Thank you, Dave. Excuse me. We are pleased to have recently shared positive initial data from our ongoing Phase 1 clinical trial of VYD222 which enrolled 30 healthy volunteers across three different dosing cohorts. Participants were randomized 8:2 to VYD222 or placebo. The initial Phase 1 clinical trial data showed that a single administration of VYD222 was generally well tolerated at all three dose levels tested with no serious adverse events reported. As expected, we saw a dose-dependent increase in serum neutralizing titers against Omicron XBB.1.5. At the lowest dose tested, 1,500 milligrams, the geometric mean serum neutralizing titers were 3,245 against Omicron XBB.1.5 at day 7, a geometric mean 39-fold rise from baseline. At the 2,500-milligram dose, the titers were 9,647. At the 4,500-milligram dose, the titers were 16,865. As a point of reference, even the lowest VYD222 dose tested resulted in higher serum neutralizing titers against Omicron XBB.1.5 than the titer shared at the recent Vaccines Advisory Committee meeting from investigational XBB-targeted vaccines that were administered to adults who are not on immunosuppressive treatment. Higher VYD222 doses resulted, as expected, in higher titer levels that were well above those reported vaccine titer levels. Serum neutralizing titer data are meaningful because COVID-19 vaccine and mAb clinical trials, including our past Phase 2/3 adintrevimab clinical trial for the prevention of COVID-19 referred to as EVADE have demonstrated that serum-neutralizing titers are correlated with the prevention of COVID-19. This correlation has also been observed in immune-compromised individuals receiving Evusheld, a mAb that targets the spike protein receptor binding domain of SARS-CoV-2 like VYD222. Based on this correlation, we believe that the serum neutralizing titers seen in our Phase 1 clinical trial are highly encouraging and support the potential for VYD222 to provide clinically meaningful protection from symptomatic COVID-19. With positive initial Phase 1 data in hand, we are pleased to have now solidified the design of our CANOPY trial of VYD222 for the prevention of symptomatic COVID-19, which is geared to support a potential EUA submission. We plan to enroll approximately 750 participants total across two cohorts in parallel. In Cohort A, we expect to enroll approximately 300 participants who are significantly immune compromised. This cohort may include, for example, people who are actively being treated for solid tumors, people with hematological malignancies, such as acute leukemia or multiple myeloma regardless of treatment status as well as other groups of people who have weakened immune systems as a result of a medical condition and/or immunosuppressive treatment. All participants in Cohort A will receive VYD222 administered via IV infusion and the co-primary endpoints will be safety and tolerability and serum neutralizing titers at day 28. In this cohort, the primary efficacy analysis will use an immunobridging approach, comparing data obtained in CANOPY for VYD222 to certain historical data from our previous clinical trial of adintrevimab in which serum neutralizing titers correlated with observed clinical efficacy. In Cohort B, we plan to enroll approximately 450 participants who are at risk for exposure to SARS-CoV-2, which is essentially anyone who has regular unmasked interaction with others. Participants in Cohort B will be randomized 2:1 to receive VYD222 or placebo administered via IV infusion. In Cohort B, the primary endpoint will be safety and tolerability. Secondary and exploratory endpoints will include serum neutralizing titers and clinical efficacy. We plan to initiate the CANOPY trial with the 4,500-milligram dose of VYD222. While we believe that all three doses tested in the Phase 1 clinical trial have the potential to provide clinically meaningful protection against symptomatic COVID-19, we have decided to initiate the CANOPY trial with the dose that provided the highest serum neutralizing titers against Omicron XBB.1.5. This decision was informed by the FDA’s preference for a conservative serum-neutralizing titer benchmark and the 4,500-milligram dose. We believe this dose has the potential to provide a significant duration of protection while also providing protection against the potential loss of neutralization activity as SARS-CoV-2 evolves over time. For context, based on our own data from EVADE and other clinical studies of COVID-19 mAbs and vaccines, we believe there is strong clinical evidence that antibody-mediated protection against symptomatic COVID-19 may be achieved even at relatively low serum neutralizing titers on the order of 30 to 100. While we believe the 4,500-milligram dose of VYD222 is likely to provide titers well above the minimum level observed to provide clinically meaningful protection for a significant period of time, we are excited to continue rapidly advancing the VYD222 program while exploring in parallel possible opportunities to leverage other doses in the future. As currently designed, all participants in the CANOPY trial will receive a second dose of VYD222 3 months after the initial dose. We plan to use the observed pharmacokinetic data from the trial in combination with the neutralization potency of VYD222 against relevant circulating SARS-CoV-2 variants to modify our redosing strategy as appropriate. With the size and design of CANOPY, we believe that we can quickly enroll the trial, given the strong interest we have seen from trial sites and immunocompromised people. To facilitate enrollment in Cohort A, we have established a registry of recruitment-ready immunocompromised individuals for potential enrollment. We now have more than 1,000 potentially eligible individuals in our database, which we believe speaks to the strong unmet need. With clinical site selected, study drug available and many other activities already completed, we are pleased to be on track to initiate the CANOPY trial in the near-term. Shifting to the regulatory pathway. As Dave briefly mentioned, the FDA has indicated that the use of a correlative protection or a surrogate of clinical efficacy in an immunobridging approach to a pivotal clinical trial may be a reasonable approach to support an EUA request for new mAb candidates when certain criteria are met. Specifically, when clinical efficacy data from a prototype mAb is available, provided that, one, the new mAb candidate is similar to the prototype mAb such that it leverages a consistent manufacturing platform and has limited structural and functional differences. And two, the new mAb has supportive non-clinical data, such as favorable in vitro neutralization data against currently circulating SARS-CoV-2 variants. We plan to leverage this immunobridging pathway in the U.S. to accelerate the clinical development of VYD222 and anticipated follow-on mAb candidates with our previous mAb candidate at adintrevimab or future proprietary mAb serving as the prototype mAb. We believe we are one of very few companies that can potentially meet all the criteria and utilize this accelerated development pathway for the prevention of COVID-19. The use of adintrevimab as the potential prototype mAb is proprietary to Invivyd and enabled by the data from our previous Phase 2/3 clinical trial of adintrevimab for the prevention of symptomatic COVID-19, which had clinical event end points. In addition to utilizing previously generated adintrevimab data, we plan to use day 28 serum neutralizing titers from the immunocompromised cohort of CANOPY, along with safety data from both CANOPY cohorts to enable the clinical data package for a potential EUA submission for VYD222. Looking outside the U.S., we continue to engage with global regulatory authorities regarding the VYD222 clinical development program. In closing, I’m very pleased with all the progress our team has made, and I’m optimistic about the opportunity we have to make a meaningful difference in the lives of some of the most vulnerable people in our communities. Viruses that typically cause minor illness in immunocompetent people can have devastating consequences for the immune compromised, which leads many of these individuals to self-isolate from their loved ones and miss out on many important moments and activities. For the immune compromise, mAbs have the potential to provide the robust protection from viral threats that they require and deserve. With that, I will turn the call over to Dave to provide an overview of our financials before we open up the call for Q&A.