Thank you, Pascal and good afternoon, everyone. As usual, I will start with our reported P&L. Please turn to Slide 9. As Pascal has already highlighted, total revenue grew by 37% in the first 9 months. As a reminder, Alexion sales were only consolidated from July 21 last year. So this impacts the revenue growth numbers favorably. Collaboration revenue increased $944 million, of which close to $400 million relates to milestones received from partners, including Merck for the Lynparza collaboration. We've booked an additional around $330 million in collaboration revenue for Enhertu. Our reported gross margin continues to be impacted by the Alexion fair value inventory uplift, which we anticipate will continue for a couple of more quarters until the inventory is sold. Please turn to Slide 10. This is our core P&L. The core gross margin during the period was 81% and increased by 6 percentage points at constant exchange rates. The favorable increase in gross margin is mainly driven by lower Vaxzevria sales versus last year. And the fact that Alexion sales were only consolidated from end of July. R&D costs increased by 29%, reflecting again, the timing of consolidation of Alexion last year, and also continued investment in the pipeline. We've had several positive readouts this year that have ungated additional clinical trials. Over the long-term, we continue to expect that we will keep R&D investments in the low 20s percentage of total revenue. SG&A cost increased by 24% year-to-date, reflecting the addition of Alexion and continued investment behind launched brands, including demand generation Evusheld. We continue to manage SG&A costs by driving productivity and the operating margin will continue to improve as our product mix evolves between primary and specialty care. However, these will need to be balanced by our long-term growth ambition and investment for that growth, as well as external factors including inflation and currency. Core EPS of $5.28 represents growth of 52%. Please turn to Slide 11. Our cash flow continues to improve and we saw cash flow generated from operating activities increased by $2.9 billion to $7.4 billion in the first 9 months. In the third quarter, we paid three regulatory milestones totaling $400 million to Daiichi Sankyo following regulatory approvals for Enhertu in both breast and lung cancer. We also paid the last of the three initial upfront payments of $325 million relating to Dato-DXd as well as $100 million for the TeneoTwo acquisition which closed during the third quarter. This brings the total amount paid year-to-date for the Daiichi Sankyo [indiscernible] and other transactions to just over $2 billion. Our current net debt to EBITDA ratio is 2.9x. If adjusting for the Alexion fair value inventory uplift would does not affect our cash flow, the ratio is 1.9x, a reflection of the improvement in our underlying cash flow. Our cash conversion ratio continues to improve and we continue to focus on working capital improvement, inventory management and cash conversion. We remain committed to a strong investment grade rating and our capital allocation policy priorities remain unchanged. Please turn to Slide 12. As a reminder, we upgraded our total revenue guidance at half year results. Today, we are updating our core EPS guidance for the full year. We continue to expect total revenue to grow by low 20s percentage. Despite being in early November, there continued to be several variables that we are monitoring in the fourth quarter, including Evusheld delivery, NRDL update and VBP implementation with potential stock compensation and the timing of some approvals with associated milestones. For the full year. We now anticipate core EPS to grow by high 20s to low 30s percentage at constant exchange rate, up from previously mid to high 20s. Although the phasing of expenses in the second half resulted in strong profitability in the third quarter, we expect higher operating costs particularly SG&A in the fourth quarter, similar to the sequential quarterly increase in prior years. As we report in U.S dollars, we face some currency headwinds with all of our key currencies having depreciated versus the U.S dollar. Based on spot rates as per the end of October 2022, we continue to anticipate mid single-digit adverse FX impact on total revenue for the full year. For core EPS, we now anticipate a mid to high single-digit adverse impact for the full year, that is somewhat higher than what we anticipated back in July and reflects further depreciation of our key currencies. This is something to bear in mind when you update your models. Please turn to Slide 13. I've previously mentioned that we anticipate keeping R&D investments in the low 20s percentage of total revenue also over the mid to long-term. Today, just over 50% of our total R&D spend is invested in late-stage pipeline, including extensive LCM programs for already launched medicines. About 40% of our R&D budget is invested in early stage pipeline and discovery focusing on novel therapies generating proof-of-concept and building our in-house portfolio of next generation medicines including ADCs, bi-specifics and complement therapies. This will help fuel our pipeline beyond 2025. The majority of the remaining part of the R&D budget is invested in Global Medical Affairs, which is focused on real world data generation and medical education, including driving guideline and practice change. This area of spend has become very important with our portfolio shifting into more specialty areas. We have a very disciplined investment approach where we set high bars from both a scientific and commercial perspective for the assets that reprogress into late-stage development. A good example is our PCSK9, which we terminated in the quarter despite having positive data. But it did not meet our high predefined criteria required for progressing into Phase III development. Our commercial investments include launching new products, new indications in existing markets, and existing products in new markets. Good examples are Enhertu low breast cancer and Lynparza in prostate cancer were considerable market shaping is required. Please turn to Slide 14. With our culture of continuous improvement, we have been working hard to drive productivity and cost savings. Just to share some examples today, we have worked to optimize our manufacturing network between in-house and external CMOs, as well as build new capabilities such as continuous manufacturing to make us more efficient and flexible. We're also looking at our global footprint enhancing how we work, leveraging low cost location and growing our global shared service centers. We're making great progress on the integration of Alexion, recently moving to a direct easy distribution model in more than 22 markets. I'm pleased to share that we now have a rare disease unit in China. We've been on a journey shifting late-stage clinical trials from an outsourced model to more mixed an in-house model that provides greater data control, and better trial execution in a more cost effective manner. Over time, the investments we are doing today will help accelerate clinical trials and shorten the time needed for regulatory submission, which will allow us to launch new medicines quicker in the future. With that, please advance to the next slide, and I will hand over to Dave, who will take us through the performance of our oncology business.