Thank you, Fran. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining our second quarter 2023 financial results conference call. The second quarter of this year was perhaps the most consequential period in the long consequential history of Sarepta. For families living with Duchenne, it was far more than that still. Buddy Cassidy living with Duchenne and then an ELEVIDYS advisory committee member shared the collective view of the Duchenne community on the June approval in words far more eloquent than I could possibly muster. As Buddy said, and I quote, there is more to do. But now let us pause and bask in the glow of our achievement. Let us bask in gratitude. Let us pause in celebration. Let us watch as dawn rises and brings in the day, close quote. In May of this year, the FDA held an advisory committee meeting on our gene therapy SRP-9001, now called the ELEVIDYS. With a majority vote, the advisory committee recommended the approval of an ELEVIDYS for the treatment of Ambulatory patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. On June 22, the FDA granted and accelerated approval for ELEVIDYS to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy, currently labeled for four and five year old patients. At the time of the approval, FDA leadership informed Sarepta and the patient community that if our confirmatory trial EMBARK meets its objectives, the FDA will in the words of Dr. Peter Marks move with maximum speed following submission of the data to the agency, minimizing any impediments to review results rapidly and broadening the label by removing any age restrictions. So we have our path. Our confirmatory trial is well designed and powered to show a statistically significant benefit in the studied population. For the avoidance of doubt, we have powered this study to show a benefit in the studied population that's four to seven years old. And with that, we will have confirmed the mechanism of action in Duchenne patients applicable to all age ranges. We will have the top-line for EMBARK in the fourth quarter of this year. We will announce top line results as we submit them to the division followed shortly by a label supplement. If successful, we should be able to expand our label in the first half of 2024 to include the majority of Duchenne patients. Additionally, we have already commenced our non-ambulatory trial ENVISION or Study-303. And we intend to commence two trials with alternative approaches to cleaving or clearing pre-existing antibodies. Our goal is to expand our label for ELEVIDYS to cover as much as 95% of the Duchenne patients. In a moment, our Chief Customer Officer, Dallan Murray will provide details on the early days of the ELEVIDYS launch. ELEVIDYS is our fourth approved Duchenne therapy, and we have been very successful with all of our prior launches, consistent with our track record, the ELEVIDYS launch is going well. A significant number of sites are now initiated and ready to infuse, payer discussions and negotiations have been more positive than our prior successful therapies. And there's a significant amount of enthusiasm from physicians and families as we have a substantial number of start forms, and more coming weekly. In fact, I am pleased to announce that the first reimbursed ELEVIDYS infusion occurred earlier today, that is faster than we projected and speaks to the team's ability to execute. And now as positive as this is, please bear in mind that the significant ramping infusions will begin later this year. This is primarily due to payer logistics and to the release protocol for an ELEVIDYS which requires that both we and the FDA released each lot. Shortly our Head of Research and Development and Chief Scientific Officer Dr. Louise Rodino-Klapac will provide an overview of our development activities including progress with our next generation PPMO. SRP-5051, and on the gene therapy side with our LGMD portfolio. To remind you, in addition to ELEVIDYS we have a deep pipeline and are advancing a number of therapies in 2023. In fact, we have 24 ongoing human clinical trials by the end of this year. And we continue to advance our next generation viral cassette, MyoAAV which in early animal models, looks to be as much as 10-fold more tropic than current AAVs. From a manufacturing perspective, our technical operations professionals more than 400 and all our focus with our partner Catalent on producing and releasing launch to support our launch. Looking to the midterm, we will also continue to work to establish comparability at our Thermo Fisher plant for ELEVIDYS. And then looking to the future we are advancing our approach to manufacturing to support our entire pipeline. In fact, we have made great progress in next generation suspension technology, which we will use across our gene therapy portfolio, including the LGMD programs, and even potentially for ELEVIDYS. In fact, we have largely completed our suspension- based process development for ELEVIDYS. And we've made three runs with 250 leaders, with a fourth run to occur later this year, with the goal of scaling to 1,000 leaders in the near term. We have seen yields that are multiples greater than the current standard. As the leader in gene therapy for rare diseases, we will continue to focus on improving the science and the delivery of our therapies. Moving finally to quarterly performance, we have had another strong quarter with our three approved PMOs, EXONDYS, AMONDYS and VYONDYS. I am pleased to announce that second quarter total revenue came in at $261.2 million in net product revenue from our PMos came in at $239 million exceeding internal estimates and analysts consensus. In the second quarter we saw no negative impact on the approved PMOs for many warehousing related to the ELEVIDYS approval, and do not anticipate substantial impact over the course of the year. We remain comfortable with our full year guidance of $925 million for total PMO, net product revenue, with a current bias to modestly exceeding that guidance. It is too early in the launch to provide an accurate guidance for ELEVIDYS, but we will continue to evaluate that. At Sarepta, we have a distinct culture. It is easy to say one is patient focused but our words are backed by action. We put the welfare of our patients above all other considerations and when necessary, we fight for them. And the tools we use for that fight include our commitment to scientific excellence, and the courage to represent the patients who depend upon us. Our fight may not always be easy, but it is paying off. We have four approved therapies and a wealth of potentially life enhancing programs in our pipeline. We will achieve $925 million on the first three of our four approved therapies this year and far more next year when our newest approval is considered. We have a near term high probability success plan to broaden the label of the first and only gene therapy for Duchenne. And if our plans are successful, we could be profitable in the next few quarters. We have done a lot already. But with our plans, our pipeline and our commitment to dogged execution, we have only just begun. And with that I will turn the call over to Dr. Rodino-Klapac, who will provide an update on our research and development progress. Louise?