Thank you, Brian, as always, and good afternoon to everyone. I'm pleased to welcome you to the Relmada third quarter 2022 conference call. During today's call, I will provide an update on our ongoing late-stage RELIANCE clinical development program for REL-1017, our lead product candidate that we are currently studying as a novel treatment for patients with major depressive disorder, or MDD. Following my comments, Maged Shenouda, our Chief Financial Officer, will review our financial results and balance sheet, and we will then take your questions. As a reminder, RELIANCE I and RELIANCE II are two ongoing Phase 3 sister two-arm, placebo-controlled, pivotal studies evaluating REL-1017 25 milligrams as a potential adjunctive treatment for MDD. RELIANCE III was the Phase 3 2-arm, placebo-controlled, registrational study evaluating REL-1017 25 milligrams as a potential monotherapy treatment for MDD. We announced topline results last month for RELIANCE III in which REL-1017 was administered for 28 days to 232 subjects. The study did not achieve the primary end point of a statistically significant improvement in depression symptoms, compared to placebo as measured by the MontgomeryAsberg Depression Rating Scale or MADRS, on day 28. In this study, the REL-1017 treatment arm showed a MADRS reduction of 14.8 points at day 28 versus 13.9 points for the placebo arm. This was an higher-than-expected placebo response. Paradoxical results were observed in certain study sites where placebo dramatically outperformed REL-1017. To better understand the paradoxical result, a post-op exploratory analysis using the bandpass method, which excludes sites with unplausibly high or low placebo responses was conducted. In this study, an unplausibly high or low placebo response was defined as the mean decrease from baseline in MADRS 10 score greater than 14 and less than 3 points. The results of the bandpass analysis showed a meaningful difference between REL-1017 and placebo, greater than 12.9 points on the MADRS, representing a p-value below 0.05. It's important to note that while we are pleased with the statistically significant difference seen using the bandpass method, we understand that this is not sufficient to be used as an FDA submission, and we may consider planning additional studies. I want to highlight that in RELIANCE III, REL-1017 demonstrated very favorable tolerability and safety confirming the results of Phase 1 and Phase 2 studies with no opioid-like effect, no withdrawal effect and no psychotomimetic effect. While we are currently further evaluating the detail from RELIANCE III, we believe that the primary driver behind the study not being successful was the enrollment of subjects who are not truly suffering from MDD and responded dramatically and roughly to placebo. As an example of this, the top enrolling center had a mean change from baseline of 23 points in the placebo group. As we approach the topline readout for RELIANCE I expected before year-end, it is important to note that the higher enrolling centers in RELIANCE III also recruited significantly in RELIANCE I. Mitigating that to some degree is the different patient population RELIANCE I, that is patients that enrolled and should already been diagnosed with depression and are not responding adequately to at least one and up to three courses of antidepressant therapy. We cannot predict how these factors will balance up. Looking further ahead, we intend to apply several plausible and operational changes in the current enrolling RELIANCE II study and make certain improvement to how the trial is being conducted. We now expect topline results from this study next year. Once we have finalized and determined how to best execute on this enrollment, we will provide a firmer timeline for topline results for RELIANCE II. Moreover, in order to be proactive and increase the likelihood of clinical success for REL-1017 as a potential therapy for MDD, an indication in which two successful studies are required to achieve FDA approval, we may consider initiating new clinical trials in 2023. As we apply key learnings from RELIANCE III to improve how RELIANCE II is being conducted going forward, we focused on the four key pillars that mainly impact the success of an MDD trial: the protocol, the site selection, the patient selection and the rating process. We will integrate our key learnings in these areas into the RELIANCE II study and any possible additional study we may consider. Now let's move on to RELIANCE-OLS, the long-term open-label safety study that is enrolling both rollover participants for all three pivotal studies as well as de novo participants. RELIANCE-OLS is ongoing and continues to involve participants as planned. Data from this long-term open-label safety study, which we now expect in first half of 2023, will be part of the planned NDA filing package. Finally, I want to emphasize that RELIANCE III was a trial execution phase, and we remain highly confident in the potential REL-1017 to be a safe and effective new therapy for the treatment of MDD. It is important to note that we have the financial flexibility to continue advancing REL-1017 in the clinic due to our strong balance sheet. Maged will review our financials in detail shortly, but we ended the third quarter with cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments of approximately $124 million. With that, I will now turn the call over to Maged for a review of the financials. Maged, the stage is yours.