Thank you, Lonnel. As highlighted on the slide, we delivered on a number of key milestones this quarter, including the closing of a public offering and concurrent private placement that resulted in aggregate gross proceeds of $143.7 million, providing capital to invest in both our commercial launch of INPEFA and our clinical development plans. And as Lonnel noted earlier, we continued our execution on launch readiness activities for INPEFA, enabling launch of product into market within 30 days of FDA approval. These launch readiness activities included appropriate preapproval information exchanges with payers across national and regional accounts, government and institutions, and continuation of the groundwork that enabled us to make bid submissions within days of FDA approval. We brought on board, trained and deployed a field force of experienced cardiovascular sales professionals. We finalized wholesaler and distribution agreements and put product into channel. And we launched a number of promotional resources, including our HCP weight [ph] facing website highlighting our key messages and differentiation. And, finally, we launched our INPEFA Together program of patient support offerings, which we’ll talk more about shortly. Turning to the FDA’s approval of INPEFA, we wanted to summarize 4 key critical elements. First, INPEFA was granted a broad label in heart failure across the full range of left ventricular ejection fraction, including HFpEF and HFrEF, and for patients with and without diabetes. Second, in an important and differentiating element of that label, INPEFA reduced the risk of total occurrence of cardiovascular death, hospitalization for heart failure and urgent heart failure visits by 33%, compared to placebo in a SOLOIST-WHF study of worsening heart failure patients who initiated on therapy in the hospital or promptly following discharge. Third, recently adopted guidelines support the use of SGLT inhibitors like INPEFA in all heart failure patients. The only class of therapy recommended is foundational treatment, regardless of left ventricular ejection fraction, and they specifically cite the SOLOIST-WHF study. Finally, a reminder that INPEFA is the first compound to demonstrate a reduction on both mortality and heart failure events, when initiated during or shortly after discharge from a heart failure hospitalization. Based on our post-hoc analysis looking at cardiovascular death and heart failure events occurring within 30 and 90 days post-discharge, INPEFA resulted in a significant relative risk reduction versus placebo of approximately 50%, the composite of cardiovascular death and readmission for heart failure at both 30 and 90 days following hospital discharge. These findings are unique and underscore the benefits of early initiation of evidence based heart failure therapy. When looking at the heart failure market dynamics, the updated guidelines and growing clinical evidence continue to help fuel the growth of the heart failure indicated SGLT inhibitors. Use in heart failure of the two other SGLT inhibitors approved for that indication has more than doubled since the beginning of 2022, and the heart failure branded market has grown by almost 40% from 2021 to 2022. With the approval of INPEFA and its broad label, we can compete across all of heart failure. However, our primary focus at launch is on the sweet spot of care, which is the transition of care patient. Based on the unique data in our SOLOIST-WHF trial, patients who are hospitalized for heart failure are ideal candidates for INPEFA once stabilized and before leaving the hospital or soon thereafter. To summarize, we believe we have a tremendous commercial opportunity for INPEFA bolstered by updated heart failure treatment guidelines, a growing unmet medical need with SGLT adoption still in the early part of the adoption curve, and a unique clinical dataset for INPEFA specifically addressing patients recently hospitalized for heart failure. And we are combining these factors into a focused commercial strategy using targeted messaging based on areas of clinical differentiation and directed to those providers, where the messages are expected to have the most impact, including cardiologists in those systems that bear the cost of hospitalizations and re-hospitalizations. As mentioned earlier, a key platform we launched at the end of June was our collection of patient support offerings, which we have launched under the name INPEFA Together. These programs are designed to reduce barriers for healthcare professionals and their patients who are prescribed INPEFA and can be accessed through our INPEFA Together website to help address each patient’s unique situation. While we rapidly pursue payer coverage, these programs will be important to ensure eligible patients are able to fill their prescriptions and provide options if INPEFA is not yet covered by their insurance plan. These programs include an option for a 30-day voucher under which patients may receive their first 30-day prescription of INPEFA for no out-of-pocket cost. Finally, and importantly, we wanted to provide an update on the key launch metrics we have committed to sharing. The data is limited this quarter as it represents activity from only our first week of launch, but it does show the early impact we were able to have in that short timeframe. Ex-factory shipments, which translated into our gross sales were approximately 1,200 bottles shipped to 15 distribution partners. These initial shipments to wholesalers and our distribution partners were the first step in enabling a patient to obtain access to an INPEFA script from pharmacies across the United States. Looking at prescription activity, we saw 6 new prescriptions in the first 5 days of launch. In addition to the prescription activity available via IQVIA, we will also share in future calls certain internal data from our INPEFA Together program offerings, which represent additional scripts not captured in the publicly available dataset. Turning to our market access discussions for plan coverage, we have currently submitted 16 bid submissions covering 198 million lives across both commercial and Medicare books of business and across both national and regional accounts. As shared at the time of our launch, during 2023, we will be focused on gaining access and this quarter we have made important steps in the contracting process with several payers which are a key first step in order to have INPEFA added to formularies. We will continue to actively pursue insurance coverage of INPEFA and expect to have new updates on our coverage status in our next quarterly call. We also continue to pursue access to INPEFA on formularies within integrated delivery networks and have identified several key accounts where we expect to have the opportunity to achieve wins for INPEFA in the next few months. We look forward to sharing with you additional updates on our launch progress and our upcoming calls. We will now turn briefly to our LX9211 program. LX9211 is a potent, highly-selective, small molecule inhibitor of a novel target, adapter-associated kinase 1, or AAK1. In a number of relevant animal models of neuropathic pain, LX9211 demonstrated consistent significant reductions in pain scores even when compared to positive controls such as gabapentin. LX9211 achieves high level of the drug in the CNS and, importantly, the mechanism of action of LX9211 is independent of the opioid pathway. In Phase 1 studies, LX9211 was shown to be well tolerated with a pharmacokinetic profile supportive of once daily dosing. Lexicon has been granted fast track designation by the FDA for diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain. We believe LX9211 has a promising profile based on 2 completed proof-of-concept studies and a substantial market opportunity. LX9211 has the potential to overcome many of the shortcomings of current therapies and could become a welcome new innovation for those suffering from diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain, or DPNP, on a daily basis. This is a large and growing market with a high unmet medical need, with more than 20 million Americans experiencing neuropathic pain and approximately 5 million DPNP patients in the U.S. in 2022. I would now like to turn the call over to Craig to provide further details about these late-stage clinical development plans for LX9211.