Thank you, Connor. Good afternoon everyone and thank you for joining us today. 2022 was an operationally focused year for Shattuck and our clinical team did an excellent job of advancing 154, our lead clinical-stage Agonist Redirected Checkpoint or ARC products candidate. As a reminder, 154 is a SIRPa-Fc-CD40L ligand bi-functional fusion protein, which serves to both block the macrophage checkpoint molecule known as CD47 and also activates an important immune stimulatory receptor known as CD40. Linking these two functions within a single therapeutic differentiates 154 from all other CD47 inhibitors in clinical development. We are very pleased to have completed the Phase 1a monotherapy dose escalation clinical trial of 154 in patients with platinum resistant ovarian cancer and achieved all of the primary goals of this first in human study including the selection of a dose of 154 to advance into our Phase 1b combination cohort, which I will describe in a moment. From a pharmacodynamic perspective, we believe that the clinical data generated through the course of the Phase 1a trial has validated one of our central hypotheses and the design of the ARC platform and shown that 154 was able to safely activate CD40 in a dose-dependent manner, including doses which saturated the CD40 receptor. One of the primary pharmacodynamic effects we observed in-patients treated with 154 was a rapid induction of interleukin 12, achieving high serum concentrations of IL-12 in a number of other cytokines widely believed to be important to support anti-tumor immune responses. A variety of other pharmacodynamic findings were also observed in this trial and we are looking forward to sharing these data at a medical meeting toward the middle of this year. In short, we are very pleased to have completed the goals of this study and to have select the 3 mg/kg dose to move into the combination cohorts. As a class, in order to see clinically meaningful efficacy, CD47 inhibitors rely upon combination regimens with another agent that provides a pro figures to signal such as a targeted antibody or ADC or with an agent that causes immunogenic cell death. For this reason, we are pleased to have moved into the combination studies, where objective responses are expected in both our ovarian cancer trial and our clinical trial for patients with acute myeloid leukemia and higher-risk myelodysplastic syndrome. There are two combination cohorts ongoing in our Phase 1b clinical trial in-patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. In the first combination cohort, 154 is being combined with a chemotherapy agent known as pegylated liposomal doxorubicin or PLD for short. We selected PLD in combination with 154 for several reasons. First, PLD causes immunogenic cell death of ovarian cancer cells and was shown to enhance antitumor activity when combined with 154 in preclinical studies. Second, PLD is a standard-of-care in the platinum-resistant setting and is well-known that patients treated with PLD have an objective response rate in the range of 10% to 12% from multiple Phase 3 clinical trials. Thus, this was a mechanistically driven combination strategy where we do not expect difficulty determining the contribution of 154 and the regimen due to the known low response rates of PLD as monotherapy. The second combination cohort in ovarian cancer is the result of collaboration between Shattuck and ImmunoGen. ImmunoGen received accelerated approval for an antibody-drug conjugate known as mirvetuximab soravtansine, which targets an ovarian cancer antigen called fully receptor alpha or FR alpha for short. The initial approval of mirvetuximab is for a biomarker selected subset of platinum-resistant ovarian cancer patients, whose tumors express high levels of FR alpha and the objective response rate is 31.7% for those patients. In preclinical studies, we demonstrated that combining 154 with mirvetuximab, potentiated anti-tumor activity not just for ovarian cancer cells that express high levels of FR alpha, but also for tumor cells that express medium and low levels of FR alpha. Thus, this is a mechanistically driven combination where the contribution of 154 is expected to be observed both in terms of improving overall response rates and response duration across the spectrum of FR alpha expression. If successful, this could more than double the proportion of patients who benefit from mirvetuximab. While we are excited about the opportunity in ovarian cancer for 154, we are also pleased to be well underway in our clinical trial of 154 in-patients with AML and high-risk MDS. As many listeners will be aware, AML and high-risk MDS are among the indications where CD47 blocking antibodies first demonstrated clinical activity and were the first approvals based on overall survival may soon occur. Over the second half of last year, our clinical team initiated both the monotherapy dose escalation and azacitidine combination dose-escalation cohorts and we remain on track for our clinical data milestones in the first half of this year. Although we acknowledge that the objective response rates for the first generation of CD47 inhibitors has contracted in this patient population over the past couple of years, we are excited about the opportunity that opens for agents like 154, which provides the important component of CD40 activation, in addition to CD47 blockade and which improved antitumor immunity in preclinical tumor models and published head-to-head studies in comparison to CD47 blocking antibodies. Let us now turn to our SL-279252 program, a PD1-Fc-OX40L ligand bi-functional fusion protein. We have completed the multicenter open-label clinical trial evaluating the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, antitumor activity and pharmacodynamics of 252 in patients with advanced solid tumors and lymphoma. After enrolling PD1 inhibitor experienced patients to the 12 and 24 mg/kg cohorts, we did not observe an overall response rate of 20% or greater, which was our target to justify further clinical development. And thus, we have made the decision to discontinue the SL-279252 program. The clinical data generated from patients treated with SL-279252 suggest that OX40 stimulation in the setting was insufficient to overcome the resistance mechanisms in-place in-patients who have already failed a PD1 inhibitor. I would like to take this opportunity to thank the patients and their families for participating in our study. As always, we remain focused on delivering novel therapeutics which will benefit patients experiencing cancer with high unmet medical need and look forward to the combination data in our ongoing clinical trials with SL-172154 in the coming quarters. With that, I will now turn the call over to Dr. Pandite, our Chief Medical Officer, who will provide you with more detail on each of these studies, the emerging data illustrating how 154 is a differentiated CD47 inhibitor and will also provide you with guidance to the various clinical milestones that are coming over the course of 2023. Lini?