Well, yeah. And I think, you know, just along the lines of what Scott was just saying, the patient population is also different from what Chronocort studied. In that we have a broader patient population. And as you recall in their study, basically, what they were looking at was trying to reduce GCs. And A4 was sort of a, you know, sort of a side issue. Had to be roughly where it started. Okay? Which could have been normal, could have been, you know, sort of above normal. And so what we'd like to do is be able to address the full population of patients who have CAH, may have high A4s and not so high GCs, high GCs, and normal A4, and high both. Right? And so in order to do that, you really can't have the same endpoint as Chronocort had. Okay? So now we also have a cascade, as I mentioned, and in the call, of secondary endpoints. And some of those are looking at certain aspects of how quickly we work and then, you know, sort of other combinations of particular, you know, sort of endpoints of interest. But we also will look in the same way that they did at, you know, somewhat, you know, similar, you know, endpoint for theirs too. But that's not what we, you know, intend to use for the FDA. And you can't, you know, so if we make the primary endpoint this broader endpoint, that's what it is required to have to get approved.