Good afternoon. And thank you for joining us for our second 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. I will give an update on the progress in our clinical trials and Lisa will give a brief financial update. Then the three of us are happy to answer any questions that you may have. This has been a fun but busy quarter at Trevi as we continue to execute against our clinical development plans for both chronic coughs and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, or IPF, as well as refractory chronic cough or RCC. We have a number of data readouts expected by year-end and are hoping to build on the strong efficacy data we saw in our Phase 2a trial in IPF chronic cough. To support this fast pace and focus on execution, we continue to bolster our team, and we’re happy to announce in April the hire of Dr. Meg Garin, who is key in progressing the clinical development of camlipixant while at Bellus Health. Meg is overseeing our RIVER trial day-to-day and has already started looking ahead to planning for our next trial. She has been a great addition to the team. Let me provide a brief update on our clinical trials, beginning with our Phase 2a RIVER trial in RCC, which is expected to read out in the fourth quarter of this year. RCC is a debilitating disease that affects approximately 2 million to 3 million U.S. adults and is defined as a persistent cough lasting greater than eight weeks, despite treatment for an underlying condition or where no underlying condition exists. With a lack of any approved therapies for RCC in the U.S. and several drug candidate failures, there continues to be a significant unmet need and an urgency from patients and providers for new therapies. We believe our key point of differentiation for Haduvio is the mechanism of action, which works synergistically both centrally in the brain and peripherally in the lungs. We believe this mechanism has the potential to work more broadly in RCC patients and potentially have a stronger effect across the broader range of baseline cough counts than peripheral-only mechanisms. Our RCC trial is the standard Phase 2a crossover design that has been conducted across several cough trials run to-date and is planned to enroll approximately 60 patients. These patients will be randomized with a 1:1 stratification or approximately 30 in each arm between those with 10 to 19 coughs per hour, moderate cough, and those with greater than or equal to 20 coughs per hour, high cough. This trial has been progressing nicely and we now have approximately 80% of the subjects enrolled. Based on the current run rate, we expect to report data from this study in the fourth quarter of this year. However, I want to note that we currently have an imbalance in the enrolled subjects between the two stratification arms, i.e., the 10 to 19 and greater than 20 cough counts. The enrollment between the two arms has fluctuated throughout the study. This is important data to inform future development and there may be a scenario where we get to our overall planned N of 60 [ph], but keep the study open a little longer to balance the arms. We are excited to complete the enrollment of this study and report the data in this important chronic cough condition. 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 has significant physical, psychological, and social impacts. Cough may also be a risk factor that plays a role in the progression of the underlying disease. The constant lung injury, micro tears and inflammation caused by persistent coughing may lead to worse health outcomes for patients. With no currently approved treatment options for chronic cough in IPF, patients and providers have an urgent need for new therapies. Our IPF chronic cough trial, CORAL is a Phase 2b parallel arm dose ranging study that will investigate three active doses of Haduvio and placebo. The study is a six-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 now have the majority of our sites activated and enrollment is progressing nicely. We have great relationships with the investigators in the trial and are communicating with them frequently to ensure our study is top of mind. The next milestone in this study is to conduct a sample size re-estimation, SSRE analysis, when 50% of the patients complete. This analysis will be done by an unblinded statistician external to the company who will rerun the power calculations using actual data. We will get very limited information back, but we will be informed of one of the following three outcomes. One, continue on as planned with the current planned number of patients, reconfirming the original powering assumptions. Two, the drug is working within the pre-specified promising zone, but will require an upsize in the number of patients to maintain the power. Or three, the drug is not working in the pre-specified range and the company should consider stopping. We will announce the results of this analysis and we have the information, which we expect in the fourth quarter of this year. We continue to expect topline data for the full study in the first half of 2025, subject to the result of the SSRE. We also are conducting two important supportive studies this year, the human abuse potential or HAP study, as well as the respiratory physiology study. I will give you a quick update on both. The HAP study is currently 95% enrolled and will require one more cohort of dosing to complete. We expect a complete enrollment and dosing in the third quarter, with data from this study reported in the fourth quarter. Finally, we have initiated a Phase 1 respiratory physiology study, which is being conducted to systematically measure respiratory function in varying levels of disease severity and IPF to help determine our Phase 3 patient population. To-date, we have excluded sleep-disordered breathing patients in our clinical studies and we want to better characterize the safety overall in the patient population. The protocol has been approved in both the U.S. and the U.K. and the study has initiated patient screening. We expect to enroll approximately 25 patients that will be inpatient for 10 days. The primary endpoint of the trial is the effect of escalating doses of Haduvio on respiratory function as measured by minute ventilation. Secondary endpoint measures of additional respiratory functions are also included. As you can see, these studies have progressed nicely and data from these trials will be important to inform the development path forward for Haduvio in chronic cough conditions. I want to thank our team who have worked hard to keep the enrollment on plan. We look forward to completing these clinical trials and reporting out the data beginning in the fourth quarter of this year. I will now turn it over to Lisa to review our financial results and we will open it up for any questions you may have.