Dr. Paula Ragan
Thanks, Dan, and thank you, everyone, for joining us on the call this morning. As you have seen from our latest announcement, the past few months validated and enabled our focus here at X4. And as a result, we believe we are well positioned to deliver significant future value both to patients and to our shareholders, as we approach key milestones over the next six months to 12 months. Most importantly, we completed a PIPE financing in late June in a highly challenging market condition, raising gross proceeds of approximately $56 million, with support from both new and existing top-tier life science investors. At the same time, we entered into an amendment to our debt agreement with Hercules Capital, who also invested in the PIPE to extend the interest-only period of our loan facility by up to 12 months pushing it out into 2024. The amendment is subject to achieving certain financial and business milestones. We estimate this amendment loan structure could result in a cash savings of up to $20 million over the interest-only period. More recently, we announced our decision to focus our efforts and resources towards advancing our lead clinical candidate, mavorixafor for the treatment of chronic neutropenic disorders, including WHIM syndrome, our lead clinical indications. And while the data from our cancer programs continue to show promise, we will be presenting an update on data from our Phase 1b trial in Waldenström’s in just a minute. We are now pivoting our efforts towards unlocking the full value of our oncology portfolio only through potential strategic partnerships, enabling us to focus on making the largest possible impact on chronic neutropenia patients in the near-term. We continue to believe that commercializing mavorixafor and providing a new therapeutic option to individuals with life-threatening CN disorders has the potential to revolutionize the treatment landscape, which is currently only served by injectable therapies that have been associated with high burden of treatment, dose-dependent side effects like severe bone pain and increased cancer risk in some patients. We are, therefore, very excited about our upcoming expected milestones, which include the following, in late September, we are planning an investor event to prevent data from our now fully enrolled proof-of-concept Phase 1b clinical trial in patients with chronic neutropenic disorders. As a reminder, our lead compound, mavorixafor, is a CXCR4 antagonist being dosed in clinical trials as a once-daily oral therapy. By inhibiting the CXCR4 receptor, we have demonstrated across multiple clinical trials and multiple therapeutic indications that mavorixafor can help regulate white blood cells, increasing the mobilization of neutrophil, lymphocytes and monocytes into the bloodstream. And these effects have been achieved across all patient population studied regardless of their CXCR4 mutation status. Mavorixafor has also demonstrated an excellent tolerability profile across hundreds of patients, some of whom have been receiving mavorixafor for more than two years. Our Phase 1b clinical trial in chronic neutropenia is now fully enrolled at 25 patients and enrollment is near final with a small number of additional patients expected. The trial examines neutrophil and other white blood cell responses to mavorixafor for treatment. Patients in the study had a range of neutropenic conditions, including severe congenital neutropenia, idiopathic neutropenia and cyclic neutropenia. Some patients received a standard-of-care called granulocyte colony-stimulating factor or G-CSF and some have not. We look forward to presenting this trial’s initial full data set in patients with diverse set of CN disorders at our event in September. We expect these results will help inform the regulatory path forward for mavorixafor in chronic neutropenic disorders and we look forward to sharing more of what that pathway might look like once we have gained clarity following the presentation of the data to regulatory authorities. Our next notable and certainly potentially transformative milestone will be the unveiling of our data from our pivotal Phase 3 for WHIM trial, which is still on track for the fourth quarter. As you know, these results are expected to support our first regulatory filing in the U.S., which is now expected early in the second half of 2023. We have been very encouraged to see a high percentage of patients coming off study, choosing to continue in the open-label extension phase of the trial. As you may know, WHIM syndrome is a rare genetic immunodeficiency disorder caused by gain-of-function mutations in the CXCR4 receptor. WHIM is characterized by HPV-associated warts, hypogammaglobulinemia, multiple types of infections and myelokathexis, which causes leukemia and neutropenia in many patients, reducing the body’s ability to mount a healthy immune response. X4’s 4WHIM global Phase 3 trial is the first placebo-controlled trial in WHIM syndrome. To help for the upcoming Phase 3 results into context, on our third quarter earnings call, we plan to discuss what success might look like from this trial, reviewing both the primary and secondary endpoints that we have previously aligned on with the FDA and some additional information about our early commercial efforts, patient finding initiatives and the continued expanding landscape of the disease profiles and diagnosis of WHIM syndrome. Before I pass it over to Adam to discuss the quarter’s financial results, we did want to provide a brief overview of our new response data from the Phase 1b mavorixafor trial in patients with Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, a rare B-cell lymphoma. As mentioned, we aim to unlock the full value of our oncology portfolio only through potential strategic partnerships. We believe the favorable data from this trial will meaningfully support that potential option. Please note that we will be uploading a summary of the deck to our website with these results shortly. As detailed in today’s press release, 16 patients were enrolled in the clinical trial which is a Phase 1b open label multicenter, single-arm study evaluating the safety and efficacy of mavorixafor in combination with the BTK inhibitor, ibrutinib, in adults diagnosed with Waldenström and confirmed to have MYD88 and CXCR4 mutations, a double mutation status that has been associated with poor responses to standard-of-care. Specifically, the presence of CXCR4 mutations has also been shown to negatively impact patient’s responses to ibrutinib as manifested by delayed responses, inferior depth of response, and/or shorter progression-free survival. In the study, all patients received oral once-daily doses of 420 milligrams of ibrutinib and escalating doses, 200 milligrams, 400 milligrams and 600 milligrams of oral mavorixafor, also once daily. As of June 2022, 10 of the 12 evaluable patients or 83% had achieved a major response to therapy, which is defined as a greater than 50% reduction in serum IgM from baseline. Nine of the 12 evaluable patients had disease relapsed or were refractory to prior treatments entering the study. Of these relapsed/refractory patients, eight of the nine valuable or 89% achieved a major response. In the treatment-naive patients, major responses were seen in all patients escalated to greater than the starting 200-milligram dose of mavorixafor. Looking at the data over time, adding mavorixafor to ibrutinib was associated with a higher major response rate at nine months, 12 months and 24 months as compared to previously recorded major response rates achieved with ibrutinib monotherapy, which historically achieved a maximum of 57% major response rates at 24 months in a similar patient population. To-date, treated patients have all achieved elevations in absolute neutrophil accounts or ANC, with no neutropenic events reported. This is meaningful as more than 40% of patients typically experience some decreased neutrophil counts with ibrutinib monotherapy. Interestingly, patients also experienced fewer infections over time with chronic combination dosing. Assessment of infection risk is a labeled warning and precaution while on ibrutinib monotherapy. No major safety signals due to mavorixafor have been identified in the trials as of the data cutoff. Mavorixafor in combination with ibrutinib showed a safety profile similar to ibrutinib monotherapy across the 16 patients, which included eight patients escalated to the highest dose of 600 milligrams of mavorixafor. We did want to highlight additionally that in June, mavorixafor was granted Orphan Drug Designation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of patients with Waldenström’s, and notably, regardless of the CXCR4 mutation status. As presented at EHA earlier this year, mavorixafor has demonstrated in vitro the ability to disrupt the bone marrow crosstalk and increase Waldenström cancer cell sensitivity to treatment regardless of CXCR4 mutation status, supporting the potential that mavorixafor made utility across a broad range of lymphoma. The Phase 1b clinical trial is expected to be completed in the fourth quarter of 2022 when the last patient is dosed and with the support of our investigators, we aim to provide full and final results in a future journal publication. And finally, we also mentioned earlier, with our new sharpened focus on chronic neutropenic disorders, further clinical studies in Waldenström’s will now be subject to completing a strategic partnership. We believe these promising data, which will be uploaded to our website support that future potential opportunity. In our July announcement, we also mentioned that further work in our preclinical oncology candidate, X4P-002 is concluding IND-enabling toxicology studies and that an IND filing will now be subject to completing a strategic partnership. As a reminder, 002 is a novel small molecule, CXCR4 antagonist, has been shown across the blood-brain barrier with potential applicability across a number of leukemias and lymphomas. In total, we believe that the mavorixafor oncology data to-date, plus the promise of our 002 candidate present a partner overall package of great potential, and we will report on our potential success on a continued advancement of these valuable assets at the time when this potential partnership is secured. With that, I will now turn it over to Adam to discuss our results for the quarter before we open up the call for questions. Adam?