Thank you, Caroline. Good afternoon, everyone and thank you for joining us today. Before I express how excited I am to be here, I want to take a moment to thank and recognize Dr. Mike Perry. Mike Perry served as CEO for the past five years, and we are grateful to him for his important contributions during his tenure. I’m often asked what about AVITA attracted me to come and join the team. As an AVTIA Board member for the past five quarters, I’ve become very familiar with the business and its challenges and opportunities. What I saw was a transformative technology that has already brought hope to thousands of patients, and an opportunity to work with a great team to bring this technology to thousands more. To illustrate that, I’d like to share with you a recent patient journey, which has inspired me and the team at AVITA. Charlie Anne Xavier was working on a project at her family’s brewery in Virginia when a lifechanging accident engulfed her in flames, causing third degree burns to over 85% of her body. At the VCU, Evan-Haynes Burn Center in Richmond, she was given a slim chance of survival with the expectation of a 12-month stay in the ICU. Instead, Charlie Anne left the hospital nine days shy of six months, to which her husband credits RECELL has a significant part of her successful recovery. Charlie Anne and her adoring husband Andre are now focused on giving back by providing hope to anyone suffering from a traumatic burn injury. Thank you, Charlie Anne and Andre for sharing your story of tragedy and triumph. This is the kind of lifechanging impact we saw continues to provide other patients and one of the main reasons I’m thrilled to have the opportunity to join AVITA. This story and others we have related truly demonstrates the importance of our burn work. Now I’d like to take a moment and discuss the initial priorities that I have been focusing on during my first 100 days as CEO. First, developing the commercial plans for burns and soft tissue repair to drive our growth and preparing to execute on that plan. Secondly, the FDA submissions for soft tissue repair and vitiligo are expected during December 2022 with approvals expected in June 2023. Just last week, the FDA informed us that the RECELL system has been granted the Breakthrough Device designation for both the soft tissue repair submission and the vitiligo submission. The Breakthrough Devices program facilitates active interaction with the FDA and prioritizes the review of subsequent regulatory submissions, including our submissions expected in December. Finally, the automation of the RECELL device for the soft tissue repair and burns program, which will be followed by an automated device for vitiligo. Our growth for the next 24 months to 36 months will be driven by the burns and soft tissue repair markets. The soft tissue repair market will expand our hospital call point and treating physician call points by nearly three times. This expansion of market opportunity is the foremost commercial priority of the company. The vitiligo program will be focusing on achieving reimbursement, supporting early commercial cases and clinical development in support of those initiatives, which we believe we will accomplish by Q1 2025. Now let me discuss our Q3 results. We had a strong top line revenue performance with $9 million in commercial revenue in Q3 2022, which is a 30% increase over the same period the prior year, and a 9% increase on a consecutive quarter basis. Keep in mind, that commercial revenue includes all global revenue, and excludes the $0.1 million in BARDA revenue booked in the quarter. I also have a Japanese market update. In early September, the Ministry of Health and Labor and Welfare, commonly known as MHLW, granted the RECELL System marketing approval for the treatment of acute burns in Japan with very favorable reimbursement of JPY 970,000 for our standard device, which is approximately $7,000 converted at the current exchange rate. We of course, share that revenue with COSMOTEC, the end customer reimbursement price is slightly higher than our current pricing in the US, of which, AVITA receives 40% from our partner COSMOTEC. COSMOTEC is preparing to launch RECELL and we have received an initial stacking order of $555,000 from COSMOTEC in September. At the point of note, other than US revenue, we do not intend to release country-specific revenues in the future, unless there’s some unusual event that causes us to do so. Let me provide an update on our ease of use product. We started selling the ease of use device in Q1 to our larger accounts, which has been well received by our customers. One of the reasons customers prefer this version of RECELL, the streamlines and the workflow mitigates the staffing shortage and reduces the training efforts that both the customer and the AVITA team need to perform. We plan to expand the availability of our ease of use product in the upcoming quarters. With regard to the soft tissue repair market, we are prioritizing our soft tissue repair launch, given our existing codes, the overlap with Level 1 and 2 trauma centers and our existing Burn Center customer base and the ability to leverage and expand our current Salesforce. One clear upside in prioritizing soft tissue repair is that, we will have immediate reimbursement. While Burns is primarily inpatient. We also have outpatient reimbursement through our transitional pass-through code, with a soft tissue repair indication, we find the majority of patients in Level 1 and 2 trauma centers being treated in the outpatient setting. Thus, we have been educating our burns’ customers on how to utilize these codes correctly. Further, approximately 50% of our current burn centers overlap into Level 1 and 2 trauma centers. Thus, we gained significant leverage from the sales organization as we expand in the coming year. Earlier this year, we released the top line results for our soft tissue repair trust. The study had two co-primary endpoints, one endpoint had a hypothesis of superiority for donor skin sparing and the other co-primary endpoint had a hypothesis of non-inferiority for healing, based on pairwise comparisons, where each subject receives both RECELL treatment, and standard of care treatment as a study control. I’m pleased to report that both co-primary endpoints have been met for both donor sparing superiority and non-inferiority healing from RECELL and soft tissue repair. In our initial analysis, the healing endpoint for RECELL versus control did not reach pre-specified statistical non-inferiority. However, after data re-verification and associated corrections, an updated analysis has revealed that the healing endpoint has been met. Now let’s spend a few minutes on vitiligo. For those of you who might be new to AVITA, vitiligo is a chronic autoimmune disease that attacks pigment producing cells, resulting in spots or patches of lighter or white, deep pigmented skin. Although non-threatening, non-life threatening, it can occur anywhere on the body and can result in severe psychological denotations due to perceived disfigurement. Today, vitiligo affects up to 2% of the population worldwide, including an estimated 6.5 million Americans. In September, we announced results from a pivotal clinical trial, evaluating the safety and effectiveness of the RECELL System for repigmentation of stable vitiligo lesions. We met our primary endpoint in this trial. Let me share a little bit about that endpoint. It is unique as there has never been a trial that effectively treats vitiligo with cellular transplant patient. Study compares success rates in a design where each patient randomly received RECELL treatment in one portion of the depigmented area. The study control was a standard of care, narrowband ultraviolet-B phototherapy, which is typical first-line treatment for vitiligo. Repigmentation was evaluated six months after treatment by an expert Central Review Committee, CRC. The CRC reported 56% of RECELL treatments, versus 12% of control treatments resulted in repigmentation of more than 50% of the treated area. The CRC also reported 36% of RECELL treatments versus 0% of control treatments result in repigmentation of at least 80% of the treated area, establishing super-superiority for the primary endpoint. We’ve had an opportunity to review this data with our medical advisors. The response was enthusiastic, particularly, because they have no treatment that achieves this result in six months. These are the first results from a US randomized controlled trial of the RECELL system in treating patients with segmental and non-segmental stable vitiligo and provide a foundation for communicating favorable clinical benefit. We intend to submit to the FDA for this indication in December of this year, with approval expected in June 2023. We’re tremendously excited about the pending submission and subsequent approval in June ‘23. Going forward, we will be working with private payers and CMS to establish reimbursement for the vitiligo RECELL treatment. Currently, we believe we can achieve this by January 2025. During the interim period, we will continue to conduct vitiligo clinical research to support the ideal patient selection and treatment regimen for the broader population of vitiligo patients. The pure scale of the market and the significant benefit to these patients will be further enhanced by our automation program, which will allow for physician office treatment with the RECELL for vitiligo. We’ll keep you current with our progress on automation, clinical development and reimbursement. Finally, I’d like to take a moment to emphasize the growth drivers for 2023. First and foremost, we’re focused on accelerating growth in our burns business through greater penetration in burn centers, and greater adoption by burns surgeries and expansion of our commercial organization. Second, we’re planning a full and immediate launch into the soft tissue repair market in July 2023, following the expected FDA approval in June 2023. We plan to hit the ground running at launch with an expanded field force in place, as well as with commercial support resources and programs. Looking at this strategically, our growth in 2023 and 2024 will be driven by the penetration of the burn and soft tissue repair markets in the US, followed by the achievement of reimbursement for vitiligo for a full launch in January 2025. With that, I’d like to turn it over to Michael Holder, Chief Financial Officer.