Thank you, Terry. I'll start by directing our audience to slide nine of our updated corporate deck. The data presented today are from cohort A1 from our Phase II EDGE-Gastric platform study, which is evaluating DOM-based combinations in both the first- and second-line setting. The A1 cohort is evaluating dom +/- zim +/- mFOLFOX chemotherapy in 1L Gastric, Gastroesophageal Junction (GEJ) and Esophageal Adenocarcinoma (EAC). As Terry mentioned earlier, this is the same setting and setting we are evaluating in our Phase III study, STAR-221. This cohort was specifically designed to generate safety and efficacy data to support regulatory requirements for the initiation of STAR-221 in certain countries outside of the U.S. Turning to slide 11, we described the baseline characteristics of this cohort. Forty-one patients were enrolled, and all patients are included in the efficacy analysis. The cohort enrolled a relatively diverse patient population from 20 different sites in the U.S., France, and South Korea. There was an even distribution of patients included in Asia versus the rest of the world, and 63 percent of patients had gastric cancer, 24 had junction tumors, and 12 percent Esophageal Adenocarcinoma. PD-L1 status was evaluated using the TAP scoring method, with 24 patients having TAP less than five, and 15 patients, or 37 percent, with a TAP greater than or equal to five. Two of the 41 patients included in the overall population did not have tumor samples available for PD-L1 testing. Note that the CPS and TAP are two methods for PD-L1 assessment, and both are used in gastric cancer. We'll show you later on this call some of these methods, sorry, that these methods have a high concordance. BMS and Merck have historically used CPS for their phase 3 studies of anti-PD-L1 plus chemotherapy, while Beijing is using TAP, including in the phase 3 gastric cancer trial, rationale 305. The following slide describes the overall response rates of the data cutoff of September 4, 2023. In the TAP high population, we observed a 73 percent confirmed overall response rate and an 80 percent best overall response rate. These results exceed historical phase 3 benchmarks for anti-PD-L1 and chemotherapy. For example, in JETMATE 649 and Keynote 859, the overall response rate was 60% or 61% for anti-PD-L1 plus chemotherapy in the CPS high arms of the study, and in rationale 305, Beijing's study in gastric cancer, which is the most contemporary phase 3 data set in this setting, there's a 50 percent overall response rate in the TAP high population. For the overall population in EDGE-Gastric, the confirmed overall response rate was 59 percent, which is very encouraging, particular given that approximately 60 percent of our patients are TAP low, which is higher than the 40 percent PD-L1 low patients in JETMATE 649. The overall response rate in Merck's Keynote 859 trial was 51 percent. I'd also note that we have seen two confirmed complete responses so far. The median duration of response has not been reached, and given the time it takes to get to a complete response and the fact that many of our patients are still on treatment, the CR rate might go up over time. We believe that the overall response rate results seen in EDGE-Gastric demonstrate the additive benefit that an anti-digit agent can provide above and beyond PD-1 chemotherapy PD-1, excuse me, and chemotherapy in upper GI cancers. On slide 13, we show the waterfall plot, and as you can see, the vast majority of patients experiences tumor volume reduction. While there is a difference in the overall response rates between the TAP high and low tumors, you can see in the chart that we have observed very deep responses in both patients with high and low expression. You can also see that in addition to the two complete responders, there are other patients with very significant tumor volume reductions that could convert to CRs over time. The next slide shows the time on treatment by patient. You can see here that there are six patients, both with PD-L1 high and low status, who continue to have stable disease and remain on treatment. On slide 15, we show the overall response rate table again, but here we show the data using both the TAP and the CPS method, and as you can see, there is strong concordance between these two methods. The next slide, slide 16, shows the ketamine myocardial for progression-free survival. Here we call out the lab-marked six-month PFS, which is mature in our trial with a minimum follow-up of six months for all patients. These data are extremely promising for both the high and the low patient population. Specifically, we observe a 77% in the overall population and a very impressive 93% in the TAP high population for six-month lab-marked PFS. While we recognize that these are small numbers, these six-month PFS numbers compare very favorable to the benchmark phase three studies, which have been in the 50% to 60% range. You can see here in the curves that we have not reached the medium PFS for either the TAP high or overall population with a medium follow-up of 8.1 months. Given that the historical benchmarks have shown a PFS in the range of seven to seven and a half months, we believe these data put us on track to exceed those benchmarks. And importantly, a substantial number, specifically 24 out of 41 patients enrolled in our study, continue to be on treatment at time of the data cutoff. Lastly, I will cover the safety and tolerability profile we've seen so far in edge gastric. The most common treatment emergent adverse events, which are shown on slide 17, are neutropenia, nausea, and anemia, which is very consistent with what we would expect from chemotherapy alone. In fact, the vast majority of grade three or higher drug-related treatment emergent adverse events were contributed to chemotherapy, and only 12% were contributed to dom or zim. No serious treatment emergent adverse events were related to dom or zim. Of note, all infusion-related reactions shown on slide 18 were deemed related to oxaliplatin. Overall, the regimen was well tolerated with a similar AE profile to that expected from Folfax plus anti-PD-1. These results add to the growing body of evidence supporting a potentially differentiated safety and tolerability profile for DOM relative to FC-enabled anti-TIGID antibodies. Before I turn it over to Jen, I wanted to spend a minute on some key elements of the design of our phase three study, STAR-221, which is shown on slide number 20. First, we are stratifying by TEP greater than 5% or less than 5%, so this is well-balanced between the two treatment arms. We are also closely monitoring the percentage of patients who have tumors with a TEP score of more than 5% to ensure that the percentage of these patients in our study meets the pre-specified percentage per our statistical analysis plan. Second, the study has dual primary endpoints of overall survival, one for the TEP more than 5% and the other one for the ITT population, so we have two opportunities to win in this study. With that, I'll turn it over to Jen to talk about the market opportunity for TIGID.