Thank you, Jacqui. As Jacqui mentioned, we have made tremendous progress towards our primary goal, submitting our BLA for 3107. We have now completed the drafting of all non-device modules, including non-clinical, clinical, and CMC modules. And after extensive testing and internal quality sign-off, we have resolved the previously announced manufacturing issue involving the single use array component of the CELLECTRA device. To resolve the issue, our device team strengthened key components, reduced stress on breakage areas, and refined the production process for the plastic molded part of the array. We have tested the new array under similar testing conditions to when the issue was first identified and have not been able to reproduce the breakage, which gives us great confidence that the modifications have resolved the issue. We began manufacturing our new commercial grade arrays, which will now be utilized in the design verification testing, so we can move forward to completing our IND and BLA submissions. In addition, the full Phase 1/2 clinical data and accompanying detailed immunology data were recently published in Nature Communications. These data further support the T-cell mechanism of action for 3107, which underpins the efficacy results we've seen. We also announced some very exciting clinical durability data, showing that patients treated with 3107 continue to show further reduction in the need for surgery to manage their disease in the second and third year. This data will be the subject of an oral presentation at the Combined Otolaryngology Spring Meeting to be held in New Orleans this May, one of the most frequented meetings by our target physicians treating RRP. We've also made important progress in preparing for our Phase 3 confirmatory trial. As a reminder, this will be a randomized placebo controlled trial enrolling patients with two or more surgeries in the prior year conducted at approximately 20 sites at major U.S. Medical centers. This progress to date will enable us to enroll in a timely manner following submission of our updated IND. I'd like to spend some time now discussing the new data, as it paints a compelling product profile that strengthens our belief that 3107 could be the preferred product for RRP patients and their physicians. As a reminder, we completed a Phase 1/2 open label trial of 3107 in patients who required at least two surgeries in the previous year for the removal of HPV-6 and 11 related papillomas. It's important to note that based on our understanding of the risk and cost to the patient of every single surgery, every surgery performed after day zero was counted against the efficacy endpoint in our trial where we followed the patients for 12 months. We then conducted RRP-002, a retrospective trial in which we were able to collect data on 28 of the original 32 patients to assess the longer-term treatment effect with a median follow-up of 2.8 years. RRP is a chronic often lifelong disease, and duration of efficacy is clearly important. Here we dive into the 002 data, looking at the longer-term efficacy results we observed in the trial. We were very pleased to see that patients continue to show improvement into years two and three following their initial dosing regimen. In fact, the complete response rate increased to 50% for the second 12 month period when evaluated at the end of year two. We also saw the overall response rate, that is the number of patients that had 50% to 100% fewer surgeries compared to their pretreatment baseline increased from 72% in the first 12 month treatment period or year one to 86% for the second 12 month period or year two. When you look at this in terms of the average or mean number of surgeries this patient group faced, it reduced by more than half from a mean of 4.1 surgeries per year prior to treatment to a mean of 1.7 surgeries at the end of year one, and then reduced further by the end of year two to a mean of 0.9 surgeries. Across the population of patients treated with 3107, this is a reduction of greater than 75% following the initial treatment regimen alone. However, one of the core strengths of our DNA medicines platform is the ability to administer additional doses to continue to drive an amplify strong T-cell based immune responses, without having to worry about the impact of an anti-vector response. Looking again at the mean surgeries per year across the population, we saw a significant decrease in the year following treatment and then a further decrease in the second 12 month period or year two. Into year three, the improvement seems to be holding steady. And what we would like to be able to do is, consider a longer term treatment strategy that supports both the maintenance of that complete or partial response and potentially extending clinical improvement, including the potential for non-responders to mount a clinical response. We have published data from a similar DNA medicine that targeted the E6 and E7 antigens of HPV-16 and 18 that demonstrated we were able to augment the CD8 T-cell responses with a single additional dose, given after completion of the primary treatment course when compared to pre dose levels. This further increase in cytotoxic T-cells supports the potential of extending the duration and improving upon the already excellent clinical response that we have seen to date. Every surgery matters to patients, and our vision for INO-3107 is to further minimize or eliminate future surgeries for all RRP patients. As I said earlier, the immunology data we've recently published becomes important here as it underpins the mechanism of action of 3107 and how we believe treatment is providing the favorable efficacy results we observed. First, in our analysis, we found that all the patients were generating the right kind of anti-viral immune responses to fight HPV, specifically antigen specific cytotoxic T-cells. And then we saw that these T-cells really got where they needed to go, traveling from the blood into the airway and papilloma tissue. Once they were in the airway tissues, they created an antiviral immune response, which we believe is responsible for reducing or eliminating the need for surgery by eradicating HPV infected cells. I would also like to note that while other investigators have suggested that multiple factors such as high viral loads or neutrophil infiltration in the papilloma microenvironment can be barriers to immunotherapy treatment of RRP. We didn't see any such factors impacting the efficacy we observed in the trial. While all patients were generating the right kind of immune response, in our non-responders, this response wasn't as large and tended to decrease faster than in our responders, which again is why we believe continued treatment may improve clinical outcomes in these patients. Overall, our immunology data provide a clear demonstration of the mechanism of action behind INO-3107, showing that it is doing exactly what is needed to treat the underlying HPV infection that causes RRP. To wrap up, I want to provide some additional detail on our next steps for 3107. Now that we have resolved the array issue, we have commenced the manufacturing of the new arrays, which we will subsequently age condition and utilize in the conduct of the FDA required design verification or DV testing process, which we anticipate will be completed in the first half of this year. This testing is required to update the IND before we can dose patients in our confirmatory trial and is also part of the last remaining module of our BLA package we need to complete. We plan to request rolling submission and priority review of our BLA. And if FDA agrees, we will begin submitting our modules in mid-2025 and complete the full submission three to four months later with the goal of having the FDA accept our complete BLA for filing by the end of the year. Once the entire BLA is submitted, we plan to finalize our long-term dosing study strategy and submit a proposed protocol to the FDA to support a supplemental BLA in the future. We also look forward to commencing onboarding of our field medical science liaison team and presenting this exciting data package at several upcoming conferences this spring, including the U.S. based National HPV Conference, the European ALS Congress and COSM, among others listed on the slide. With that, I will now turn it over to our Chief Commercial Officer, Steve Egge, for an update on our commercial efforts. Steve?