Thank you, Dan, and thanks to all of you for joining us this morning. The first quarter of 2025 was an extremely productive and value-building period for X4 with clinical trial advancement in chronic neutropenia, continued progress in the commercialization of XOLREMDI for WHIM syndrome in the US and our achievement of several significant milestones towards expanding the global potential of mavorixafor for patients. Let's begin with mavorixafor for in chronic neutropenia or CN. As you know, having successfully developed mavorixafor, branded XOLREMDI for patients with WHIM syndrome in the US, we are now also developing mavorixafor for the larger indication of chronic neutropenia. There are currently about 50,000 people diagnosed with some form of CN in the US based on retrospective ICD-10 code analyses. Of those currently diagnosed with primary CN, we estimate that approximately 15,000 individuals or about 30% to 40% have remaining health challenges and continue to experience low absolute neutrophil counts or ANCs and recurrent infections despite available standard of care. We define this as the high unmet need CN patient population. And it is with this population in mind that we are launching our ongoing 4WARD trial, a global pivotal Phase III clinical trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of once-daily oral mavorixafor in people with certain chronic neutropenic conditions including primary autoimmune, idiopathic and congenital neutropenia and who are experiencing recurrent and/or serious infections. As we reported on our last call, we're now screening and enrolling participants in over 20 countries with more than 90% of our target global trial sites being activated. Additionally, we've now finalized the trial design based on the feedback we also discussed previously from both the FDA and EMA to focus on those with the highest unmet needs, a population that matches up well with mavorixafor's targeted commercial CN patient population. The trial is enrolling with those with moderate to severe CN or ANC below 1000 cells per microliter and experiencing two or more infections over the past 12 months. We also finalized the ANC response endpoint. The definition of ANC response is now uniform across all participants and is defined as an increase in ANC greater than 500 cells per microliter versus baseline ANC and occurring at 50% or more of the time points evaluated in the trial. The trial seeks to demonstrate statistically significant increases in ANC response and corresponding decreases in annualized infection rates between those on mavorixafor versus placebo. To date, the demographics of the enrolled population are balanced and representative of the target commercial CN patient populations and baseline ANCs and historical infection rates are consistent with this high unmet need population. We recently completed some additional data analyses that further increase our confidence in the success of the 4WARD trial. Individual patient data from both the mavorixafor Phase 3, 4WHIM trial and the completed Phase 2 CN trial have now been analyzed applying this just mentioned 4WARD trial ANC response criteria. The full details of these analyses can be found in the updated investor deck that is on the front page of the Investors section of our website. In summary, we created what we're calling heat maps, which detail individual ANC responses across all trial participants at all the assessed time points. Specifically, the 4WHIM Phase 3 heat map provides a benchmark for ANC responses that translated into a 60% reduction in annualized infection rates when comparing mavorixafor treatment to placebo. The CN Phase 2 heat map demonstrates the impact of mavorixafor on durable increases in ANC across those with idiopathic cyclic and congenital chronic neutropenia. ANC outcomes in the CN Phase 2 trial look similar to ANC responses seen in the mavorixafor arm of the 4WHIM trial. When taken together these heat map analyses provide evidence supporting the potential success of the CN Phase 3 trial, where we believe that the expected ANC responses resulting from mavorixafor treatment will correspond to a significant decrease in annualized infection rates. We also continue to believe that the 4WARD trial is rigorously designed and powered to demonstrate the impact of mavorixafor in CN. The trial is powered at greater than 95% to assess the ANC response endpoint and the 150 participant sample size independently supports robust powering at greater than 90% for the infection rate results. As of today, we continue to anticipate full enrollment in the trial in the third or fourth quarter of 2025, which would enable disclosure of top line data in the second half of 2026. Lastly on the CN front, we have good news from the US patent office. We received a notice of allowance on our application which claims include the use of mavorixafor in treating severe chronic idiopathic and autoimmune neutropenia in patients without a CXCR4 genetic variant. The patent is expected to expire in the US in March of 2041. Similar patent applications are pending in Europe, China, Japan and Canada. To conclude, we remain confident that we'll be able to deliver on our upcoming milestones in CN that will have a long-term patent protection in the indication and that the value proposition for mavorixafor in CN could represent a $1 billion to $2 billion opportunity in the US alone. With that let's turn now to our progress with mavorixafor in WHIM syndrome. At the end of March of this year cumulative sales of XOLREMDI reached $3.5 million since our mid-May launch last year. This quarter's sales were slightly lower than those reported in the fourth quarter because of the fluctuations in the timing of inventory resupply, which causes some lumpiness to sales. This is typical with markets anchored in small patient populations and early in launch. We do expect this to even out over time with the increasing demand that we're already seeing. We are currently in the thick of conference season and continue to have fruitful engagements with all of our targeted top-tier immunologists and hematologists increasing the visibility of WHIM syndrome. And we're seeing success in our educational efforts that support HCPs and finding WHIM patients with new patients now representing approximately 40% of our current XOLREMDI treated population at the end of the first quarter. In addition, we're just about to kick off our WHIM patient ambassador program and hope these efforts will continue to build demand for XOLREMDI in the US. As we discussed on our last call, we made significant progress in our efforts to expand the potential global reach of mavorixafor in WHIM during the first quarter. In January, we announced that our submitted MAA was accepted by European regulatory authorities for review. With a typical 12- to 15-month review process, we anticipate potential approval from the EMA as early as the first quarter of 2026. We also announced the completion of two international partnerships in the first quarter. The first with Norgine a leading European specialty pharmaceutical company to commercialize mavorixafor in Europe Australia and New