In the paper 'Intersection theorems with geometric consequences' (Combinatorica 1981) P. Frankl and R. M. Wilson consider families $\mathcal{F}$ of $k$-subsets of $\{1,\dots,n\}$ with the restriction on mutual intersections: $|A\cap B|-k$ is not divisible by $q$, where $q$ is a fixed prime power, whenever $A\ne B$ are from $\mathcal{F}$. They claim that $|\mathcal{F}|\leqslant \binom{n}{q-1}$, it is cited also by R. L. Graham here. This bound looks very strange: what if $n=q-1>k$, for example? Or $q-1>n$?
I think that from their proof the following weaker estimate may be obtained: $|\mathcal{F}| \leqslant \sum_{i\leqslant q-1}\binom{n}{i}$.
Now the questions: was there errata, or maybe everything is correct and I miss something? What are current best lower and upper bounds in this question?