Brendan Delaney
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Please proceed.
No, again, the duration of treatment will evolve over time, as you can imagine, if you're getting later line patients, you expect a little bit of a shorter duration upfront. And then to your question, if you can fully penetrate the frontline setting, I think that's where we'll start to see a much longer duration. So that will evolve over time. However, we did provide, again, with limited data, the reorder rate that would - I have provided in my prepared remarks, north of 80%, it's encouraging. Again, not a perfect measure of it, but when -- if you assume at account orders and puts a patient on therapy, the fact that they continue to reorder in vivo [ph] amounts that would kind of mimic the dosing and schedule of a patient. That's at least encouraging not a perfect metric, but it looks good. And the fact that more than 80% reorder rate is, I think, pretty encouraging. The other thing I would say on that is, the feedback from clinicians has been very positive, right. They're able to start patients, but in that way hearing from our representatives, that those patients are continuing on therapy and continuing very well, is very encouraging, right. And I think many physicians see this as a very differentiated drug and one where you see response pretty early right. And so the clinical experience that builds, leads me to believe that will, over time, start to kind of maximize the duration of therapy, especially as we penetrate the frontline settings.