Well, first of all let me speak to the patient population for Pyoderma, because we’ve actually purchased some very good data here recently from, if you were to guess on two companies we purchase it, from it be one of those two, right? So, the patients that were treated, the number of patients treat over the last three years, it was between 11,000 and 14,000. The prevalence is considered to be around 3,500, but the incidence is 3,500, but the treatment is 11,000 to 14,000 a years, right. So when we think about that and we think about the results we’ve seen so far, we believe that we do pretty well in getting a percentage of the patients treated per year, still with that said, your underlying question is exactly right. The pricing for that kind of an indication could be substantially higher than it would be in a broader non-infectious uveitis type indication. So what we’ll have to look to, to help us set our plans for pricing is which indications, do we get to the marketplace with first. And so as you heard us, we talked about the Behçet’s uveitis, which again is probably again, 3 or 4 to 7,000 patients in the U.S., pyoderma is fairly close. So those could be a higher premium pricing, than you see in non-infectious uveitis. So while our product has delivered at the same dose in the same way on the same regiment, we have to have it work across indications. If we’re into some of these smaller indications first in the marketplace, you could see us starting with a higher price than ultimately where we would settle.
Ted A. Tenthoff – Piper Jaffray & Co: Okay. Fair enough. And then, if you could just remind me, the six patients that we’ve seen so far – walk us through the data. And is there any update on either durability or, kind of, how they’ve been doing?