Yeah, but also to just add to what John said, I think we’ve said from the very beginning, that to find patients with active disease, that at least two out of a four on the vitreous haze, it’s more difficult to find them in the United States because treatment or intervention occurs before that. It’s a little easier to find patients with more severe disease in these new countries that have opened up, so there’s a strong rationale as to why that bolus should occur on the basis of the various geographic areas that we’re now opening up centers. And that has historical precedent. If you look at all the other companies that have done studies for acute uveitis, they see a disproportionate number of patients enrolled from these new countries that we now are getting up and running. So it really makes sense, and that’s why we’re relatively optimistic that there’s this chance to get this bolus of patients. On the XMetD front, the only safety issues related to the drug really were in the efficacy results, and that really is a function of raising glucose, which is exactly what we would have expected. The other adverse events were more related to typical Phase I trials in that we saw things like headaches and we saw things like intravenous catheter, because the catheter was in place for a five day period. And in fact, the weight of adverse events, although none were severe, was virtually identical in the placebo versus the active group. So the safety aspect of this seems very predictable, and there’s nothing in the safety results that would preclude very aggressive development at this point in time. Where we haven’t finished designing the Phase II trial, we believe that it wouldn’t be dissimilar in terms of the types of things we would measure, because really, you’re looking at glucose and insulin. The difference is in patients rather than having to inject insulin, we could provoke hypoglycemic episodes by, in the case of congenital hyperinsulinism, you would do the measurements after a prolonged fast, and that’s typically what they do to characterize patients. And in the patients that have post-gastric bypass hyperinsulinemia, you would just feed them, because that’s typically what provokes their hypoglycemia, and then you’d measure glucose. So again, the endpoints are validated and relatively simple and very relevant. So I think that the actual I’s dotted and T’s crossed for the protocols haven’t yet been completed and we’re still talking to experts, and we need to have some chats with regulatory agencies, we have a pretty good understanding of what we need to do to prove that the drug works in these patients.