Yes, thanks, Jonathan. Thanks for that. So, as for any changes underway at FDA, as we said in the prepared remarks, we’re not seeing any impact at all. The agency has been responsive, collaborative, productive. So we’re not seeing any effects at all. We requested priority review. We’ll be able to give guidance. We would expect to receive notification from FDA on whether the application has been accepted for review and the PDUFA date here in the second quarter and we can communicate that at that time. But at this point, it’s business as usual. I’ll just add, Jonathan, recall that we have breakthrough therapy designation and NPM1-mutant AML. And as we said at the time, this is when that designation matters because agents that have breakthrough therapy designation generally get a higher priority and more resources within FDA because of course, they are directed at significant unmet needs and there is – and needs for which there’s no available therapy. And so whether or not that’s playing into the fact that we’re not seeing any impact at all, I can’t say, but I think we feel today pretty good about where we are with FDA. With respect to the second part of your question about the monotherapy data, we – again, we’ve answered this question, I think many times. The CR, CRh rate will be between 20% and 30%. We’ll also look at time on treatment, safety and tolerability, all the key considerations. You’ll see much of that articulated in the abstract. The ASCO presentation will have a more fulsome data set, of course, because you can go much beyond the abstract. The timing of those two, they’ll be as of the same data cutoff. But of course, the oral presentation will have more data, of course, relative to the abstract.