Thank you, Brian as always and good afternoon and welcome everyone to the Relmada First Quarter 2025 Conference Call. 2025 is off to a good start for Relmada. We added two unique product candidates with very encouraging Phase 2 data and large addressable markets to our portfolio, NDV-01 for bladder cancer and sepranolone for Prader-Willi syndrome, Tourette syndrome and potentially other CNS indications. Reported initial proof-of-concept Phase 2 data for our lead product candidate, NDV-01 at the American Urology Association, and we made progress towards our objective of bringing each program to patients as soon as possible with preparation underway to begin the next set of studies for NDV-01 sepranolone. With two innovative product candidates that have shown promising proof-of-concept data, $27 million cash balance, clean balance sheet and a disciplined approach to development plan, we are in a good position to advance our pipeline to important clinical milestones. During today’s call, I will provide a snapshot of our two programs, including a review of the initial Phase 2 data for NDV-001 at the AUA meeting 2 weeks ago. After that, Maged will review our financial results. I will make a few closing remarks, and then we will take your questions. We also invited on the call today Dr. Yair Lotan, Chief of Urology and Oncology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, who can answer your clinical question regarding NDV-01. We are encouraged by the potential of the diversified pipeline that we are building at Relmada. Starting with NDV-01, we believe the program is an excellent fit with our strategic plan and has the potential to meaningfully improve the care of patients with bladder cancer. Our decision to in-license NDV-01 was based on strong science, strong field data and the anticipation of positive Phase 2 data at the upcoming American Urology Association Meeting, or AUA 2025. I’m pleased to report that positive top line proof-of-concept data presented at AUA 2025 supported our initial enthusiasm for NDV-01’s potential to be the class leading bladder-sparing chemotherapy for non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. During today’s call, I will touch on the market opportunity, the mechanism of action, the data and the next steps. Starting with the market, sources indicated that there are about 75,000 new cases of bladder cancer diagnosed each year in the U.S. About half or 50% of those cases have high-grade disease that has a high risk of recurrence. That is a very high recurrence rate for the 600,000 people approximately in the U.S. living with bladder cancer. Moving to mechanism of action, NDV-01 is a novel sustained-release intravesical formulation of two chemotherapy agents, gemcitabine and docetaxel or GEM/DOCE. NDV-01 forms a spherical soft matrix within the bladder that sequesters GEM/DOCE and releases these two agents as a matrix gradually dissolves. The formulation was specifically designed to maximize local GEM/DOCE concentration and also provide prolonged exposure while minimizing systemic toxicity. Published clinical studies have shown that gemcitabine and docetaxel achieves a response rate and recurrence-free survival that are comparable to, or better than the historical standard of care, Bacillus Calmette-Guerin or BCG. However, the administration of conventional chemotherapy is cumbersome. The two chemotherapy agents require special handling and preparation in a controlled hospital pharmacy setting. In addition, the two chemotherapies are administered sequentially over 3 to 5 hours with limited tumor exposure time. In contrast, NDV-01 sustained release formulation is intended to be dosed in office as a ready-to-use therapy that is administered in less than 10 minutes without the need for anesthesia or new or dedicated equipment. What is really exciting about NDV-01 data is the data presented at the AUA 2025 2 weeks ago. The presentation was based on data from an ongoing single-arm, single-center ex-U.S. Phase 2 study evaluating NDV-01 in patients with high-grade NMIBC. 26 patients have been enrolled as of the data of the last data cutoff. The AUA presentation was based on the results for the first 20 patients. The group included 2 patients with carcinoma in situ, CIS and 18 patients with papillary disease, Ta and T1. Of the papillary disease patients, 8 were BCG naive and 12 were BCG unresponsive. The efficacy data were presented based on 3- and 6-months assessment. In addition, the highest response rate at any time point was also reported. Based on the 3-month assessment, dosing of NDV-01 resulted in overall response rate of 85% or 17 out of 20 patients, high-grade recurrence-free survival in patients with papillary disease of 83%, or 15 out of 18 patients. A complete response in carcinoma in situ patients, recognizing that the number is small, was 100% or 2 out of 2 patients. For data report at any time point, the overall response rate was 90% or 18 out of 20 patients. High-Grade Recurrence-Free Survival in papillary disease was 89% or 16 out of 18 patients. Complete response in carcinoma in situ patients remains 100% or 2 out of 2 patients. Importantly, 7 patients were evaluable at 6 months. 100% of these patients achieved disease-free status. This group includes 1 patient with CIS and 6 patients with papillary disease characterized as Ta or T1. One of these patients was retreated at 3 months and responded to the second treatment. From a safety perspective, NDV-01 was well tolerated with no treatment-related adverse events greater than Grade 1. We were very pleased with the reception of the data received at AUA. We believe that the results suggest that NDV-01 has the potential to significantly improve the care of patients with NMIBC. NDV-01 is currently in – continues the Phase 2 single-arm study to assess safety and efficacy in patients with high-grade non-muscle invasive bladder cancer. Our goal is to bring NDV-01 to patients as soon as possible. Looking ahead to the second half of 2025, our effort will focus on securing a U.S. IND clearance. Turning briefly to sepranolone. In February, we acquired the right to sepranolone from Asarina Pharma. Our decision was based on sepranolone’s broad safety database and promising Phase 2 results in Tourette syndrome. I would like to touch on 4 topics for sepranolone, the market opportunity, the mechanism of action, the data and the next steps. Starting with the market, we believe sepranolone is well suited to treat disorders marked by compulsive behavior and excessive activity of the GABA neurotransmitter pathway, including Prader-Willi syndrome and Tourette syndrome. This soon neurobehavioral disorder can manifest through repetitive behavior and positivity and represents sizable underserved markets. Prader-Willi syndrome or Prader-Willi is our first candidate indication for sepranolone. Prader-Willi is a complex genetic disorder, often defined by persistent anger and overheating hyperphagia. Current treatment is focused on improving obsessive compulsive behavior and other medical complications. Prader-Willi is estimated to affect approximately 350,000 people worldwide, including approximately 20,000 people in the U.S. Turning to the mechanism of action, sepranolone is first-in-class endogenous neurosteroid. It’s a member of a new subgroup of neurosteroid called GAMSAs or GABAA modulating steroid antagonist. GAMSAs selectively act on GABAA to alleviate the repetitive symptom of compulsive disorder. We were attracted to sepranolone because of its unique mechanism of action and promising proof-of-concept data. The Phase 2 results from the originator Asarina showed that sepranolone demonstrated a competitive peak reduction of 28% with a p-value of 0.051 in its primary clinical endpoint as measured by the YGTSS, a standardized Tourette scale. The data also showed that sepranolone treatment produced an improved quality of life without any off-target CNS effects. These data provide a strong foundation to study sepranolone in compulsion-related disorders such as PWS or Prader-Willi syndrome. Our effort to progress sepranolone are expected to include planned FDA interaction and further development of product supply with plans to advance into clinical development in early 2026. Now I would like to turn the call over to our Chief Financial Officer, Maged Shenouda, to talk about our financial results. Maged?