Great. Thanks, Katherine. Second quarter 2024 revenues from continuing operations grew to $68.9 million compared to $45.2 million in the second quarter of 2023 and $61.5 million in the first quarter of 2024. That’s an increase of 52% year-over-year and 12% sequentially in total. Drilling into that, exome and genome revenues grew 77% year-over-year and 15% sequentially, delivering $50 million in revenue this quarter. Both volume and collection performance contributed nicely. Adjusted gross profit from continuing operations was $42.8 million in the second quarter of 2024. That’s up 153% compared to Q2 2023, and up 13% from the first quarter of 2024. Adjusted gross margin from continuing operations was 62% in the second quarter of 2024, up from 37% a year ago and up from 61% in the first quarter. Gross profit growth and margin expansion is driven by increased volume, improved average reimbursement rate, continued cost per test leverage and favorable mix shift. On volume and mix, exome and genome was 31% of all tests resulted this quarter, up from 22% a year ago and up from 30% in the first quarter. Overall, I’m quite pleased with the mix, given the strong underlying exome and genome volume, whereby our team delivered over 18,000 tests this quarter, an increase of 52% year-over-year and 9% sequentially. We’ll continue to optimize the test portfolio towards exome and genome balancing unit economics, clinical impact and customer satisfaction over time. On average reimbursement rate, our exhaustive effort to improve exome reimbursement rates through denial reduction is working. In the second quarter of 2024, our average reimbursement rate for exome and genome after all denials was approximately $2,800, up from $2,600 last quarter and up from $2,500 in the fourth quarter of 2023. Across the commercial insurance payer environment, we continue to enable and calibrate insurance specific workflow to reduce administrative and procedural denials. That said, we remain clear about the complex operating environment where some payer business models are inherently predicated on collecting premiums while narrowly interpreting archaic medical policy and administrative requirements to suit their own business needs. Our focus on generating clinical data and articulating the value proposition of our differentiated exome as a first-in-line test will continue to underpin our advocacy for equitable access and patient-centric medical policy. All so that we can help get more families the care they need and get reimbursed fairly. Across Medicaid populations, denials are and should continue to come down as medical policy continues its momentum towards broad coverage for exome and genome. In particular, state Medicaid programs continue to expand coverage for rapid genetic testing in the NICU. We highlighted North Carolina, Texas and Connecticut in our release today. And on cost per test, the team has done a great job optimizing the wet lab, and there remains opportunity to couple our unparalleled genomic data set with new generation of automation tools to drive scalability and efficiency across drive side clinical interpretation analysis, abstracting and report reading. Now moving down to operating expense. Total adjusted operating expense was $45 million in the second quarter of 2024. That’s a reduction of 24% year-over-year and 1% sequentially. I now consider us to be at a normalized relative OpEx base for the business, ready to drive operating leverage as we grow. One call out this quarter, GAAP expense and GAAP net loss in the second quarter of 2024 includes a onetime litigation charge, net of expected insurance recovery of approximately $13 million. The charge relates to a stockholder commenced lawsuit brought in the prior year as a class action on behalf of former stockholders of CM Life Sciences who did not redeem their shares in connection with the 2021 business combination between CM Life Sciences and legacy Sema4. The suit named CM Life Sciences and its directors at the time of that business combination. And on the bottom line, total company adjusted net loss for the second quarter of 2024 narrowed to $2.7 million. That is an improvement of 93% year-over-year and 68% sequentially, driven by gross profit growth and operating expense rationalization. With that, we’re approaching the turn to profitability. Our second quarter net cash burn was $6.1 million, which improved 89% year-over-year and 65% sequentially. And we’ve now delivered 9 consecutive quarters of cash burn reduction. On the balance sheet, cash, cash equivalents, marketable securities and restricted cash was a total of $108 million as of June 30, 2024. And as of June 30, 2024, there are 26,926,383 Class A common shares outstanding. The outstanding share count includes the issuance of 645,414 shares of Class A common stock to Perceptive in April 2024 to satisfy a cashless exercise of the 800,000 warrants they received in connection with the October 2023 debt placements. And now turning to guidance. We are again raising previously issued revenue guidance and now expect to deliver revenues between $255 million and $265 million for the full year 2024. We are reiterating previously issued adjusted gross margin guidance to land full year 2024 at 60% or higher. And we’re improving our net cash burn guide and now anticipate using $65 million to $75 million of net cash for the full year 2024. That latest guide here contemplates fully absorbing the legal settlement should that be required in 2024. The ultimate timing of that payment is still uncertain at this time. And as a reminder, the next scheduled payment under the 2022 legacy Sema4 payer settlement is $10 million, and that will be paid in December of 2024. Finally, we once again reiterate our expectation to turn the business profitable in 2025. With that, I’ll turn you back to Katherine.