Thanks, Jacqui. Before I dive into the new data that we have presented at several scientific conferences over the last couple of weeks, I think it's important to review why we're working so hard to bring INO-3107 to patients. RRP is a rare HPV related disease, characterized by small wart-like growths called papillomas, found in the respiratory tract. People with RRP mount an insufficient immune response that's unable to prevent or clear the HP infection from their airways, so the papillomas can grow unchecked. The papillomas often cause difficulty speaking or complete voice loss, difficulty swallowing, shortness of breath, or choking episodes. The current standard of care is surgery to clear out the papillomas, but that doesn't address the underlying viral cause of the disease. And the papillomas grow back, setting patients up for an endless cycle of resurgence of symptoms and need for more surgery. Every single surgery presents a risk of permanent vocal cord damage, reinforcing what patients have said time and again, that a reduction of even one surgery would be life changing. That patient experience has been central to our efforts to develop 3107, which we believe has the potential to change the treatment paradigm for RRP. Designed to generate antigen-specific cytotoxic CD8 T cells, targeting both HPV-6 and HPV-11, 3107 is a potential novel, non-surgical treatment option for RRP patients. In our Phase 1/2 clinical trial, we observed a compelling combination of clinical benefit and tolerability across the disease spectrum of severity and including both HPV-6 and HPV-11 driven disease. In addition, we saw the generation of a significant and targeted immune response that was associated with a reduction or elimination of surgeries for these patients. We believe that the growing body of evidence shows that 3107 could be used to treat the vast majority of RRP patients and supports its potential to be the preferred product of choice by patients, healthcare providers, and payers if approved. At the International Society of Vaccines Conference and the Fall Voice Conference this past October, Inovio presented its full safety and efficacy data for the Phase 1/2 trial, which is summarized here. In the trial, the overall clinical response, defined as patients experiencing a decrease in the number of surgical interventions in the year after the initial 3107 administration compared to the prior year was 81% or 26 of the 32 enrolled patients. This number includes 28% that required no surgical intervention during or after the dosing window. These are our complete responders. Further, 44% of patients had a partial response, defined as a reduction of at least 50% in the number of surgeries when compared to the prior year. The overall response rate, calculated by adding our complete responders and partial responders, was 72%, or 23 out of 32 patients. Importantly, in our trial design, we counted every surgery after day zero because every surgery matters to patients. On this slide, you can see our overall safety data. 3107 was well tolerated in the study, with the most common treatment-related adverse events being injection site pain reported in less than a third of patients. Supporting that as [CELLECTRA] (ph) electroporation device was well tolerated by patients and was also easy to use by healthcare providers. Fatigue was the next most frequent reported treatment related AE in just three patients. No treatment related adverse events greater than Grade 2 severity were reported. One of the core strengths of our DNA Medicine Platform is the ability to drive a T-cell response, which is particularly important for treating chronic viral disease. You can see on this slide the proposed mechanism of action for 3107, inducing HPV antigen-specific T-cell responses in the blood, then having those T-cells travel to and infiltrate the papilloma and airway tissue, and ultimately eradicate the HPV infected cells to reduce or eliminate the need for surgery. I'd like to now turn to our new immunology data that we have shared at the recent scientific conferences, including this week at the International Papilloma Virus Conference. To further characterize immune responses to 3107, we analyzed blood and tissue samples from patients in our Phase 1/2 trial. Our goal was to evaluate the individual steps that combine into the proposed mechanism of action that I just presented. We conducted a number of very extensive immunological assessments on blood and tissue samples to, one, confirm the induction, activation, and expansion of cytotoxic T-cells with antigen specificity to HPV-6 and HPV-11. And two, to assess the level and form of immunological change from baseline, including T-cell infiltration and profiling, and the potential impact of the papilloma microenvironment on clinical effect. In short, what we discovered was very compelling. The data demonstrated the ability of 3107 to do exactly what it was designed to do, induce HPV antigen-specific T-cell responses in the blood that infiltrate papilloma and airway tissues and that they are the right kind of T-cells to eradicate HPV-infected cells and ultimately reduce or eliminate the need for surgery. Overall, the key takeaways from this study include five main points. First, INO-3107 generates the right kind of immune responses to fight HPV for the vast majority of RRP patients. In our research, we see generation of HPV-6 and HPV-11 antigen-specific cytotoxic T-cells with responses that are durable out to 52 weeks, indicating a long-lived memory response, which is important for the treatment of a chronic viral disease like RRP. Second, the newly generated T-cells get to where they need to go. Our data shows that T-cells travel from the blood to the papilloma and airway tissue, and the resulting inflammatory and antiviral responses are seen in the tissue. Third, the immune response we have observed is targeted and specific to treatment with INO-3107. We saw expansion of both pre-existing T-cell clones and the emergence of new T-cells in the blood. These new T-cells could not be detected prior to treatment, meaning the majority of T-cells seen in airway tissue at the 52-week time point were emergent clones. The presence of these new T-cells in the tissue corresponds with the clinical benefit we saw in the trial. Fourth, we were also able to show that immune responses in responders are different to those seen in non-responders. While all 32 patients in the trial were seen to generate an immune response in the blood, the kinetics and magnitude of that response differed based on the clinical response seen. We believe we can build on these initial responses in non-responders through the administration of additional doses. And finally, from our evaluations to date, we have looked at elements of the papilloma microenvironment that have been reported in recent scientific literature to impact the potential efficacy of treatment. To date, we have not found evidence that these elements appear to restrict the clinical benefit of 3107. This immunology data is currently under review at a peer-reviewed journal, and we look forward to providing an update on that publication when available. So in summary, I would like to point out why this new data is so important to the potential of INO-3107. First and foremost, we believe the immunology data support the biological mechanism of action of 3107. This data will be an important component of our upcoming BLA submission and other future regulatory filings. The data confirm that 3107 effectively targets HPV-6 and HPV-11, the strains that cause the vast majority of RRP disease. The data confirm that 3107 generates new and expands existing populations of T-cells and activates them to eliminate the underlying cause of the disease. The data also support that 3107 can have clinical benefit across the disease severity spectrum and in both HPV-6 and HPV-11 driven disease. Remember that patients tell us that every surgery matters. So our goal is to be able to treat patients with RRP, regardless of the severity of disease. In short, we believe these data provide compelling evidence that INO-3107, if approved, can be a game changer for RRP patients by reducing their need for repeat surgeries to treat their disease. I'd also like to mention that in addition to this important immunology work, we have also recently completed a retrospective study investigating the long-term durability of clinical response seen in patients treated in our Phase 1/2 study. We anticipate announcing that data by year-end. On that note, I'll now turn it over to our Chief Commercial Officer, Steve Egge, for an update on our commercial efforts. Steve?