Thanks, Terry. I'll now turn to our data events for the second half of 2024 and specifically for Cas, our HIF-2 alpha inhibitor, which we are developing in clear cell renal cell carcinoma, or ccRCC. As a reminder, HIF-2 alpha is a validated mechanism, with belzutifan recently approved, is monotherapy for baseline clear cell RCC patients. Cas has PK and PD advantages over bel, which should enable it to hit the target harder with the goal of achieving greater clinical efficacy than that of belzutifan. As we talked about on our last earnings call, there are multiple opportunities to improve upon the profile of belzutifan. A lower rate of primary progressive disease, a higher overall response rate and more prolonged responses, any of which could translate into a higher PFS and ultimately longer OS for cas relative to that of belzutifan. Our Phase Ib study for cas, ARC-20, now has enrolled over 80 patients, that's 8-0. It was designed to answer numerous questions, so I want to spend a minute describing the various components of this multi-cohort study, which is summarized on Slide 27 of our corporate deck. First, for the dose escalation, as of our last earnings call in February, we had completed enrollment of the 20 mg, 50 mg and 100 mg dose cohorts with no dose-limiting toxicities observed. We have now completed enrollment of the 150 mg cohort. And again, we did not observe any DLTs, and we just cleared that dose. Additionally, we continue to see linear dose proportional PK for cas even at the 150 mg dose. The dose expansion portion of ARC-20 was designed to serve a few purposes. First and foremost, to generate data for a proposed Phase III dose of 100 mg of cas. These data will be used to support initiation of our first Phase III study, which is an advanced stage [indiscernible] for cas. The monotherapy dose expansion portion is enrolling patients that have received at least 1 prior anti-PD-1 therapy and at least 1 TKI. And the 100 mg dose cohort, approximately 1/3 of patients have received 4 or more prior lines of therapy. So the patients were relatively advanced. On our last earnings call, we disclosed that while the majority of patients in this cohort had only received 1 or 2 scans, we were already seeing a response rate, including responses pending confirmation, in line with LITESPARK-005, the Phase III study for belzutifan. We also mentioned that we have served a lower rate of primary progressive disease where the percent of patients that progressed, prior to their first scan, that was reported for LITESPARK-005. This is important as one weakness in the LITESPARK-005 data set, as we've heard consistently from clinicians, is the high rate of primary progressive disease. Bringing this rate down should result in more patients benefiting from treatment to prolong PFS and survival. We are very excited to present detailed data from the cohort at a medical conference in the second half of this year. We also designed the dose expansion portion to satisfy the dose optimization work, required for regulatory submissions. Specifically, we included 2 additional monotherapy cohorts in ARC-20, which are evaluating a 50 mg dose and 150 mg dose. We have now completed enrollment of the 50 mg cohort, and we just initiated enrollment of the 150 mg cohort. So in addition to enabling us to complete the dose optimization work required for Project Optimus, these cohorts will also generate a lot of additional data that will further elucidate the clinical profile of cas. In addition to the 3 monotherapy expansion cohorts in ARC-20, we are about to initiate enrollment of a cohort to evaluate cas in combination with cabo, the most commonly used TKI in clear cell RCC. Data generated from this cohort in addition to the data generated from STELLAR-009, our Phase II study being operationalized by Exelixis, will be used to support the planned initiation of at least 1 Phase III study for cas in combination with the TKI. Given the enthusiasm for cas and the rapid enrollment of ARC-20, we expect our 100 mg dose expansion cohort data presentation, later this year, to be followed quickly by data from the various other cohorts. We are aggressively advancing cas towards the initiation of our first Phase III trial early next year. Importantly, we are taking a strategic approach to our development plan to maximize the value of what we believe is a best-in-class HIF-2 alpha inhibitor. For example, the STELLAR-009 study is evaluating cas with a next-generation and potentially best-in-class TKI with belzutifan. We believe that both zanza and cabo could have advantages over belzutifan's TKI partner, lenvatinib, with a better tolerated AE profile. And therefore, we expect our cas TKI combination can be differentiated from both an efficacy and safety and tolerability perspective relative to belzutifan plus lenvatinib. I'd like to end by spending a few moments on the RCC market, of which approximately 80% of patients, 8-0% of patients have the clear cell histology. The annual addressable patient population for first-line clear cell RCC includes over 12,000 incident patients in the U.S. and approximately 30,000 in the G7 countries. Around 2/3 of these patients progress on first-line treatment in our addressable in the second line, resulting in more than 8,000 patients in the U.S. and approximately 20,000 across the G7 countries. The ccRCC market is fragmented, the cabo is the most frequently used TKI. Cabo sales in 2023 in the U.S. alone were over $1.6 billion, driven almost entirely by RCC and with only 1/4 of market share in first line and under 50% market share in the second line study. In terms of the treatment paradigm for first-line RCC, patients are typically treated with anti-PD-1 plus a TKI or a combination of nivolumab plus ipilimumab. When patients experienced tumor progression on first-line therapy, a cycle through different TKIs frequently for a few years or more. With few options beyond TKIs, the clinician community has been eagerly waiting for the introduction of HIF-2 alpha inhibitors, particularly given the relatively benign safety profile relative to TKIs -- and not surprisingly, the positive Phase III data for belzutifan resulted in an immediate and steep inflection and script trajectory. Monthly scripts are now a twofold since top line data for bel and clear cell RCC was released in August 2023 and up 50% in just the first format after belzutifan's approval in the setting. Based on just March scripts, belzutifan is now at an approximately $400 million run rate in the U.S. alone and growing. As we've discussed, we believe that cas may improve clinical outcomes relative to belzutifan, and we plan on developing cas in differentiated combinations, all of which support a very meaningful market opportunity for cas, which we believe is north of $2 billion. Before we conclude, I'll now turn the call over to Bob to review our quarterly financials.