Thank you, Marianne. Before speaking to our future research and ongoing development efforts, I want to address the topline data from our influenza Phase 2 clinical trial. This trial failed to demonstrate a statistically significant difference between those who received VIR-2482 and placebo. Specifically, at 1200 milligrams, which was the highest dose of VER-2482 tufted, there was a non-statistically significant reduction in influenza illness of approximately 16%. Interestingly, in this same group, an approximate 57% reduction in influenza A illness was observed when illness was defined according to CDC criteria. More analysis is going to be needed to address why this study was unsuccessful. We are looking at the data from the perspective of how different symptoms, their duration, and severity might influence outcomes, and understanding drug concentrations, time to infection, and the sequence of the actual viruses the participants were exposed to will also be important. As far as next steps, any other significant development of VIR-2482 will be guided by these analogies. To be clear, however, we will not be initiating Phase 3 trial. In the influenza space, as Marianne noted, we are continuing our efforts on VIR-2981, an investigational [Indiscernible] targeting monoclonal antibody. That covers not just flu A, but also flu B. In some animal models, it has shown markedly greater potency. The characteristics of VER-2981 parent antibody was recently published in nature. Because VER-2981 has a different mechanism of action, targeting the enzymatic activity of the neuraminidase, not the stem of a hemagglutinin, we believe in its potential to prevent influenza illness. As we learn more from the PENINSULA trial, we will certainly apply relevant findings the ongoing development of VIR-2981. More broadly, as Marianne noted earlier, the antibody platform in beer has already resulted in a medicine for COVID-19 in just fifteen months, and the only single antibody capable of treating Ebola. So, one of the setback for VERAD2482 is unfortunate, it doesn't change our perspective on our platform's ability to identify potentially best in class antibodies and to then leverage data science and AI to further engineer them. Specifically, we can enhance antibody binding, potency, vector function, half-life, developability, and stability. Even more broadly, we recognize the importance of a fully integrated data strategy from research all the way through product development. And believe that this ability will continue to be differentiated here at Vir. We have 24 publications and numerous patents and awards related to our data science achievements. Now, let's turn to chronic hepatitis B. Unlike the current standard-of-care, which requires taking antiviral medicines for the rest of one's life and does not eliminate the risk of cirrhosis or liver cancer, our goal is a functional cure. After completing a functional cure therapy, there should be no need for further treatment and there should also be a further reduction in the risk of liver complications. Our functional cure hypothesis is based on a novel widely accepted belief that chronic hepatitis B is an immunologic disease caused by a virus. As such, we believe that combinations of anti-virus alone are not enough. Instead, we believe functional cure requires a combination of antivirus with immunologic agents. We call our approach stop and clear. We stop the virus from replicating and clear already infected cells by immune-stimulation. This is the fundamentally different hypothesis we seek to prove in our clinical trials. Our clinical development pathway has been as follows. We began with Phase 1 and Phase 2a studies that are exploring different combinations of anti-virals and immunomodulators. By specifically using small courts in these studies, we are able to explore a broad space of possibilities to help identify the right combination, dose, duration, frequency, and population. In the studies, we have made two major advances towards a functional cure for chronic hepatitis B that highlight why we believe we can succeed. One, At 11 June, we showed that we could achieve a durable off treatment response in 16% of participants who received VIR-2218, and pegylated interferon alpha for 48 weeks. While the sample size was small and the confidence interval is large, it's worth noting that interferon alpha alone is generally thought to result in an off treatment response only 3% to 7% of the time. Two, at the AASLD Conference in 2022, we showed that a short course of VIR-2218 with VIR-3434 3434 resulted in nearly a three log knockdown in hepatitis B surface antigen. This is a viral protein that is a measure of virus activity. Notably, antiviral activity was additive and no new safety signals were observed. Our next development step has been to build upon these observations. Last summer, we started Part B of our Phase 2 March study which is exploring the combination of VER2-two eighteen and VER3-four thirty four with and without pegylated interferon alpha. For durations of 24, 48 weeks. We expect to present end of treatment data for the 24 week cohorts in the fourth quarter. Let me now direct your attention to chronic hepatitis Delta. For chronic hepatitis Delta, the only treatment approved which is only available in some parts of the world and not the US, requires lifelong daily subcutaneous injections and has only a 45% chance of benefiting the patient. Our goal is a highly efficacious treatment that only needs to be administered once or twice a month. Because hepatitis delta requires the surface antigen protein from hepatitis B, we can target delta using our existing chronic hepatitis B assets, VIR-2218 and VIR-3434. At EASL, we shared the preclinical data demonstrating their potent anti-viral activity against hepatitis Delta. A Phase 2 clinical trial is now underway evaluating VIR-2218 and VIR-3434 individually or in combination with one another in a small cohort of hepatitis delta patients. We expect to present data from this trial in the fourth quarter. It is worth noting that because hepatitis Delta is a potential orphan disease with high unmet medical need, the regulatory path for a treatment for Delta may be accelerated. Turning now to our early stage pipeline, we've already highlighted VIR-2981, our neuraminidase flu antibody. I will now touch on other key assets based on our proprietary monoclonal antibody platform, First, VIR-8190, which in vitro can neutralize both RSV or respiratory syncytial virus and human metapneumovirus. Both of these viruses pose a serious threat to infants and immunocompromised. Second, VIR-7229, our next generation COVID-19 monoclonal antibody, which in vitro is differentiated by both extreme breath and potency against a broad spectrum of historical and currently circulating variants. With respect to our T cell platform, which is based on human cytomegalovirus, we are advancing two assets; VIR-1388 is our novel next generation HIV vaccine, which will soon be entering the clinic. Unlike VIR-1111, which was deliberately attenuated by creating a replication defect, VIR-1388 does not have that replication defect, and we believe can be more immunogenic. We anticipate dosing our first patient in Q3 of this year. VIR-1949 is a potentially therapeutic vaccine against HBV associated cervical, anal, and head and neck dysplasia and cancer and is the second asset in our T cell platform based on HCMV. We look forward to sharing more about these INDs in the future. I will now turn the call over to Chief Financial Officer, Sung Lee.