President, CEO, Principal Executive Officer, Principal Financial Officer & Co-Chairman of the Board Good afternoon, and thank you for joining. Today, I'm excited to share updates on the progress Pulse Biosciences has made in each of our 3 market development programs. I will then turn the call over to our CFO, Jon Skinner, who will review the second quarter 2025 financial results, and we will then be joined by Bob Duggan, Co-Chair of the Board for a question-and-answer session. Pulse Biosciences has developed a next-generation energy modality, Nanosecond Pulsed-Field Ablation technology or Nano or nsPFA technology that delivers therapeutic ablations applicable to numerous clinical targets by generating much shorter pulse durations measured in the billions of seconds. nsPFA produces a fundamentally differentiated mechanism of action that delivers deep ablations in short delivery times, all while delivering low energy levels to tissue, which reduces the risk of thermal damage and other complicating factors reported in conventional or microsecond PFA as well as with Thermal energies. We are progressing as expected on the priorities we established at the beginning of the year. We have expanded pilot utilization of the percutaneous electrodes for soft tissue ablation initially in benign thyroid disease. We have also submitted our nsPFA 360 catheter IDE to treat atrial fibrillation. So in addition to our previously submitted IDE for the pivotal trial of our cardiac surgical clamp, we are advancing toward our regulatory goals with 2 IDEs under review. In parallel, we continue to treat additional patients with our cardiac devices in their respective feasibility studies in Europe, which continue to generate outstanding clinical results. These achievements further reinforce the advantages we've seen of nsPFA and by continuing to generate these early clinical results, we are increasing awareness of the technology among clinicians who may choose to support Pulse as clinical investigators or commercial customers. I will now provide more detailed updates on each of our individual market programs, starting with our soft tissue ablation device, the Percutaneous Electrode. Our nsPFA percutaneous electrode system is FDA cleared for the ablation of soft tissue. Surgeons are currently using the device in a pilot launch mode for the ablation of symptomatic benign thyroid nodules. We see tremendous market potential for our device in this market as nsPFA addresses unmet clinical needs by offering a safe, minimally invasive, nonsurgical and thyroid sparing treatment that could be appropriate for several hundred thousand patients per year in the U.S. alone. Ablation of these nodules with nsPFA Energy has demonstrated significant nodule size reduction and meaningful reductions in patient symptoms just one month after treatment without evidence of residual fibrosis or scarring that would routinely accompany radiofrequency ablation and without risk of thermal damage to nerves and other critical structures surrounding the thyroid gland. We believe these compelling aspects of the procedure create an opportunity to convert thyroidectomy operations to minimally invasive nsPFA procedures as removal of this vital gland should not be the primary option for a benign growth. We also believe overall interventional volume for benign thyroid nodule treatment will expand by offering nsPFA as a treatment option to a large portion of watchful waiting patients. These patients have chosen not to undergo an intervention because of undesirable consequences of losing their thyroid surgery or accepting the risks of thermal ablation modalities. The percutaneous electrode system from Pulse is currently being used at multiple centers in the United States as part of our pilot launch program. Over 140 patients have been treated in the pilot program to date. With procedure volumes and the number of treatment centers continuing to grow as positive and consistent outcomes are reported across providers. This experience is helping refine our commercial use model. Based on surgeon and patient experience feedback, we have determined the ambulatory surgery center or the operating room to be the preferred sites of care rather than the office setting. All procedures are now being transitioned into the ASC or OR. In addition to the optimal patient and surgeon experience, the reimbursement guidelines in this setting also support improved patient access. We are pleased to see insurance claims are being processed that appropriately reflect the clinical value provided by the procedures. Our therapy development managers are focused on working with these initial users to support their nsPFA procedures and to integrate the procedure into their practices. Our capital equipment system sales professionals are engaged with our first potential customers to purchase the systems and are building a pipeline of potential future adopters, targeting high-volume thyroidectomy centers and those with ultrasound-guided procedure capabilities. Throughout the second half of 2025, we expect to achieve a blend of nonrevenue evaluation procedures and revenue-generating procedures from our first commercial customers. As is normal with capital equipment and new therapies, system sales cycles will span months and acquisition purchasing structures may vary. Generating high-quality clinical data is a central component of our sales and marketing efforts to drive awareness and adoption of nsPFA for the ablation of soft tissues such as benign thyroid nodules. A multicenter prospective clinical study will be performed to generate additional clinical data. We have identified and are contracting with 5 sites for this post-market study and expect to commence enrollment in Q3 upon receipt of IRB approvals. We will also be sharing positive clinical data for the treatment of benign thyroid nodules using nsPFA at the American Thyroid Association Annual Meeting in early September to be presented by Dr. Ralph Tufano. This year, we plan to demonstrate the strong product market fit for the nsPFA percutaneous electrode system as a treatment for ablation of soft tissue such as benign thyroid nodules and to develop clinical evidence demonstrating nsPFA may be a better treatment than surgery for many patients suffering with benign thyroid disease. Let's now discuss our surgical ablation plan. Clinical guidelines from most relevant societies suggest surgical ablation should be performed concomitantly with any first-time nonemergent cardiac surgery for patients with atrial fibrillation. Unfortunately, and likely due to technology limitations this concomitant procedure is underutilized and underpenetrated in practice today. Based on our initial clinical experience, including 3-month post-procedure electrophysiology mapping to demonstrate ablation durability, we believe that our nsPFA surgical ablation clamp will address surgery concerns and clinical barriers to enable more widespread adoption of concomitant ablation by delivering rapid, consistent, full thickness ablations. As a reminder, the FDA awarded Breakthrough Device designation for our cardiac surgical clamp ablation device in July 2024, and the device was accepted for inclusion in the FDA's total product life cycle advisory program, the TAP program, which quickens regulatory submission review times. As mentioned earlier, our IDE submission is under review by the FDA. As planned, the clinical trial will enroll up to approximately 150 patients in up to 20 sites. The trial is designed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the clamp as measured by freedom from any atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter or atrial tachycardia and freedom from use of new or increased antiarrhythmic drug dosing. We anticipate this trial will take approximately 1 year to enroll and we will report on protocol and other timeline details once we have IDE approval. We've received significant site interest to participate in the trial and expect to enroll our first patients in the next few months with rapid site expansion thereafter. We will provide an update on enrollment next quarter. Our confidence in the device is informed by the feasibility study underway in Europe and the outstanding clinical outcomes observed to date. We have 3 centers enrolling patients and have already treated 40 patients. Feedback from surgeons has been positive. Reporting the device consistently produces fast, contiguous and transmural ablation. We remain very pleased with the clinical value proposition offered by nsPFA and the surgical clamp device, including very rapid 5- second ablation times, limited total numbers of ablations and total ablation times and deep and fully transmural lesion formation. We are looking forward to treating our first patients in the U.S. upon IDE approval, while we continue to generate and publish positive patient outcomes with our feasibility study in Europe. Now moving on to our 360 catheter system for AF ablation. Our second feasibility study is ongoing in Europe for the 360 cardiac catheter system and endocardial ablation catheter, specifically designed to deliver our proprietary nsPFA energy. Over 140 patients have been treated to date by multiple investigators with very positive outcomes. We will continue to prioritize the generation of high- quality clinical data to validate our technology and support future regulatory filings and market adoption. Our early clinical results suggest that nsPFA Energy could represent a large step forward from microsecond PFA, the current market standards. For example, our procedure times have decreased compared to what we presented at the HRS 2025 Annual Meeting in April with physicians now reporting ablation times of as little as 5 to 8 minutes compared to averages from our feasibility study of 11 minutes and of about 30 minutes for ablation catheters already on the market. The procedure is streamlined due to the benefits of nsPFA, which allow Pulse to deploy fundamentally different catheter designs. The 360 catheter delivers a full circumferential lesion in a single short energy application without the need for catheter rotations. We believe our system uses less energy, causes less neuromuscular stimulation and enables deeper, more consistent lesions with a more flexible catheter that physicians find easy to manipulate in the left atrium. On the regulatory front, we are making solid progress with our catheter IDE. We are engaged with the FDA in interactive review of our proposed study protocol and remain on track to commence an IDE study in the next few months. Looking ahead, we view the EP ablation market opportunity as one in which a strategic partnership would be beneficial to Pulse. We are focused on the possibilities of collaborating with a market leader in the electrophysiology space to create value for all stakeholders and will provide updates on partnership progress when appropriate. With that, I will turn the call over to Jon to speak about our second quarter financial updates. Jon?