Cervical cancer, first of all, has probably a two-year lag period between pre-cancer and advanced cancer, with all those opportunities to either prevent it with vaccinations and screening, as Shannon Salvador mentioned, or to intervene and cure it. There are great opportunities there.
The endometrial cancer I was talking about is one that might present with spotting. It very much depends on the molecular features of that tumour and whether it is a cancer confined to the uterus and cured by surgery alone or is identified by that molecular feature and definitely needs more treatment because of a very high risk of recurrence.
In knowing that, there are opportunities to intervene and cure, and there are opportunities to spare treatment just in those two examples.