Thank you, Pete, and thank you all for joining us this afternoon. Last year, as we continued in dose escalation with our menin inhibitor ziftomenib in an all-comer population of patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia, we sought FDA feedback regarding the design of our registration-directed trial. In the context of those discussions, FDA advised we spend more time in our Phase 1 study to identify an optimal dose. Guidance we now know was part of a broader FDA initiative in oncology drug development aptly named Project Optimus. In agreement with FDA, we enrolled a Phase 1b study with two-dose expansion cohorts, 200 milligrams and 600 milligrams, each comprised of 12 patients with NPM1 mutant or KMT2A rearranged relapsed refractory AML. I'm pleased to report we've nearly completed our assessment of these patients in the expansion cohorts for efficacy, safety and tolerability, as well as pharmacokinetics and exposure, and we believe we've identified a recommended Phase 2 dose for ziftomenib. We're working diligently to gather the data package for submission to FDA and look forward to sharing the recommended Phase 2 dose for ziftomenib later this year, pending the agency's review along with top line data from the Phase 1b study with a more complete dataset reserved for presentation at a medical meeting in the fourth quarter. In the meantime, enrollment in KOMET-001 has continued and we're pleased to announce that we've enrolled an additional 18 patients in the Phase 1b study in less than three months that what we believe to be the recommended Phase 2 dose, an indication of the continued enthusiasm surrounding ziftomenib among investigators and patients. We continue to believe data from all patients treated at the recommended Phase 2 dose will have potential to contribute to the registrational patient population. In parallel with our efforts to advance ziftomenib's monotherapy, we've been working to operationalize a series of combination studies in the relapsed and frontline settings. We've designed these studies to assess the safety, tolerability and therapeutic activity of ziftomenib in combination with current standards of care in AML, including venetoclax and azacitidine, FLT3 inhibitors and standard induction cytarabine, daunorubicin chemotherapy, commonly referred to as 7+3. We remain enthusiastic about the potential for ziftomenib in the treatment of acute leukemias as we prepare to transition into the Phase 2 registration-directed portion of KOMET-001 and initiate our combination studies pending determination of our recommended Phase 2 dose. Although our menin program continues to capture much of the attention, we remain just as motivated by opportunities for farnesyl transferase inhibition in oncology, one of the first therapeutic applications of an FTI as a targeted therapy with via direct inhibition of an oncogenic protein namely HRAS. We've demonstrated the potential for tipifarnib to drive durable responses in recurrent and metastatic HRAS mutant head and neck squamous cell carcinoma or HNSCC, and our ongoing AIM-HN registration-directed trial continues in that indication. More recently, we've begun efforts to build upon the initial monotherapy activity of tipifarnib with a focus on overcoming drug resistance. Late last year, we initiated the current HN study designed to evaluate the combination of tipifarnib and alpelisib, an inhibitor of PI3 Kinase alpha in selected HNSCC patient cohorts. We believe that HRAS and PI3 Kinase alpha are co-dependent oncogenes in HNSCC, and the combination of the two inhibitors has potential to provide improved antitumor activity relative to the inhibition of either target alone. The combination also had potential to increase the total addressable population for tipifarnib to as much as 50% of patients with recurrent and metastatic HNSCC. The initial cohort of the current HN study includes patients with PIK3CA-dependent HNSCC, and I'm pleased to report that we recently dosed the first patient in a second cohort comprised of patients with HRAS overexpression. Our goal with the current HN trial is to identify a recommended Phase 2 dose and schedule for the combination in each patient cohort. We are encouraged by the preliminary safety and tolerability of the combination, as well as early evidence of clinical activity, and we believe we may be in a position to share preliminary proof of mechanism data from patients in the PIK3CA-dependent HNSCC cohort later this year. Beyond HNSCC, we continue to elucidate the role of FTIs in preventing or delaying the emergence of resistance for certain classes of targeted therapy with potential to drive deeper and more durable responses in large solid tumor indications. One of these emerging combination opportunities was unveiled earlier this year at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting, the preclinical data generated through a collaboration with INSERM support potential for tipifarnib to prevent emergence of resistance to osimertinib and other potent EGFR inhibitors in EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer. We're preparing to initiate a Phase 1 study of tipifarnib in combination with osimertinib in EGFR mutated non-small cell lung cancer, which we call KURRENT-LUNG later this quarter. We intend to perform initial clinical evaluation of tipifarnib and osimertinib together valuable experience in data, while in parallel advancing KO-2806, the lead development candidate in our next generation FTI program through IND enabling studies. KO-2806 represents a next-generation farnesyl transferase inhibitor with improved PK, exposure and bioavailability relative to tipifarnib. In addition to combining FTIs with EGFR inhibitors, we continue to investigate combinations with other potent targeted therapies in preclinical studies that may represent additional opportunities. We intend to evaluate KO-2806 in combination with these targeted therapies and we remain on track to submit an IND application for KO-2806 in the fourth quarter. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Tom for a discussion of our financial results.