Thank you, Jennifer. First, baseline injections, again, that data has been collected, but this is historical from charts of the investigators. It isn't controlled within a study, and it's not something that necessarily you want to state publicly until you're confident that the numbers are correct. So, I don't believe there's any value or advantage for us to talk about interim data around the injection numbers. Suffice it to say, we would expect it to be less than the 8.6 that we saw on DAVIO 1, but we really don't know at this point. However, when you really talk about that, what you're really getting at is the reduction in treatment burden. And I actually believe that the vorolanib important denominator here to look at is not the retrospective injections leading into the study, but it's the prospective injections that the Eylea arm will receive. So, drilling down into that, after month two when all the patients received their last Eylea load, and then they got either 1901 or a sham, for the six months following that visit, the Eylea arm should, on average, get at least three injections. And in fact, they may get more because they could also get supplemented. That's really the best comparator because that is under the control of the study and six injections a year. Multiple studies have shown us that's kind of the average that patients get in the real world. So, when we talk about treatment burden reduction at the top line, the first treatment reduction burden will be prospective against that Eylea arm, but we will also talk about retrospectively. One last point, which again, drilling down a little bit. Three injections in the Eylea arm and DAVIO 2 goes to six injections per year. That's a smaller number than the 8.6 that the DAVIO 1 trial showed. So even if we do just as well in DAVIO 2 with supplements or lack thereof in the treatment arms, the percentages will be different, will be lower because the denominator against that will be lower. So, just a note there. Finally, granularity of the data. I'd say once again, we're working through exactly what we will be able to show and be confident in, in early December, because the data will not be locked at that point. That takes another month or two. But we will certainly show by group the visual acuity change in visual acuity, OCT data, we expect to show supplement free rate for all the arms and percentages of patients who were supplementary up to month six, which, I'm sorry, up to month eight in this study. And also, safety, of course, we showed some safety data already and we should have the reported safety data pretty complete by the time we do top-line. Jennifer, anything else?