Thank you, Eric. I'm pleased to provide a medical perspective following the full approval of FILSPARI and the increasing confidence we hear from nephrologists about FILSPARI's role as a foundational treatment for patients with IgA nephropathy. This confidence is rooted in FILSPARI 's compelling clinical profile as the only kidney targeted medicine which blocks two pathologic processes, endothelin-1 and angiotensin II. These two pathways work together to amplify inflammation and kidney injury in IgA nephropathy. Our growing scientific evidence demonstrates that FILSPARI, as the only dual endothelin and angiotensin receptor antagonist, significantly reduces proteinuria and preserves kidney function for patients with IgA nephropathy. We just attended ASN Kidney Week in San Diego, the largest worldwide gathering of nephrologists. During Kidney Week, we presented important new data supporting the use of FILSPARI in a broad population of IgA nephropathy patients at risk of disease progression, data supporting the use of FILSPARI early in treatment, as well as early data paving the way for potential combination use with other medications. I'll briefly highlight some of these datasets. First is the SPARTAN study of newly diagnosed RAS inhibitor naive patients with IgA nephropathy, which showed that FILSPARI reduced proteinuria up to nearly 70%, with approximately 60% of patients in the study achieving complete remission through 24 weeks. And eGFR was stable throughout the measurement period. Also, as part of SPARTAN, we examined initial human mechanistic data which demonstrates that FILSPARI reduces an important inflammatory biomarker called Urinary CD163. This biomarker is recognized as highly predictive of IgAN disease progression. The magnitude of CD163 reduction that was seen with FILSPARI has only previously been seen with a systemic immunosuppressive. These clinical data are consistent with our preclinical models and support the kidney targeted anti-inflammatory mechanism of FILSPARI. They're also promising given FILSPARI is the only non-immunosuppressive treatment available for patients with IgA nephropathy. We look forward to presenting more data from SPARTAN on how FILSPARI impacts important pathologic processes that cause kidney inflammation and injury in patients with IgAN at upcoming meetings. We also presented promising data in patients from PROTECT with lower ranges of proteinuria less than one gram per gram and showed treatment with FILSPARI reduced proteinuria and preserved kidney function similarly to patients with higher ranges of proteinuria. This is especially important given the recent draft KDIGO guidelines calling for physicians to diagnose and treat all patients above 0.5 grams per day or even 0.3 grams per day. Uniquely, we also showed encouraging data on patient reported outcomes that suggests that treatment with FILSPARI versus irbesartan can improve a patient's burden of kidney disease. Lastly, in IgAN, consistent with the growing approach of using multiple treatment options for patients with IgA nephropathy, we presented compelling efficacy and safety data in combination with SGLT2 inhibitors and immunosuppressants, both from real world use as well as from our open label extension study. We expect this will provide nephrologists with even greater confidence in using FILSPARI as foundational care. In a late breaking session at ASN, we also presented exciting new data in high-risk subgroups of genetic FSGS patients who were historically the most difficult to treat. The data demonstrated that Sparsentan was able to deliver a rapid and sustained proteinuria reduction in high-risk patients with genetic FSGS, including only a Sparsentan treated patient achieving complete remission and low rates of the kidney failure composite endpoint compared to irbesartan. The efficacy of sparsentan in patients with genetic FSGS was consistent with the overall DUPLEX population, which is promising given the subgroup of FSGS patients is typically resistant to treatment. From a regulatory perspective, we have submitted an sNDA for a modification to our REMS for FILSPARI and IgA nephropathy to request a change in our liver monitoring frequency from monthly in the first year to quarterly. We remain confident in the safety profile of FILSPARI, especially given increased patient exposure from our clinical trials and commercial use, which continue to demonstrate no change in the low rates of asymptomatic LFT elevations and no cases of drug induced liver injury. Thus, we believe we now have the data to support the proposed change to the liver monitoring frequency within our REMS and have aligned with the FDA on the presentation of the data package for them to consider the request. Quarterly monitoring of liver function is what was used in our clinical trials and it aligns well to the regular testing IgAN patients undergo with their nephrologist. We have requested priority review of this REMS submission with the potential for this modification to occur in the first half of next year. Let me now turn to FSGS to discuss the recent data from the PARASOL Initiative as well as our plans for a potential sNDA submission for sparsentan and FSGS. The PARASOL Group held their public workshop in early October and we were encouraged by the input of the patient community, thought leaders, regulators and industry who came together with a common goal to identify a path forward for medicines to be approved for the FSGS community. During the workshop, participants heard firsthand from patients and family members stories of perseverance and of hope for a better future, such as an eight-year old's wish to leave the hospital to attend his sister's third birthday. These compelling stories are a consummate reminder that the data reviewed at PARASOL are from people living with a rare kidney disease with no approved treatment options. In our view, the PARASOL meeting was a success as the consensus from the workshop, which reviewed comprehensive analyses for more than 20 databases encompassing over 1600 children and adults with FSGS, represent a potential new path forward for regulatory approval in FSGS. I'll walk through some of the key findings from the PARASOL work and how we believe data from our sparsentan program align. First, due to the relapsing and remitting nature of FSGS, there is clearly too much variability in eGFR measurements to remain a feasible endpoint for regulatory approval. This was evident in our DUPLEX data set, the largest randomized study run in FSGS to date. Second, reduction in proteinuria over 24 months is strongly associated with a reduction in the risk of kidney failure in FSGS patients, including responder definitions based on thresholds of proteinuria that are both biologically plausible and strongly supported by epidemiologic data. We have seen this response consistently across both our Phase 2 DUET and Phase 3 DUPLEX studies. In DUET, we saw significantly more patients achieve the modified partial remission endpoint with sparsentan versus irbesartan and in the open label extension portion of the study, with approximately four years of follow-up on sparsentan, 43% of patients achieved complete remission. Among those patients who achieved complete remission with sparsentan, which was roughly an 80% reduction in proteinuria over time, they had a significantly slower rate of loss of kidney function, approximately one mil per minute per year and negligible rates of kidney failure. In DUPLEX, sparsentan demonstrated statistically significant and clinically meaningful treatment effects on the modified partial remission endpoint at 36 weeks, and this treatment effect was durable to two years. And as published in the New England Journal of Medicine and its supplement, we see that at multiple pre-specified thresholds of proteinuria from 1.5 grams per gram down to 0.3 grams per gram of complete remission, sparsentan demonstrated a statistically significant treatment effect versus irbesartan. Notably, the magnitude of the treatment effect became even stronger as the proteinuria thresholds got more stringent. And while DUPLEX was not powered to show statistically significant treatment effects on heart outcomes, the rates of kidney failure were nearly double with irbesartan versus sparsentan, with a meaningful 42% reduced risk of kidney failure. Third, there needs to be clear biologic possibility for how a potential therapy works to reduce proteinuria and/or preserve kidney function. With proteinuria as an indicator of podocyte injury, it is in the mechanistic pathway leading to kidney failure in FSGS and in our preclinical data, some of which was recently featured in the Journal of Clinical Investigation Insight, sparsentan led to improvements in podocyte number, glomerular, hemodynamics, cell functions, and tissue repair, resulting in reduced proteinuria and preserved kidney function. Most importantly, FDA was a key stakeholder in the PARASOL initiative and through these findings, proteinuria is now expected to be used as a validated surrogate endpoint for full approval in FSGS going forward. These data were again presented at ASN Kidney Week and were received with enthusiasm and support from the community. Overall, we believe that our data from DUET and DUPLEX align very well with the conclusions from the PARASOL group. Our next step will be to discuss our data with the FDA to understand their perspective now in the context of the PARASOL work and a potential path forward for an FSGS indication. As Eric mentioned, we now have a meeting scheduled with the FDA and we're preparing a robust briefing book that will align with the recent PARASOL work to discuss the potential for filing an sNDA for sparsentan and FSGS. In parallel, we are preparing the FDA so that we will be in a position to move quickly following our FDA interaction. I'll now briefly touch on Pegtibatinase as it remains the only development program that has the potential to be disease modifying for the HCU community who deserves better treatment. While we recently announced a Voluntary Pause of Enrollment in the Phase 3 HARMONY Study due to necessary commercial scale up process improvements, we continue to have the utmost confidence in the program and in our team's ability to restart enrollment as quickly as possible. We are grateful for the continued support of the HCU community and our supply partners. Overall, we've made incredible progress with FILSPARI and its path to foundational positioning in IgA nephropathy. And we look forward to our upcoming regulatory engagement on the potential to deliver sparsentan to patients with FSGS. Let me now hand the call over to Peter for the commercial update. Peter?