that affects almost one third of diabetic adults over the age of 40 and is projected to impact over 14 million Americans by 2050. In NPDR, blood vessels are weakened, potentially leading to swelling in the macula, which is called diabetic macular edema, or DME, and eventually abnormal blood vessel growth, which is called proliferative diabetic retinopathy, or PDR. Both of these complications can ultimately result in severe visual loss. It's important to note that there remains a great unmet need for a safe, efficacious, and convenient treatment option for NPDR that proactively maintains a patient's vision over a long period of time with fewer intravitreal injections than the currently available therapeutic options. Approximately 90% of patients with NPDR received no course of treatment apart from observation by their eye doctor until their disease progresses to a site threatening complication. Due to the burdensome nature of the currently approved short-acting treatments. EYP-1901 and our phase II PAVIA trial could potentially safeguard patient's vision for a much longer period of time between treatments. Top-line data remains on track for the second quarter of 2024. Looking ahead, we also plan to initiate a phase II trial evaluating EYP-1901 and DME in the first quarter of 2024. Importantly in May, we sold YUTIQ to Alimera Sciences for $82.5 million in addition to future royalties. This value creating transaction allowed us to retire all of our outstanding bank debt, reduced our projected SG&A, and extend our cash runway into 2025 as we prepare for potential phase III trials. The sale also completed EyePoint's transformation into a pure play drug development company with sharpened focus on advancing and expanding our pipeline of sustained delivery treatments for serious eye diseases. I would like to thank the entire EyePoint team for an incredibly productive quarter. I will now turn the call back over to George to review the financials. George?