Thank you, Roger. I'd like to group the recent litigation and regulatory activity into two buckets. First, those items on the critical path to YUTREPIA’s approval. Second, the recent attempts by United Therapeutics to assert new legal theories to block approval of YUTREPIA. All told, we see the increased and frantic litigation activity by United Therapeutics as perhaps a sign that even they believe that the legal impediments to final approval of YUTREPIA are nearing an end. In the first bucket I mentioned, as we have publicly stated previously, there are only two items on the critical path for YUTREPIA to be launched. First, Judge Andrews must lift the injunction he ordered in August 2022 based on his finding of infringement of the 793 patent, a patent that has subsequently been invalidated, a finding that was affirmed again yesterday when the Federal Circuit denied United Therapeutics’ request for a rehearing. And second, the regulatory exclusivity granted to Tyvaso for the PH-ILD indication must expire, which will occur on March 31. Once both of these have occurred, the FDA will have the ability to issue final approval for YUTREPIA for both the PAH and PH-ILD indications. We'll not speculate on the specific date when Judge Andrews will render his decision, but the matter has been fully briefed and could be decided at any time. In the second bucket, over the last several weeks, United Therapeutics has sought to add new impediments to FDA approval in our launch of YUTREPIA by seeking preliminary injunctions in multiple proceedings. However, as we have stated previously, in order to obtain any preliminary injunctions, the burden will be on United Therapeutics to convince the judge that among other things, they're likely to succeed on the merits in those actions. We believe that this burden will be a challenge for them to meet based on the laws and the facts at issue. Their first request for preliminary injunction is directed to the second Hatch-Waxman lawsuit alleging infringement of the 327 patent in the treatment of PH-ILD. Issued after the YUTREPIA NDA was submitted, and after Liquidia amended its NDA to add PH-ILD to the label for YUTREPIA, the 327 patent covers the treatment of PH-ILD patients with Tyvaso in accordance with the dosing regimen in the Tyvaso label. As we have noted previously, there is considerable prior art that teaches the treatment of PH-ILD patients with Tyvaso, including the 793 patent and multiple peer-reviewed publications in the decade prior to the priority date for the 327 patent that described positive results from treating PH-ILD patients with Tyvaso. The courts have generally refrained from issuing preliminary injunctions in situations where there are substantial questions as to the validity of a patent. And in light of all the prior art here, we believe substantial questions of validity of the 327 patent exist. A second request for preliminary injunction is directed at United Therapeutics’ recently filed suit against the FDA under the Administrative Procedures Act. Filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, this suit alleges that the FDA mistakenly permitted Liquidia to amend the NDA for YUTREPIA to add the PH-ILD indication. We have intervened in the case and are now a party to the case alongside the FDA. First and foremost, the FDA did in fact accept our amendment to the NDA for review, and we believe that the FDA's acceptance of our amendment for review was proper and in full accordance with current FDA regulations. United Therapeutics’ argument that an amendment to add a new indication is improper, is based primarily on a non-binding 2004 FDA guidance document ignoring subsequent FDA regulations adopted in 2016 that expressly contemplate the possibility of adding new indications through an amendment. Secondly, even if United Therapeutics was correct that the amendment was improper, that would not mean that United Therapeutics would receive a new 30-month stay as they have argued. For instance, even if the amendment was now rejected by the FDA, Liquidia could simply supplement its NDA after approval to add the PH-ILD indication, the exact same process used by United Therapeutics to add PH-ILD to their label for Tyvaso. Critically, the statute expressly states that amendments and supplements treated the exact same way in determining whether a patent can give rise to a 30-month stay, meaning that only those patents submitted to the Orange Book prior to the filing date of the original NDA, not the filing date of the amendment or supplement, can give rise to a 30-month stay. Briefing on the motion for preliminary injunction will be completed on March 18, and a hearing will be held on March 29. We look forward to this matter being addressed in short order. In summary, Liquidia sees the path to launching YUTREPIA in two straightforward actions, removal of the injunction, and approval of the product. The rest is a last-ditch attempt by a competitor to make any and every argument they can to maintain their monopoly and deny patients the access to a meaningful treatment option. We have long anticipated the possibility that United Therapeutics could engage in such a flurry of activity as we near clearance of the original Hatch-Waxman litigation, and we are prepared to meet them head on. With that, I will pass to Mike for a review of last year's financials.