Thank you, Christiana, and good morning, everyone. As we highlighted a year ago and we summarized on this slide, we remain on track to deliver more than ten high-impact launches by 2030 from programs across the portfolio. In the next few slides, I would like to provide an update on two of these programs. The phase two proof of concept study of pobarsidinib in patients with chronic spontaneous circulatory care and an update on the phase three results for poorsitinib in patients with heredionitis super. We are delighted to announce the positive top line results for the phase two study evaluating poursitinib in patients with chronic spontaneous tikarria. The study met the primary endpoint at the seventy-five milligram dose, of change from baseline into urticaria activity scores summed over seven days or US seven, at week twelve. Treatment with over Sydney was well tolerated with known safety signals observed. These results open the door to a potentially new treatment option for over three hundred thousand patients with CSU are inadequately controlled, on antihistamines. We are pleased with this proof of concept results which will be presented at an upcoming medical conference. And we will be engaging with regulatory agencies to determine next steps as we plan a pivotal study for poursitinib in patients with CSU. Just a few weeks ago, we presented the results of the phase three studies, STOPHS one and STOPHS two, evaluating povarsitinib in patients with moderate to severe HS. The studies showed statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in high score at both doses in both studies. Slides twenty-five and twenty-six summarize updated results through eighteen weeks of follow-up in these two studies. As a reminder, patients on placebo were allowed to crossover at week twelve and were randomized to either forty-five or seventy-five milligrams of roversitinib. As illustrated in the chart, for those patients who started on pobacitinib and stop h s one, the number of patients achieving high score increased from one hundred and seventy-six at week twelve to two hundred and three by week eighteen. Among the patients who crossed over from placebo to receive either porvacitin forty-five or seventy-five milligrams, high score at week eighteen improved from twenty-eight point six percent and plus which placebo and fifty-seven point eight respectively. Importantly, for the crossover patients, the number of responders increased from fifty-eight to one hundred in just six weeks. Demonstrating once again the rapid onset of benefit produced by poursindiv in patients with HS. Similar findings are observed in stop HS1 summarized on this slide. For those patients who started on pobricitinib, the number and proportion of patients achieving high score continues to increase from one hundred and sixty-four patients at week twelve to a hundred and seventy-seven patients at week eighteen. Among the patients who crossed over from placebo, to receive either poursidinib forty-five or seventy-five milligrams, high score week eighteen improved from twenty-nine point seven percent on placebo to fifty-eight percent and fifty-five point two percent respectively while the number of those achieving high school increased from sixty to ninety-nine. This week eighteen results from both stop ages one and stop HS two clearly show that the response rates in the power sydney farms continue to increase over time. And perhaps more importantly, demonstrated doubling of the responses in patients initially randomized to placebo after they were switched to either poursidinib dose level. We previously reported a greater differential efficacy in favor of poracitinib in patients previously treated with biologics with an average placebo adjusted difference in high score of nineteen point one percent for pravosidinib forty-five milligrams and eighteen point three percent for porbarsidinib seventy-five milligrams in the pooled analysis for stop h s one and stop h s two. In slides twenty-seven and twenty-eight, show that this is true regardless of the type of biologic being considered. Either anti TNF or anti l seventeen agents. Shown on this slide is a high score, but prior anti TNF therapy with a placebo subtracted high score of thirteen to twenty-three percent in the different arms of these two studies. On slide twenty-eight, we see the high score by prior anti IL seventeen therapy with a placebo subtracted high score of five to twenty-five percent in favor of porvacitinib treated patients. In all, totality of the data presented clearly demonstrates that patients with HS have the potential to benefit from over Sidney therapy regardless or whether they have received treatment with a biologic and regardless of the type of biologic they received. We are pleased by the positive data that Power Cyndic continues to generate. With positive phase three data for HS, positive phase two proof of concept data previously presented for Vitiligo, Perrigo Nodularis, and now at CSU, where Sydney solidifies itself as a potential new medicine across several indications in development. We are securing a broad development plan and anticipate additional proof of concept data for asthma to be available in the second half of 2025. We continue to evaluate additional opportunities for provercitinib and plan to share these updates in the second half of 2025. As mentioned by Herve, 2025 will be a pivotal year for Incyte Corporation. With over eighteen key milestones, including four new product launches, four pivotal trial readouts, at least three phase three study initiations, and seven proof of concept study results. As you can see on slide thirty-two, we have achieved several of these milestones with the launch of NickTimbo, bioequivalency data for ruxolitinib extended release, phase three data for roxolitinib cream and paragon nodularis, and povarsitinib and hydronetis suppurativa as well as the phase two proof of concept data for CSU. We look forward to sharing additional updates on these milestones over the course of 2025. I will now hand the call over to Herve Hoppenot for closing remarks.