Thank you, Pat. And I'll spend a couple of minutes just starting on a key focus area, and that's our balance sheet. We think it's important to start with that and specifically speak to cash runway. So, we ended the first quarter with $27.5 million in cash. We made a draw in early April on our existing credit facility with Squadron. So, we ended the quarter with $47.5 million in cash on a pro forma basis. We also recently executed a commitment letter for a $35 million expansion of the facility with Squadron. A part of those proceeds will pay-off our revolver with MidCap and the remaining will be available to draw as needed. We've also extended maturity of the entire credit facility by two years to 2025. We've removed all financial covenants, and we expect to close this financing by the end of May. We absolutely believe this is the right financing at the right time for us, provides the runway we need to execute on our growth plans. We've also made some decisions on cost containment across the organization, again, as Pat mentioned, with an eye toward preserving the employee base and maintaining key product development initiatives. And finally, we think it's important to note that, in Q1, our cash burn was elevated over prior quarters really due to transaction-related and litigation expenditures. Recall that litigation was atypically high in Q4 related to our patent litigation. So, we saw that cash impact in the first quarter. On to revenue. We saw 34% year-over-year growth from our strategic distribution channel. Importantly, as Pat mentioned, this is the mix of not just increases in surgical volume, but more case complexity and a continued increase in the products per case, which is driving revenue per case higher. And our legacy distribution channel continues to perform at a level where we – actually, above the level we expected to be at this point. Gross margin has held steady, as expected. We continue to see a bit of a margin drag from excess and obsolescence on legacy products. We expect this to continue through 2020 as we continue to transition to new products. We'll start to see this normalize in 2021. And once E&O normalizes, our variations in gross margin will primarily be driven by product mix, but we continue to believe that mid-term we'll maintain margins in the mid-70% range. A little bit about the P&L and OpEx. Our non-GAAP OpEx profile remains consistent year-over-year, again, in line with our expectations as we continue to make investments in new product development and build out our strategic sales channel. I think, importantly, we continue to hold the line on G&A. It's essentially been flat for the last 12 quarters and below 2017 run rates when we started the strategic pivot of the company. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Pat for closing comments.