Thank you, Bill, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. When I joined Ocular, our number one priority was bringing AXPAXLI to market for wet age-related macular degeneration. Wet AMD affects about 1.65 million people in the United States, which translates to approximately one in every 160 adults. That means many of us are likely to know someone who is affected by this disease, and it reminds us that this market is large and underserved with up to 40% of patients discontinuing treatment within the first year alone. Just before AAO in mid-October, we reported that recruitment has progressed rapidly for SOL-1, allowing us to project full randomization by year end 2024, which is well ahead of our prior guidance. Today, we are thrilled to share that following this outstanding SOL-1 recruitment success, our active study sites can now enroll new patients directly into SOL-R, our second registrational trial for AXPAXLI in wet AMD. Let me repeat, SOL-1 has reached a key enrollment milestone and we have turned the switch, allowing clinical sites to directly enroll patients into SOL-R. This is a significant milestone and we expect this adjustment to further accelerate the pace of SOL-R enrollment. As we reflect on the start of this year, there were widespread concerns that enrolling SOL-1 would be challenging. The consensus was that the trial's unique superiority design, which we believe is directly in line with the FDA's draft guidance and validated with a special protocol agreement, would lead to significant recruitment hurdles. In fact, some investors projected it would take us as long as 18 months to two years to complete randomization. In response, we assembled a world class team who went beyond simply activating clinical trial sites. The team leaned on decades of experience and relationships to actively engage and communicate with the retina community in a way that resonated deeply. This extraordinary level of engagement sparked a remarkable level of enthusiasm and commitment from investigators and study coordinators for both our SOL studies. Our approach has transformed what was expected to be a difficult enrollment process into one marked by rapid and enthusiastic participation. Accelerating the enrollment timelines for SOL-1 has positioned us for an impactful year in 2025, setting the stage for a significant milestone with clinical data expected in the fourth quarter by reaching enrollment targets ahead of schedule. We are advancing more rapidly toward the top line data that will provide pivotal insights into AXPAXLI's potential in treating wet AMD. This acceleration brings us one step closer to potentially delivering a much needed therapeutic option to patients who deserve a more sustainable treatment and better long-term outcomes. But enrolling SOL-1 is just the beginning. SOL-1 is the first of two registrational studies for AXPAXLI and wet AMD. Our second registrational trial, SOL-R, is a repeat dosing non-inferiority study. These two studies were meticulously crafted to work in harmony, strategically designed to enhance each other's enrollment while providing a broad evaluation of AXPAXLI's durability, repeatability, and flexibility. SOL-1 focuses on highlighting AXPAXLI's durability. The goal here is to establish superiority in durability over 2 milligram aflibercept. SOL-R, on the other hand, is a more familiar repeat dosing non-inferiority trial that is designed to ensure our findings are robust and applicable in real world settings. Both studies were thoughtfully aligned with regulatory guidance. SOL-1 supported by a special protocol agreement and SOL-R supported by a Type C written response from the FDA earlier this year. Importantly, neither of these trials require sham for masking. The FDA has repeatedly stated, including most recently on a podium at AAO, that they do not recommend sham or masking because sham can elicit bias. In addition to taking important steps to reduce our regulatory risk, we focused just as much attention on taking steps to derisk the clinical outcomes and reduce variability between subjects. In SOL-1, we are administering two loading doses of aflibercept and requires subjects to gain at least 10 ETDRS letters in BCVA or to reach approximately 20/20 vision prior to randomization. This ensures that we are only selecting subjects that have been responsive to anti-VEGF therapy and allows us to focus on durability of each treatment arm. Meanwhile, in SOL-R, we've gone a step further by incorporating five loading doses and two observation periods to carefully screen out subjects who are highly VEGF dependent. This approach emphasizes patient stability. Again, here, we are continuing to focus on reducing risk by taking action to ensure that the enrolled patient population is as homogeneous as reasonably possible. By building in these measures, we're reducing variability, enhancing patient selection, and we believe strengthening the potential for successful clinical trial outcomes. From the onset, we also designed SOL-1 and SOL-R to complement each other and boost recruitment for both studies. Initially, all subjects enrolling in SOL-R were required to be loading or randomization failures in SOL-1. This approach ensured that SOL-R, which is widely seen as the more attractive trial for physicians to enroll their patients in, did not cannibalize enrollment in SOL-1. As I shared at the outset of my comments, today, we're announcing that SOL-1 has reached a key enrollment milestone and our trial sites are now enrolling subjects directly into SOL-R. We expect this important update will lead to further acceleration in SOL-R enrollment, which is already well underway. As SOL-1 very quickly approaches complete randomization, subjects who are not ultimately randomized can seamlessly transition into SOL-R. This coordinated approach allowed us to avoid the typical slowdown seen toward the end of trial enrollment, creating a streamlined and efficient pathway that capitalizes on recruitment momentum at our clinical sites. We believe that this will provide us with a tremendous advantage as we continue to strengthen our deep history and strong relationships with our clinical trial sites heading into 2025. The bottom line is that we've seen outstanding demand for participation in our AXPAXLI clinical studies, underscoring the strong enthusiasm and interest within the retina community for a durable treatment option. This level of demand is particularly encouraging as it signals the excitement for AXPAXLI among both patients and physicians. Based on our historical clinical data generated for AXPAXLI combined with actions we have taken to de-risk our SOL studies, we remain confident in the potential success of both SOL-1 and SOL-R. To date, AXPAXLI is the only TKI we are aware of to show proof-of-concept for monotherapy activity in treatment-naive wet AMD patients. To take that a step further, if you look at our prior U.S. wet AMD study, treatment with AXPAXLI alone resulted in an impressive 100% per protocol rescue free rate at six months, and that was in a trial where no steps were taken to de-risk the patient population or trial design. Finally, we believe AXPAXLI is the only TKI to show clear signals of efficacy in subjects with non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy or NPDR. In our HELIOS trial, the administration of a single AXPAXLI hydrogel, literally zero subjects were observed to have developed any vision threatening complications at 48 weeks compared to 38% of subjects in the sham control arm, which is in-line with natural history data. In other words, not a single patient after just one injection of AXPAXLI developed a potentially blinding complication at 48 weeks. Moreover, every subject in the AXPAXLI arm with non-center involved diabetic macular edema experienced disease improvement. It cannot be overstated these types of results do not occur by accident. We believe the results from SOL-1 and SOL-R may set a new standard, emphasizing the strengths of our data and underscoring our advantages in the competitive landscape. As such, it is imperative that we be prepared for a strong commercial launch should AXPAXLI be approved. If clinical demand is a proxy for commercial interest, and we believe it is, then we should plan for strong commercial interest in AXPAXLI potentially ushering in a new era of wet AMD treatment. We benefit greatly from having a remarkable commercial team that is currently achieving excellent results with DEXTEN