Dr. Neil Gallagher
Analyst
Yeah. So I think the first thing to remember is that the trial -- the SAVE trial accrued a very heavily pretreated population. So, two-thirds of patients had failed prior to ven. One-third have been or half -- over half of them had been transplanted. So this is a patient population with a median number of prior therapies of 3 to 4. And therefore, the cytopenia rate that was observed is, according to the investigators and not only investigators in the study but others, entirely consistent with what you would expect with ven and oral to cytopen in that particular patient population. I mean, if there’s been some comparison to a less heavily pretreated population that may be in people’s minds, that’s just not a valid comparison. Like, you have to look at the patient population that was included in the trial. And therefore, that’s why we can -- the investigator has stated his confidence and we agree with him that the cytopenia rate was consistent with what would be expected from the backbone. In terms of BAML, I’m not sure that I understand why you think that there’s a challenge around dose selection both. So just to reiterate for the entire audience, there were two doses of revumenib tested in all three of the combination trials that we reported out at the investor event at ASH, right, or was also reported at ASH itself. BAML was presented independently of our event as well. So the two doses that were included in all three combination trials were 113 milligrams twice a day and 163 milligrams twice a day. Different patient populations, obviously, in the BAML trial, they were newly diagnosed, SAVE we’ve just discussed, they were heavily pretreated with relapsed/refractory and in AUGMENT-102, they were heavily pretreated with relapsed/refractory patients. And in all three trials, the dose limiting toxicity windows for both doses were cleared, okay. So -- and in -- with respect to BAML, what the group is now doing is expanding those cohorts to further refine what the RP2D would be for a Phase 3 trial and we stated many times publicly that it is our intention to proceed to that Phase 3 by the end of the year. So that the -- so just -- and just one final point, those two doses, 113 milligrams and 163 milligrams, 163 milligrams is the presumptive monotherapy full dose when administered with a strong CYP3A4 inhibitor, okay? And 113 milligrams is also highly active. Also, you have to recall that venetoclax and azacitidine in the BAML trial was administered at full dose. So there’s -- the -- there’s no question in our mind that the combinability of revumenib with ven/aza in the newly diagnosed setting, as well as in the other two settings, it’s clear.