If the medicine instructions didn't state that they should be taken in the morning it might be reasonable, but presumably the producer had some reason for including that instruction. Furthermore, the linked study implies that this effect was suspected before but not confirmed - it's possible and even likely that the CedarCure makers knew this and specified the instructions as such.
> There’s a really interesting phenomenon in the immunotherapy field that has been going on for what seems to be several years now
> All of this culminated in a really incredible review paper
(review paper references papers from multiple years prior)
And no, it's absurd to imply I do carry blame here. I'm not a medical professional and that's exactly why I asked two specialists for help understanding the criticality of the instructions... that's the point. Even if they didn't know, they could have deferred to the written instructions rather than coming up with an original conclusion.
> There’s a really interesting phenomenon in the immunotherapy field that has been going on for what seems to be several years now
> All of this culminated in a really incredible review paper
(review paper references papers from multiple years prior)
And no, it's absurd to imply I do carry blame here. I'm not a medical professional and that's exactly why I asked two specialists for help understanding the criticality of the instructions... that's the point. Even if they didn't know, they could have deferred to the written instructions rather than coming up with an original conclusion.