Hey, Greg. Thanks, thanks for the questions. We appreciate it. So you're absolutely right. We, you know, we gave new guidance today on the timing of the study of atebimetinib in combination with Regeneron's anti-PD1 Libtayo in lung cancer. And we said not just I think you used the word start, but we specifically said we're going to dose the first patient in 2026. And, you know, I think that's important. Different companies use kind of ambiguous words that can really mean very different things around trial timing, but dosing the first patient is just a really clear and unambiguous milestone. So, you know, that's why we like to be clear with that. So absolutely, dosing the first patient in that study in the second half of 2026. And we're really excited about that because of all the preclinical data, both from us and from the luminaries in the immunotherapy field. Like, Wolchuk, who, you know, has a paper showing that pulsatile inhibition of MET can really enhance the activity of immunotherapy in a lung cancer model in a preclinical setting. So really excited about that study and looking forward to dosing that first patient. With regard to our agreement with Eli Lilly, to evaluate atebimetinib in combination with olomirafen. You'll recall we, you know, that agreement is much more recent. Right? So while we had announced a Regeneron agreement in February, that one we announced over the summer, towards the end of the summer. So it's just a little early to guide on that yet. So we're just not gonna guide on the timing of the first patient dosed. But, certainly in due time, you can expect guidance on that. You know, in terms of the kind of the dynamic between those two, look, I mean, you know, there's, again, a vast unmet need in lung cancer. You know, obviously, the olomirafen is a KRAS G12C inhibitor, so that trial would be focused on patients with a KRAS G12C mutation. Whereas, you know, the use of immunotherapy would potentially address, you know, a different population of patients. So, you know, I think it's early to really comment further on that, but I will say we think atebimetinib with its ability to durably inhibit the MAP kinase pathway with this really kind of excellent tolerability that I think you just heard about from two of the investigators. You know, we think it's really an attractive backbone, frankly, for combinations with a wide variety of agents. And, you know, we've shared preclinical data on quite a few and are exploring quite a few more. So there's just really a broad potential for combinations here, and we don't, you know, we think of these two as kind of just the beginning of the potential for atebimetinib. So just really excited for what we'll be able to do for patients with, you know, what we believe we'll be able to do for patients with lung cancer, colorectal cancer, melanoma, just a really vast number of types of cancer that are frequently driven by the MAP kinase pathway. So really excited about the breadth there. And then, you know, with regard to our cash guidance with runway into 2029, we're certainly funded to conduct Phase III as we've laid out to conduct these studies in lung cancer and then to advance our preclinical pipeline as well. Right? So keep in mind that atebimetinib is the first and most advanced of our pipeline of deep cyclic inhibitors, but we're pursuing and developing deep cyclic inhibitors against a variety of targets in oncology and a variety of pathways. So we're, you know, we're certainly excited to continue that work because I think the ability that atebimetinib has demonstrated of deep CYP1 inhibitors to mitigate resistance mechanisms to durably inhibit tumors and to do so with just really remarkable tolerability. I mean, to hear a cancer patient say they've never felt better as Dr. Ocean mentioned, is just really remarkable. So we're excited for that preclinical pipeline as well.