Thanks, Trip. Our strong second quarter performance displayed the continued successful execution of our growth initiatives across surgical glaucoma and dry eye. We generated record total revenue of $23.5 million, growing 36% compared to the second quarter of 2022. We saw great revenue growth in both of our businesses, propelled by strong commercial activity and expanding clinical evidence supporting the value proposition of our technologies. Most notably, we were thrilled to announce the success of SAHARA, our landmark device versus drug, randomized controlled clinical trial, comparing interventional eyelid procedures enabled by our TearCare technology to Restasis for the treatment of dry eye. At the six-month endpoint, interventional eyelid procedures enabled by TearCare technology were superior to Restasis and improving tear break up time or TBUT, the primary objective sign endpoint. TearCare was also non-inferior to Restasis with respect to improvement in Ocular Surface Disease Index, or OSDI, the primary subjective symptoms endpoint. As importantly, patients in the TearCare Group demonstrated clinically and statistically significant improvements of all 10 signs and symptoms endpoints measured at every observation interval. We are extremely excited about these clinical results and believe they will lay the foundation for us to help physicians rethink how they treat dry eye and transform the market by moving away from daily prescription eye drops and towards once or twice a year interventional dry eye procedures. An abstract of the six-month Phase 1 results from SAHARA has been accepted by the American Academy of Optometry for presentation at its annual meeting in October. We look forward to discussing the SAHARA data with payers as a key part of our efforts to establish reimbursement and fair patient access for TearCare treatments. To begin our surgical glaucoma discussion, I would like to address the draft LCDs for MIGS recently proposed by 5 MACs that could impact sales of our OMNI and SION products. These MACs administer Part B Medicare benefits for Medicare fee-for-service patients on behalf of CMS. We believe these proposals have numerous serious flaws and would adversely affect Medicare patients and limit surgeons' ability to provide proven, effective treatments for their glaucoma patients, if implemented as currently drafted. In particular, the proposed LCDs have not considered all the available clinical data, demonstrating the benefits of OMNI procedures, which have been published in at least 18 peer-reviewed publications. Our extensive clinical data, real-world outcomes and broad FDA label reinforce the safe and effective use of our OMNI technology in adult patients with primary open-angle glaucoma or POAG. These 5 MACs have hosted public open comment meetings regarding the proposed LCDs. Medical societies, physicians and patients have provided overwhelming support for continued access to OMNI technology, expressing the critical nature of the benefits enabled by and the importance of continued access to our OMNI technology to help preserve the vision of POAG patients. In our presentations at the MACs open meetings, we reiterated the important role canaloplasty and trabeculotomy play in the treatment of glaucoma and highlighted additional clinical data, which was not considered in the draft LCDs. Specifically, we presented results from the two-year extension of our multicenter ROMEO Study. This important study demonstrated the reduction in both intraocular pressure or IOP and glaucoma medication use in mild-to-moderate POAG patients treated with OMNI that we originally observed at 12 months, extended out to 24 months. This longer-term data provides further evidence of the durability and efficacy of our OMNI technology. We also presented 12-month results from GEMINI, our prospective multicenter trial of OMNI in combination with cataract surgery. In GEMINI, we observed significant reductions in both IOP and medication usage with OMNI compared to the historical cataract control. GEMINI had prespecified success criteria to exceed the IOP reduction due to cataract surgery alone as observed in the control arms of the pivotal MIGS implant studies. The prospective study successfully met its prespecified efficacy endpoint with statistically significantly greater IOP reduction at 12 months than the historical control arm. Our presentation to the various MACs further highlighted and described the consistency of positive outcomes observed across the published articles. We appreciate the efforts made by all of the physicians, patients, societies and other stakeholders who helped educate the MACs regarding the necessary and crucial role that our OMNI technology plays in the treatment of POAG. We would also like to thank all of the dedicated site employees, particularly in our clinical, commercial and market access groups who coordinated our exceptional response. We do not believe there is a supportable basis for the implementation of these proposed LCDs as they are currently drafted, coverage criteria are based on published clinical evidence, significant clinical benefits that are equivalent or superior to other Medicare covered procedures, consensus clinical guidelines, generally accepted standard of care and FDA clearance specific to glaucoma therapy, all of which favor and support continued coverage of the procedures enabled by OMNI technology. We plan to continue to communicate with all stakeholders regarding the published clinical evidence and real-world results, supporting the safety and efficacy of our OMNI technology and the importance of continued and appropriate coverage to preserve access to these treatment options for POAG patients. We don't have visibility at this time as to when the MACs will either revise withdraw or finalize their proposed LCDs, but we believe we have provided clinical information sufficient to maintain coverage for procedures enabled by our OMNI-technology. In other news, we were pleased to report in June that Cigna, one of the largest commercial health insurance companies in the United States with almost 15 million covered lives, revised their glaucoma surgical procedures coverage policy to include procedures performed with our OMNI technology as medically necessary and covered as of June 15, 2023. This decision further validates OMNI's clinical importance. We are excited to bring the benefits of OMNI to the Cigna community. Commercially, our surgical glaucoma business growth continued to outpace the MIGS market overall as more clinicians adopted our OMNI technology, as evidenced by our record quarterly revenue, commercial activity for the second quarter exceeded our expectations. Notably, net account retention was particularly strong despite the current market considerations associated with the proposed LCDs. It's clear that with continued market access, we have a sticky, stable and expandable revenue opportunity via our growing surgeon base. Feedback from surgeons who use OMNI continues to be very positive. We attribute this customer stability and stickiness to the differentiated consistency and degree of efficacy of our OMNI technology, its exceptional usability and our commercial excellence. I would like to congratulate the graduating class of 2023 ophthalmic surgical residents and fellows. Our outstanding strategic accounts team has worked hand-in-hand with over 160 of these new surgeons to develop their expertise using our technologies. We look forward to partnering with this latest generation of surgeons to improve the lives of patients with POAG in the years to come. OMNI continues to perform well within the combo cataract segment, and we are encouraged by the market expansion and accelerating penetration we're observing in stand-alone mix. Based on projected claims data from a third-party analytics provider, we observed expanded stand-alone activity as measured by the growth in stand-alone patient visits involving CPT codes associated with OMNI. While stand-alone procedure volumes remain modest compared to the combo cataract segment, we remain confident in our ability to drive increasing awareness and growth of our OMNI technology in this segment through a comprehensive market development program, which leverages stand-alone clinical evidence, targeted field resources, comprehensive patient and physician education and marketing initiatives. The other product in our surgical glaucoma portfolio, SION, also contributed to our growth in the second quarter. SION addresses the needs of surgeons seeking a simpler MIGS solution for certain patients. We are pleased with the positive industry reception for SION, although it is still a small overall contributor to total revenue. Turning to our dry eye business. We designed our TearCare technology to address the serious unmet needs of patients with evaporative dry eye and meibomian gland disease or MGD, which is associated with up to 86% of dry eye cases. Historically, treatment for dry eye has been dominated by artificial tears and prescription eye drops, both of which have clinical limitations and do not address the underlying causes of MGD. We believe the Phase 1 results observed in SAHARA demonstrate that our TearCare technology should play a prominent role in the dry eye treatment paradigm. During our controlled commercial launch, we have experienced growing adoption of TearCare as a self-pay treatment option, illustrating the pent-up demand for a procedure that can offer safe and effective relief from MGD. We believe there is immense potential for our TearCare technology with fair and appropriate reimbursement. We are thrilled by the success of SAHARA, the first of its kind head-to-head device first drug, RCT, comparing treatments using our TearCare technology to twice daily use of prescription eye drop treatment with Restasis. In this trial, 345 patients at 25 sites in 14 states were randomized 1:1 between TearCare and Restasis groups. SAHARA achieved its primary clinical science six-month endpoint, demonstrating the superiority of interventional eyelid procedures enabled by TearCare over Restasis eyedrops and improving tear-break up time, a key measure of aqueous retention, tear stability and the tear film's ability to protect the ocular surface. Throughout the study, interventional eyelid procedures with TearCare demonstrated clinically and statistically significant improvements of all 10 endpoints at every measurement interval evaluated to date, one week, one month, three months and six months. We designed the SAHARA RCT with exacting standards to minimize potential bias and to ensure that the results, if successful, would provide meaningful support for healthy payer coverage discussions. These measures included setting the superiority endpoint at six months rather than the one or three months period common in dry eye studies. We did this intentionally to help ensure Restasis has sufficient time to reach peak effect. Endpoint assessments were carried out by assessors masked to treatment assignment to further minimize potential bias. In coordination with the study's principal investigators, we plan to submit Phase 1 results from SAHARA to leading peer-reviewed journals. We are also preparing associated health economics and outcomes research and a budget impact model for publication. If successfully published, we believe these articles will encourage doctors to revamp the treatment of dry eye disease and provide payers with persuasive evidence to support patient access and reimbursement. To date, payers have not received the rigorous RCT data for dry eye procedures that we believe SAHARA provides. SAHARA highlights our commitment to rigorous clinical evidence, and we are very pleased with the results. I would like to recognize the exceptional efforts of our clinical team, our team of investigators and all the patients involved with this important trial. The TearCare technology was designed to intervene at the root cause of MGD comprehensively in a user-friendly way and has now demonstrated the ability to consistently produce best-in-class clinical outcomes in two RCTs. We look forward to advancing our TearCare market access strategy, expanding usage of our OMNI technology and improving the lives of patients suffering from chronic eye diseases. I will now turn the call over to Ali to discuss our financials.