So I’ll repeat what Katherine said, it was a strong quarter. Total revenues were $53.3 million for the third quarter of 2023. Revenues from continuing operations were $50.4 million compared to $47.2 million in the third quarter of 2022 and $45.2 million in the second quarter of 2023. Excluding a onetime appeal benefit in the third quarter of 2022, revenues increased 14% for this third quarter. Whole exome and genome volume this quarter was over 13,000 tests, which represents a 71% increase year-over-year, an 11% increase compared to the second quarter of this year. We generated $34 million this quarter from exome and genome testing, a 42% increase year-over-year and 18% compared to the second quarter of this year. Adjusting for the same onetime appeal benefit in the third quarter of 2022, revenue specific to exome and genome increased 61% year-over-year. In the third quarter of 2023, adjusted gross margin from continuing operations was 48%, up from 37% in the second quarter. The margin expansion is coming from 3 places. The first is Test Mix. To level set, our adjusted gross margin for exome remains over 60%. Exome and genome represented 23% of all tests in the third quarter with a high of 28% in the month of September. Total gross margins will continue to benefit as exome picks up more share of our overall test production volume, replacing lower margin and, in some cases, negative margin products. The second is on cost per test. We now have 2 lower cost per test Illumina X Plus machines live, and we will aim to replace the remainder of our APS legacy NovaSeq fleet at the right time over the next several quarters. We also have recently received our first PacBio Revio machine. Beyond our long-read sequencing collaboration, the team here is excited about the potential use of this technology to lower cost by replacing older orthogonal confirmation platforms. Additionally, we’ve now completed the consolidation of disparate library preparation platforms to a lower-cost solution offered by [Tuas] Biosciences. And while we are pleased with where exome costs are today, a number of initiatives are already underway or plans to further improve the cost base. Automation and AI across review analysis, report writing and certain genetic accounting steps offer real near- and long-term cost reduction opportunities. The third was from average reimbursement rates. The fully loaded average reimbursement rate on the exome and genome portfolio was over $2,500 in the third quarter, slightly up from over $2,400 last quarter. The Exome portfolio operates at over 60% gross margin today despite a high denote that we know has opportunity to be improved upon. As Katherine mentioned, new leaders have been brought into the company to lead billing, market access, sales, product and technology and finance-related teams to bring enhanced experience and new perspectives specific to these efforts. The majority of our denials, we continue to believe are addressable. Let’s now move down to operating expense. Total adjusted operating expense was $49.4 million for the third quarter of 2023, down from $91.8 million in the third quarter of 2022 and $60.1 million in the second quarter of 2023. That’s a reduction of 46% year-over-year and 18% from last quarter. We’ve once again delivered reduced costs as we further separate from the legacy Sema4 business and search for efficiency. For awareness, this quarter includes a $1.8 million onetime benefit. This baseline will further reduce over the next couple of quarters with the cost rationalization plan affected earlier today. On the bottom line, total company adjusted net loss for the third quarter of 2023 narrowed to $21.1 million compared to an adjusted net loss of $69.8 million in the third quarter of 2022 and $38.6 million in the second quarter of this year, improvements of 70% and 45%, respectively. Our third quarter cash burn of $42 million included nearly $17 million in final Sema4 payables and onetime costs and otherwise would have been approximately $25 million for the quarter. Our total cash, cash equivalents, marketable securities and restricted cash were $115 million as of September 30, 2023. And today, we announce that we have entered into a new 5-year senior secured credit facility with Perceptive Advisors. This agreement provides for up to $75 million in capacity, consisting of an initial tranche of $50 million, which was drawn on October 27, 2023, and an optional second tranche of $25 million, which is committed through December 2024, subject to certain criteria. Interest is payable at a rate of SOFR plus 7.5%. And under the terms of the agreement, Perceptive will be issued warrants to purchase 800,000 Class A shares of the company’s stock at closing with an exercise price equal to the 10-day VWAP. That price is $3.17 a share. Upon barring of the subsequent tranche, Perceptive would be issued warrants to purchase an additional 400,000 Class A shares. Personally, I want to thank the Perceptive team for the hard work involved in the transaction. We are excited to have yet another strong thought partner in the mix. In giving rise to the net proceeds of the initial tranche, our pro forma cash on hand at September 30, 2023, is $163.7 million. Now turning to guidance. We expect to end 2023 with full year revenue from continuing operations in a range between $187 million to $192 million. We’re narrowing the expected cash burn guidance for the second half of 2023 to a range between $75 million to $79 million, inclusive of servicing obligations of the exited business activities. As a reminder, in December 2023, the next scheduled installment payment of $5 million will be made with respect to the legacy Sema4 payer settlement. And as we have expressed, the outlook to turn profitable in 2025 remains unchanged. So while we’re not providing specific long-term guidance beyond 2023 at this point, I did want to speak to how we view that path to profitability by the end of 2025. There are 3 primary drives. The first is rationalizing the operating expense base. Our current adjusted operating expense is roughly $50 million a quarter or a run rate of $200 million annually. We’re taking out an additional $40 million in specifically identified costs to get down towards $160 million over the next several quarters. We firmly believe these cost reductions will not impact our ability to drive exome growth. The second is by expanding gross margin. We just reported Q3 adjusted gross margin of 48%. Remember, our blended exome gross margins are greater than 60% today. So as exome test continue to make up more of our revenue, our total margin moves towards that 60-plus percent. We also believe exome margins can expand beyond their current level given COGS reductions and reimbursement work. The third is revenue growth. We just reported Q3 revenue of $50.4 million for continuing operations or a $202 million run rate. Our future revenue growth is all exome and genome and exome just grew 62% year-over-year this past quarter. If one were to assume even a much lower exome growth rate in the zone of 20% over the next 2 years, that generates a very reasonable breakeven level given the cost structure I just mentioned. That said, we certainly aim to achieve stronger exome revenue growth than that. So with the cost saving initiatives announced today, margins continuing to trend towards our current exome margin and revenue growth tracking to even moderate levels, we see a clear path to breakeven by the end of 2025. And finally, in terms of cash, our cash burn for continuing operations was approximately $25 million this quarter. And on a go-forward basis, you should expect adjusted net loss and cash used to more closely conform to each other, except for the payer settlement severance and fairly minimal CapEx. I’d also point you to the liability section of our balance sheet, which will show huge structural improvement as we’ve now put substantially all Legacy Sema4 operating payables behind us. We, therefore, anticipate the new debt financing proceeds will primarily serve as balance sheet protection as we shift towards sustainable profit. I’ll now turn the call back to Katherine for any closing remarks.