Thank you, Linda, and good afternoon, everyone. I'm excited to report a strong quarter of 18% growth with total net sales of $7.4 million, an increase of $1.2 million over the prior year. Domestic Core led with 15% revenue growth that was driven by increases in volume for pumps and consumables from new account wins in our key specialty pharmacy accounts and continued strength in prefilled penetration. International core net revenues increased by 23%, with growth across several key markets. Driven by international expansion efforts and increased availability of SCIg drug, Novel Therapies net revenues grew by 62% driven by a nonrecurring engineering innovation service agreement with revenue supporting progression toward a clinical supply milestone. As we look at our gross margin, we can think about margin progression in 2 halves for 2023. In the first half, we expect margins to range from 55% to 57%. We are on track with the 56.1% gross margin reported in the quarter. During the quarter, we completed our manufacturing transition to a third-party CMO, and we consolidated manufacturing into our new site in Mala, New Jersey. This consolidation allowed us to close down and exit our Chester facility. In Q2, we will be recognizing on the P&L the incremental costs incurred from Q1 during the manufacturing transition period and, therefore, expect to see a similar margin profile to Q1. As we look at the second half of the year, we expect significant improvements in gross margin with 2 full quarters of lower-cost outsourced products, lower labor and overhead, and improved efficiency in Modelo. This will lead us to achieving strong second-half margins and a plan to exit the year at a gross margin rate between 60% and 62%. Our cash balance at the end of Q1 was $12.2 million and represented a $5.2 million decrease from the beginning of the year. Similar to last year, we plan for a higher level of cash burn in the first half than in the second half. For instance, you might recall that our cash burn in the first half of 2022 was about $7 million, and we reduced that to under $1 million in the second half. We expect a similar cash usage pattern this year. We're about a 90-10 split between the first and second half. Given this pattern, I want to spend a few minutes on first-quarter cash burn, and we'll come back to the outlook and expectations for the remainder of the year on the guidance slide. As we look at the usage of the $5.2 million of cash in the quarter, we saw the majority, or $2.8 million coming from working capital in 3 major areas: in the form of higher accounts receivable driven by higher March revenues, a higher level of transition inventory to avoid supply disruption as we move manufacturing locations and a higher level of payments driven by bonus and year-end accruals. Net losses, excluding noncash items, were $1.8 million, of which the biggest driver was total operating expenses for the first quarter of 2023 of $7.2 million, primarily due to innovation investments in research and development. We expect a lower overall cash burden in 2023 and continue to prioritize our expenses and capital plans according to our revenue growth goals. We will come back to the cash outlook on the next slide. We reaffirm our year-end guidance of a cash balance greater than $10 million, driven by working capital improvements, revenue growth, and gross margin expansion. We are reaffirming our outlook and expect the following for the full year 2023, revenue to be between $32.5 million to $33.5 million, representing growth in the range of 17% to 20%. And as previously stated, we have identified several key milestones we will attract throughout the year that will serve as the foundation for revenue growth. These include an expanded Novel Therapies pipeline with 5 additional new collaborations, expecting more of these in the back half with one already signed, bringing our total collaborations to at least 20 by the end of the year and 2 to 510(k) filings in the second half of the year. For SCIg drug market growth of greater than 10% and prefilled penetration increasing to the 15% range. Our gross margins are between 58% to 60% for the full year and to exit the year between 60% to 62% gross margin. Key drivers behind the increase in our 2023 gross margins that were successfully completed in Q1 include: completion of the manufacturing transition, including the Chester site closure and consolidation in Kamala and ramp-up of our outsourced consumables and contract manufacturing. With this, we target 55% to 57% gross margin for the first half and more than 60% margins in the second half of 2023. We expect our cash balance at year-end 2023 to be greater than $10 million. Given our revenue and gross margin guidance, the other major drivers include: total operating expenses for the year inclusive of stock compensation expense of $30 million, and we expect to see a higher sequential level of R&D spend in Q2 as we advanced several of our key product development programs into its next phase of development. An improvement in working capital, including lowering inventory by approximately $2 million throughout the course of the year and then keeping our DSO and DPO balances in the range of 45 to 50 days, and finally, receiving the ERC credit of $700,000. With these assumptions, this gets us to the ending cash balance of greater than $10 million. We continue to expect a breakeven in the second half of 2024 and with enough cash to execute our strategic plan. While we may look to increase the cash on our balance sheet through non-dilutive debt financing to fund our growth, we are not anticipating or planning any equity raises at this time. I will now turn the call back to Linda for our closing comments.