Yes, Justin, it's a good question. So again, I think you have to be - Mollie, who's not on the call, has taught me to be precise in my language. In the KMT2A - in the frontline and in the relapsed/refractory for KMT2A, those patients are typically younger. You want to get them to transplant as quickly as you can, in general. Not always, but in general, that's true. In the case of NPM1, those patients are often older, and so there may not be as much of a desire to move them to transplant. What we're seeing, Justin, is quite interesting, and that is they seem to do well in either case. This is focused more on the NPM1 than the KMT2A because your question is about transplant. But I think we give physicians the option. If they want - if they believe it's in a patient's best interest to go to transplant, they have that option, and then they can put them back on ziftomenib. All of our protocols allow that, allow the physician or the patient to go back on zifto post-transplant. If, on the other hand, they feel that perhaps they'd want to save that transplant, delay that transplant, then they can do that. And they seem to get very good benefit. You might say, well, why would they save the transplant. And the reasons are we forget - I mean, it's, in many cases, still the best option for a cure, but it is not cost-free. There is a 20% to 25% risk of mortality, you typically have graft versus host disease, you're on lifelong immunosuppressants. There are a lot of complications associated with transplant. So in that older population, particularly NPM1, Justin, you may actually - if you're able to drive a durable CR, you may greatly delay the time to transplant and really save that. The final thing I'll say, Justin, is we are also pursuing a formal post-transplant maintenance study. That's the 012 protocol. That is currently in a safety run-in phase as part of an IST. That would ideally allow any patient who fits the genotype to come on post-transplant. Whether that patient has come from zifto, from a FLT3 inhibitor, from another menin inhibitor, they would be eligible to go to that. Let's break that out separately. We're basically, Justin, going to do it all. And I think the beauty of it is, again, because of the safety, the tolerability, the activity of zifto, you're giving physicians this optionality. They can take patients to transplant or not. And you'll see - we're looking forward to sharing this data with you at the end of the year. I think it'll become clearer as we walk you through the data that has been generated in the 007 protocol to date.