Thank you, Alexa. Good morning, and thank you all for joining us today. Today, we will share progress and updates from the third quarter of this year, highlighting developments we've made in advancing our platform, actualizing the potential of this powerful subclass of T-cells, these allogeneic Invariant Natural Killer T-cells, or INKTs. With our fully integrated discovery platform, engineering expertise and manufacturing innovation, we're poised to deliver what we believe to be the most scalable and transformative cell therapy platform for patients facing cellular tumor cancers and other immune-related diseases. Importantly, we have the capacity to truly democratize access to these innovative therapies, enabling their development and application beyond rare disease settings and expanding the treatment possibilities for a much broader patient population and much broader set of diseases. We've been able to make this progress with even further operating efficiencies and reductions in operating burn by nearly an additional 60% at the same time from last year alone. While this is in large part a cost offset by external funding of our clinical programs, we've continued to develop manufacturing efficiencies that reduce our cost of goods and increase scale and production capacity. We remain acutely aware of our cash position, and while we look forward to strengthening this position, we will continue to identify additional areas for cost containment and efficiency. I'd like to begin the call today by informing you of a key addition to our leadership team. Just a couple of weeks ago, we welcomed Dr. Robert or Bob Kadlec to our Board of Directors. Dr. Kadlec's decades of experience in public health and biodefense, including his role as Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services brings immense strategic value to MiNK. Dr. Kadlec spearheaded critical initiatives in pandemic preparedness, emergency response coordination, and medical countermeasure development. His insights into public-private partnerships and comprehensive health strategies will be invaluable as we expand the application of our iNKT cell platform, particularly in tackling infectious disease and high-impact health challenges. In addition to strengthening our leadership, we've made advancements in our clinical programs and advancements in our preclinical progress. On the clinical front, our lead program, 797, is progressing in a Phase 2 trial for second-line gastric -- advanced gastric cancer at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. This trial incorporates flotetuzumab, valfilumab [ph], chemotherapy, on top of our iNKT cell therapy. Data from the first half of the patient cohorts treated indicate very promising signals of efficacy or activity compared to existing treatment options. We look very forward to presenting these data in a major oncology conference in early 2025. Furthermore, data presented last week at the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer, or SITC, annual meeting showcased wonderful progress of our iNKT cell therapy program, highlighting the significant potential of 797 to expand the benefit of immune checkpoint inhibitors, as well as bi-specific engagers in areas where we have seen these approaches fall short in the clinic. Additionally, we presented data on our novel PRAME-TCR, designed to address the unmet needs of intracellular targeting to eradicate PRAME-expressing tumors. These findings underscore the unique mechanisms of iNKT cells, highlight the activity of our platform to create high-throughput medicines quickly, and show that we can enhance the effectiveness of commonly used therapies through strategic synergistic combinations. These advancements offer promising new strategies for patients with challenging diseases. To provide more detail on our findings presented at SITC, I'd like to turn the call over to Dr. Nils Rutquist and Dr. Paul Abbott to give you an overview. Nils?