 Yeah, good afternoon. My name is Herman Einzler. I'm based in Wurzburg and I'm the director of the Department of Internal Medicine where we see a lot of myeloma patients. Now the myeloma patients are quite concerned about COVID-19 and I think that is is clearly very important because we know that the likelihood of a severe cause of a COVID-19 infection is higher among myeloma patients when compared to healthy controls. So please be careful, please wear your mask, please keep social distancing and also all the hygiene restrictions that should be followed. And this should be also done in a patient who receives a vaccination. Now why this? We know that we can successfully vaccinate patients with multiple myeloma and I would encourage you all to do a vaccination and to have a vaccination done. Concerning the different vaccines, I don't see an issue with any of the vaccines. It's so important to get vaccinated. I would accept every vaccine that is available for you. There is no increased risk with these vaccines like AstraZeneca or J&J that are slightly different from the biotech or Moderna vaccine that are RNA based but still they are safe and I think especially in myeloma patients they can be safely applied. What we don't know or what is questionable whether the protection in a myeloma patient is as good as in a healthy control and that's why even after being vaccinated you should still wear a mask and do the social distancing and all the measurements of hygiene. But in principle and that has been shown and we have seen this that in most of the patients the vaccination is protective. Patients that have a very low likelihood to respond to the vaccine patients early after stem cell transplantation so in the first one to two months following stem cell transplantation is probably not effective. You should also be careful not to take steroids during maybe five or seven days prior to vaccination. You shouldn't use steroids five to seven days post vaccination though. This is important and if you are in a certain schedule it always makes sense to have the vaccination being done between two cycles of therapy and if possible it might be good to delay a little bit the treatment and have sufficient time that the immune response can develop. So in conclusion I would recommend you all to get vaccinated accept every vaccine that is approved by the AMA by the European Medicine Agency and get vaccinated as early as possible because we know that these vaccinations are protective in myeloma patients but not probably in all patients as much as in a healthy control. Please stay safe and all the best to you all.