Sometimes, even published medical research needs a correction. That's what happened here — the journal has issued an erratum, which is a formal notice that something in a previous article was wrong and has been fixed.
We don't know what the original study was about, who it involved, or what specific error was corrected. The notice doesn't tell us whether it was a small typo or something that could affect how the results are understood. That lack of detail is important context.
What we do know is that the scientific process includes these corrections to maintain accuracy. When researchers or journals spot mistakes, they publish errata so everyone reading the work has the right information. This particular correction stands alone without the original article for context, so we can't draw any conclusions about treatments or health implications from it.