Thanks Mike. I think our Q3 results demonstrate the strategy we're paying off and I'm excited to share the highlights. We generated $215 million in total revenue and product revenues were up 33% versus last year. Volumes were stronger again across the business with strong year-on-year growth in women's health and oncology versus Q3 of last year and a nice sequential recovery quarter for organ health. Signatera volume growth particularly continues to exceed our internal forecast and this was the second-best quarter ever in terms of the absolute unit growth in the clinical panel. As good as those topline metrics are, I'm most encouraged by the margin and cash on results. We talked about the focused effort to improve ASPs and I think that effort started to pay off this quarter. Gross margins were 45%. You'll recall we also had 45% gross margins in Q2, but we noted it was closer to 43% on a normalized basis as it had some one-time benefits. In contrast, we think this quarter represents an organic 45% based on ASP and COGS improvements. We slashed our cash burn dramatically in the quarter as well, almost a 50% reduction compared to last quarter. Clearly, we are getting leverage as revenue grew rapidly, while operating expenses was essentially flat and margins have improved. Our efforts to improve ASPs, is also leading to getting reimbursed more quickly on average from payers. Mike will talk about this later in the call, but we think this is a good sign that more ASP improvements are in store for future quarters. These results in the continued strong trends we are seeing so far in Q4 put us in a position to significantly improve our annual guidance across the board. We are raising the revenue guide once again to a completely new range and now expect to come in between $1.035 billion and $1.050 billion in total revenue for the year. We are tightening the gross margin guide to the top end of the range and are now expecting full year gross margins to land between 43% and 44% which we think implies the strong Q3 gross margins are repeatable in Q4. Finally, we are dramatically reducing our tax burn guidance for the year now expected to be $250 million to $280 million. This represents a more than $200 million reduction in cash burn versus 2022. The momentum we are seeing leaves us even more confidence that we are in a good position to repay cash flow breakeven quarter next year. And we do not believe we need any guideline changes in order to hit that milestone. The significant reduction in cash burn has largely been achieved, because our core strategy is working. We are growing revenue rapidly while reducing COGS and improving ASPs, we are keeping OpEx stable though at very competitive levels allowing us to maintain a strong commercial team and continue to focus on clinical and innovation road maps. For example over the past few years, we've made investments into technology development, product enhancements and clinical trials and these investments are now resulting in an excellent pipeline of new products and new indications to go after within our core businesses. As a result, in 2024, we expect to announce new MRD-related products and updates along with other major innovations that empower future growth. In addition on the clinical side, we have major randomized controlled trials that we expect will be read out in 2024 some of which have taken investments over five or more years to get to this point. So we think we are positioned very nicely for the future. We're on a rapid revenue growth path, while moving quickly to cash flow breakeven and doing so with our previous multiyear investments driving potential major near-term catalysts. On top of our financial results, we had several big wins during the quarter. I'll start with RenaCARE which has proven to be a landmark study for us in an area that we believe can drive significant growth overtime. Last week we announced the study publication as in JASN, a leading nephrology [indiscernible] and also share the results at the ASN Kidney Week conference. As a reminder RenaCARE is a large real-world prospective study of more than 1,600 patients that looked at the impact of genetic testing within chronic kidney disease. The finding is coding strong clinical and diagnostic utility profile for Renasight or genetic test to identify causes of CKD. The results also exceeded clinical precedents for the implementation of genetic testing within an at-risk population for example Hereditary Breast Cancer which we think is a good proxy for comparison. I don't spend too much time on this now, as Solomon will cover it in detail later in the call, but I'll just note that we're very excited to see where we go from here. Feedback from nephrologists has been positive. And we believe these results lay a strong foundation for increased adoption and coverage. The market opportunity is potentially large and notably underpenetrated with 37 million people affected by CKD in the United States. There's a significant need for reliable and actual genetic information to serve these patients and we think Renasight could be that driver backed by the strong clinical evidence we reported in the study. In oncology, we presented key colon cancer data at ESMO from the GALAXY arm of the CIRCULATE study. Notably, this analysis included 2,000 patients, which was like as many as the Nature Medicine paper as well as significantly longer follow-up at 24 months. The data provides significant insights to the predictive and prognostic value Signatera and CRC with ongoing excellent performance by Signatera. Separately, while MRV has historically been focused on the initial adjuvant draw and the adjuvant chemo decision-making, the initial MRD timepoint represents only a tiny fraction of the overall MRD opportunity. More and more we are leading the way in a new area that we call treatment on molecular relapse, which is where patients can actually receive a drug upon becoming ctDNA positive with Signatera in the surveillance setting rather than waiting for radiologic evidence of recurrence. This is part of our key vision for how the serial use of Signatera to transform cancer care and ultimately save lives. And we see it gaining real momentum now with sponsorship from both pharma and academic consortia. In fact, long-term this might be the single biggest MRD opportunity and one where we believe Natera has a meaningful first-mover advantage with multiple Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials already underway, some which have been ongoing for several years already. So Alex will describe treatment on molecular relapse a little bit later in the call including describing the new SREP [ph] ctDNA study which seeks to show the benefits of treatment on molecular relapse in early-stage breast cancer. This is a randomized Phase 3 trial conducted across 120 sites in 12 countries led by the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, otherwise known as EORTC. We also published a digital data in lung cancer, strengthening our leadership position in the patient population. In 2023 alone, we publicly presented the results for four key lung cancer cells across the neoadjuvant, adjuvant and metastatic treatment study and we've seen very strong performance. Two of these were conducted in collaboration with our partners at Foundation Medicine and demonstrated strong clinical test performance for immunotherapy monitoring. These studies helped to support the broad clinical launch and Medicare covers their FoundationOneTracker, which we also announced in October. As many of you know Tracker is a complimentary asset at Signatera with a focus on patients with advanced stage cancers. We're very excited about the launch and believe this new offering will help oncologists make the best possible decisions about the pace of care through actionable and personalized data. Great. So with that let's get into some of the business trends on the next slide. We saw continued strong growth in volumes across the major product areas as I described. In women's health, we had strong growth compared to Q3 of last year. The strong growth particularly given our ongoing efforts to reduce some volume from account where we don't see a path to stable reimbursement over time. In Organ Health we were pleased with the return to growth. As a reminder, earlier this year, reimbursement changes created some uncertainty for transplant centers about when they should order Vasistera. That uncertainty has now largely been resolved. And in Q3 we saw coming our larger customers recurring to prior levels. Both Organ Health and Women's Health represent large underserved base of population that have a critical need for the type of testing we offer. Solomon will cover the oncology volumes later in the call where the trends continue to be positive. On the next slide you can see that our revenue growth is getting a significant boost from improved reimbursement in addition to our volume growth. The left chart of total revenues, which grew 27% year-on-year, and I think that growth rate actually understates our good progress because we recorded a large one-time licensing payment in Q3 of last year. The product revenues on the right-hand side of the page we adjust for that. And as you can see product revenues were up 33% year-on-year. We made a decision last November to redouble our efforts on reimbursement and billing operations making sure that we navigate all the operational hurdles required to get reimbursement for covered service. For example, doing better on appeals when a service is denied or chasing down missing insurance information. Since then, we've made a significant investment in new processes. We've added new team members and we've identified systems and engineering opportunities. While we're still at the very early stages, it's great to see that we're starting to see these efforts come through in the financial results and there's still a long way to go. Of course, these improvements benefit both revenue growth and gross margins as you can see on the next slide. Gross margin dipped to 41% in Q4 of last year and then to 39% in Q1 of this year as we executed growth on the initiatives that we've described in the past. On the Q2 call, we described that gross margins were helped a bit by some one-time factors. In that time, we estimated the organic gross margin to be about 43% on a normalized basis. In Q3, our 45% gross margin is largely organic. We are seeing modest improvements in the NIPT and carrier ASPs and have outperformed our expectations in Signatera. For each of these products we have put in place multiple operational initiatives whose effects have not yet been fully recognized in revenue approval. So we're cautiously optimistic that we can deliver steady gains in the gross margins throughout the course of 2024. Another interesting byproduct of all this efforts is that our cap election cycle noticeably improved in Q3 compared to prior quarters, which helped drive the significant reduction in quarterly cash burn along with the revenue growth and gross margin improvement. Finally, we continue to hit our marks on cost of goods sold as we've expanded our Signatera, Exton laboratory and executed COGS projects across the company. We've got a full slate of these lab infrastructure projects and we expect to launch many of them during 2024. This has been a big area of investment within our R&D budget and it will be nice to see that investment pay off. In addition to the above cards project, we've also passed some key validation and regulatory milestones with an alternative NGF provider. We validated the Signatera technology on an alternative NGF platform and in partnership with a major pharmaceutical company achieve a regulatory milestone using that alternate platform. In addition, we validated NIPT on alternative NGF platform and past the regulatory milestones which we may now launch a version of in our centralized laboratory. All of these factors give us confidence that we are on track to get to a cash flow breakeven quarter next year. And with that, let me turn it over to Solomon, who will dive deeper on the results from RenaCARE in the Oncology business. Solomon?