Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2024 earnings call and business update. Joining me today on this call are my colleagues, Lisa Delfini, Trevi's Chief Financial Officer; and Dr. David Clark, Trevi's Chief Medical Officer. We reported Q4 earnings just 6 weeks ago. So Lisa and I will give a brief update then the 3 of us are happy to answer any questions. This is a busy time at Trevi, advancing our clinical development plans for both refractory chronic cough or RCC as well as cough and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis or IPF. Let me provide a brief update on our various trials, beginning with our Phase IIa trial in RCC, which is expected to read out later this year. Refractory chronic cough or RCC is a debilitating disease that affects up to 10% of the adult population and is defined as a persistent cough lasting greater than 8 weeks despite treatment for the underlying condition. With the lack of any approved therapies for RCC in the U.S., there continues to be a significant unmet and urgent need for new potential therapies. The key point of differentiation for Haduvio in refractory chronic cough is the mechanism of action, which works synergistically both centrally in the brain and peripherally in the lungs. We believe Haduvio's mechanism has the potential to work in more patients and potentially have a stronger effect across a broader range of baseline cough counts than peripheral only mechanisms like the P2X3 inhibitors. Our RCC trial RIVER is a Phase IIa double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, 2-period crossover study, evaluating the reduction of cough in approximately 60 patients. This design is similar to other Phase IIa cough trials run to date but does incorporate a meaningful difference. These patients will be randomized with a 1:1 stratification between those with 10 to 19 coughs per hour and those with greater than 20 coughs per hour. Each treatment period will last 3 weeks separated by a 3-week washout period. Patients on Haduvio will have the dose titrated weekly from 27 milligrams up to 108 milligrams twice daily across the dosing period. The primary efficacy endpoint is the relative change in the 24-hour cough frequency as measured by an objective cough monitor. The study will also explore secondary endpoints, including patient-reported outcome measures for cough and quality of life. We now have all 14 sites activated for this trial and see almost an even split in the enrolled subjects between each arm, the 10 to 19 and greater than 20 cough counts in the study. Enrollment is progressing, and we continue to expect top line data from this study in the second half of this year. Next, an update on our lead program in IPF chronic cough. IPF is a serious end-of-life disease. Chronic cough is reported by approximately 85% of patients suffering from IPF and have similar significant physical, psychological and social impacts to that of RCC, but may also be a risk factor that plays a role in the progression of the underlying disease of IPF. The constant lung injury, microtears and potential inflammation caused by persistent coughing may lead to worse health outcomes for patients such as increased respiratory hospitalization, mortality or need for transplant. With no currently approved treatment options for chronic cough and IPF, patients and providers have an urgent need for new therapies. While there are a lot of ongoing development programs in IPF, current and in-development therapies have not shown an impact on chronic cough, which is one of the most difficult aspects of IPF elevating the unmet need. Our trial, CORAL is a Phase IIb parallel arm dose-ranging study that will study 3 active doses of Haduvio and placebo. The study is a 6-week trial in approximately 160 patients. We are conducting this study in multiple countries and sites to be able to complete enrollment in a timely manner. We expect to have the majority of our planned 60 sites activated by the end of June. Enrollment is progressing, and we are working with our sites to ensure our study is top of mind. We reaffirm our guidance for this study in which we expect to read out the results from our sample size reestimation analysis in the second half of this year, and we continue to expect top line data for the full study in the first half of 2025. As a reminder, the SSRE is conducted when 50% of the subjects complete the study. We intend to share the SSRE results once it is complete, which will either confirm our current study sizing assumptions, recommend upsizing within a prespecified range or indicate utility. We have also made good enrollment progress on our human abuse potential study or half this year. This study is now approximately 75% enrolled, and we expect to complete enrollment this summer. The objective of this study is to determine the abuse potential of oral nalbuphine relative to butorphanol and placebo and was designed and agreed upon with FDA input. Recall that parenteral nalbuphine is unscheduled by the DEA and was recently rereviewed by the DEA and left on schedule. It's also important to note that the 2 parts of nalbuphine's mechanism are also unscheduled, whether it be kappa agonist such as Korsuva or mu antagonists in products such as naloxone and naltrexone. This study will be submitted with our NDA as part of an 8-factor plan, which includes all the preclinical work done to date, the mechanistic rationale for why this drug is unscheduled. Our clinical data generated in our development programs, the results of this HAP study as well as a public health rationale. Our goal is to have oral nalbuphine ER remain unscheduled as the parenteral form has been all these years. We continue to expect top line data from this study in the second half of this year as well. Finally, our IND for IPF cough was cleared by the FDA, and we expect to initiate our respiratory physiology study in the third quarter of 2024. We anticipate this study being conducted in the U.S. and in the U.K. The goal of this study is to systematically measure the impact of nalbuphine ER on respiratory depression in varying levels of disease severity in IPF to determine our Phase III patient population. To date, we have excluded sleep disorder breathing patients in our studies, and we want to better characterize the safety in this group as we move forward. As you can see, it is a busy time clinically for Trevi, and we believe the data from these trials will be important to inform the development path forward for Haduvio across chronic cough conditions. We are excited to begin completing these studies in the second half of this year and reporting the data. On a final note, our management team will be attending several medical conferences over the next few months, including the American Thoracic Society meeting in San Diego in a couple of weeks, the London Cough Conference in July and European Respiratory Society Meeting in Austria in September. Please let us know if you plan to attend as we would love to meet with you. I will now turn it over to Lisa to review our financial results, then we will open it up for any questions.