Thank you, Curran. I'll start with RGX-202, a potential one-time gene therapy for the treatment of Duchenne. RGX-202 uses the NAV AAV8 vector and is the only microdystrophin construct to include the C-Terminal domain, a key element of naturally occurring dystrophin critical to protecting muscle from contraction induced damage. This novel construct, combined with the highest purity levels in the field, make RGX-202 a potential best-in-class gene therapy for Duchenne. As Curran mentioned, I'm pleased to share that today, we announced the pivotal phase of the AFFINITY DUCHENNE trial is beyond 50% enrolled. Our accumulating Phase I/II results are showing impressive evidence of differentiation on safety, biomarker and functional outcomes. This is driving increased excitement throughout the Duchenne community, giving us further confidence as we move toward our target of completing pivotal enrollment in the second half of this year. This trial is enrolling ambulatory patients aged one and above, generating data where limited results exist for Duchenne gene therapies. Based on the clinical profile, and in partnership with our investigators, we expanded the inclusion criteria to a broader range of exon mutations. Additional trial sites continue opening in the U.S. and Canada, and we are making great strides in our pivotal strategy to enroll across a wider age range with an aim to secure a broad label supported by a clear and robust product profile. In November, we reported positive safety and efficacy data from the Phase I/II study, including positive functional outcomes from the first five participants at nine and 12 months. These results presented last November showed RGX-202 recipients exceeded external natural history controls and established benchmarks for clinical outcomes. Specifically, we observed functional improvements in all five evaluated patients, including those at dose level 2, consistent, robust expression, transduction and localization of our differentiated RGX-202 microdystrophin in muscle, with all participants above 10% expression. We have also seen a favorable safety profile with no serious adverse events or AEs of special interest. Building on this data, in March, at the 2025 MDA conference, we presented new biomarker data from two patients, including the first data from our cohort of patients under four years of age. This patient, aged three at dosing, had a microdystrophin expression level of 122% of control. Patients age one to three represent a significant portion of the prevalent Duchenne population, yet this group has no access to approved gene therapy. Overall, the Phase I/II data show consistent microdystrophin expression in all 12 patients spanning all age groups, functional improvements and evidence of altering the trajectory of disease, and a favorable safety profile. As the program advances, we expect an increased focus on the dose level 2 cohort as these patients receive the commercial dose level. We look forward to sharing additional data from the Phase I/II study in the first half of this year. Now on to our retina franchise, ABBV-RGX-314, which is being developed in collaboration with AbbVie to treat wet AMD and diabetic retinopathy, or DR. I'll start with ABBV-RGX-314 for DR being evaluated in the Phase II ALTITUDE trial using in-office suprachoroidal delivery. Like wet AMD, DR is a progressive disease that causes vision loss and ultimately blindness if not treated appropriately. As we've shared, we completed our end of Phase II meeting with the FDA in the fourth quarter of last year and are actively working with AbbVie on plans for our Phase III clinical program that would support global regulatory filings. We look forward to sharing more on that program as preparations progress. In wet AMD, we are evaluating ABBV-RGX-314 via two different delivery forms, subretinal and suprachoroidal. Within subretinal, we have two ongoing pivotal trials, ATMOSPHERE and ASCENT in the U.S., Europe and Japan. These trials continue to progress well. As we've announced in January, enrollment of both pivotal trials is expected to complete this year, and we expect to share top line data in 2026. ABBV-RGX-314 is on track to be the first gene therapy on the market for wet AMD and is poised to deliver a compelling product profile based on the impressive safety and durability seen in our Phase I/IIa trial. In this trial, ABBV-RGX-314 achieved meaningful reduction in treatment burden and sustained treatment effect through four years. Overall, we remain encouraged by the ongoing progress with ABBV-RGX-314. I'd like to particularly highlight the differentiated safety profile observed in our in-office suprachoroidal program. This is particularly notable in the setting of short course seven week prophylactic steroid eye drops, a significantly shorter regimen than those used in other gene therapy trials. This continues to support the potential of ABBV-RGX-314 as a meaningful treatment option for patients and physicians. Finally, turning to our MPS program. It's an incredibly exciting time for REGENXBIO in the Hunter syndrome community with the recent submission of our BLA for RGX-121. This filing is supported by data from the CAMPSIITE trial, which met its primary pivotal endpoint with high statistical significance. In addition, we previously reported that 80% of pivotal dose patients either discontinued enzyme replacement therapy or remain treatment naive, along with evidence of neurodevelopment improvement sustained through four years post-dosing. RGX-121 represents a potential significant advancement, not only improving patient outcomes, but also improving the daily lives of patients and families. As a one-time gene therapy, RGX-121 has the potential to achieve these benefits, while also reducing the treatment burden and the significant amount of time families spend getting weekly enzyme replacement therapy. We look forward to an anticipated FDA approval decision in the second half of 2025. To conclude, we are making significant progress with data updates and trial progression across all programs in our pipeline. I'd like to thank all of the patients, families, clinicians and patient advocacy representatives, who have been involved in and supported all of these trials. With that, I'll turn the call over to Mitch to review our financial guidance. Mitch?