Guest guest Posted April 30, 2001 Report Share Posted April 30, 2001 I know this relates to silicone gel for the most part, but the point must be taken that statistically significant results have been obtained to show causation between implants and disease... Patty ----- Original Message ----- From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> <Recipient List Suppressed:> Sent: Monday, April 30, 2001 11:08 AM Subject: Silicone Gel Breast Implant Rupture, Extracapsular Silicone, and Health Status in a Population of Women ~ New Journal of Rheumatology VOLUME 28: NO. 5 MAY 2001 http://jrheum.com/subscribers/01/05/996.html Silicone Gel Breast Implant Rupture, Extracapsular Silicone, and Health Status in a Population of Women S. LORI BROWN, GENE PENNELLO, WENDIE A. BERG, MARY SCOTT SOO, and MICHAEL S. MIDDLETON ABSTRACT. Objective. To assess whether breast implant rupture or extracapsular silicone are associated with selected symptoms of self-reported physician-diagnosed connective tissue disease (CTD). Methods. Women with silicone gel breast implants responded to a questionnaire that included questions on health status, satisfaction with implants, symptoms of CTD, and physician-diagnosed disease. These women then had magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of their breasts to determine the status of the implants with respect to rupture and extracapsular silicone. Results. Women with breast implant rupture diagnosed by MRI were no more likely to report a diagnosis of selected CTD than those with intact implants or those with implants of indeterminate status. Women with extracapsular silicone (silicone gel outside of the fibrous scar that forms around breast implants) were more likely to report having fibromyalgia (FM, p = 0.004) or other CTD, which included dermatomyositis, polymyositis, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, mixed CTD, pulmonary fibrosis, eosinophilic fasciitis, and polymyalgia (p = 0.008) than other women in the study. The association with FM remained statistically significant when adjusted for multiple comparisons (7 diagnoses) and implant age, implant location, or implant manufacturer (p < 0.05 in all cases), but became of borderline statistical significance when adjusted for multiple comparisons and self-perceived health status (p = 0.094) or self-perceived rupture status (p = 0.051). The association with other CTD remained statistically significant when adjusted for multiple comparisons and implant location or implant manufacturer, but became borderline or insignificant when adjusted for multiple comparisons and for implant age (p = 0.051), self-perceived health status (p = 0.434), or self-perceived rupture status (p = 0.145). Logistic regression was used to compute odds ratios of self-reported diagnoses comparing women with and without extracapsular silicone. The odds ratios were 2.8 (95% CI 1.2 to 6.3) for FM, and 2.6 (95% CI 0.8 to 8.5) for other CTD after adjustment for implant age, implant location, implant manufacturer, implant type, self-perceived health, self-perceived rupture status, and site of surgery practice. Conclusion. These data suggest an association between extracapsular silicone from ruptured silicone breast implants and FM. If this association persists in other studies, women with silicone gel breast implants should be informed of the potential risk of developing fibromyalgia if their breast implants rupture and the silicone gel escapes the fibrous scar capsule. (J Rheumatol 2001;28:996-1003) Key Indexing Terms: BREAST IMPLANTS BREAST PROSTHESES SILICONE FIBROMYALGIA ADVERSE EVENTS ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Silicone gel breast implants have been available in the United States since 1963. In 1976, with the passage of the Medical Device Amendments, implants became regulated products. After manufacturers of silicone gel breast implants failed to provide adequate scientific evidence of the safety and effectiveness of their products in 1991 and because of emerging health concerns, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) imposed a short voluntary moratorium on their sale and implantation in 1992. After a second panel meeting in 1992, the FDA agreed with the General and Plastic Surgery Devices Advisory Panel that there was a public health need for silicone gel breast implants to remain on the market for use only by women requiring implants for reconstruction after breast cancer or for other medical indications while manufacturers performed safety and efficacy studies1. Women desiring breast implants for reconstruction were required to receive silicone gel implants in an adjunct study to ensure that they gave informed consent prior to implantation. Unanswered questions about the prevalence of breast implant rupture and the potential link, if any, between implants and immune-related disorders were cited as important factors in the FDA's decision2. Recent studies have ruled out a large increased risk of connective tissue disease (CTD) overall for women with breast implants3-5, but they have not ruled out small increases in specific rare CTDs. Neither have these studies ruled out the possibility that women with breast implants may have a complex of symptoms or a syndrome that is not typical of diagnosed CTD. A genetic predisposition for developing symptoms has been investigated and may be a factor in the development of symptoms in women with breast implants6. Another factor that has not been studied is the potential role of exposure to silicone gel from ruptured implants. In our study, a population of women with silicone breast implants underwent MR imaging examinations to determine the status of their silicone gel breast implants. These women were invited to participate in the MR imaging examination without regard to health status or self-reported symptoms or diagnoses. Our study reports on the health status of women with ruptured implants. MATERIALS AND METHODS Patients. Participating women were from 2 plastic surgery practices in Birmingham, Alabama, included in a National Cancer Institute (NCI) study to examine whether implants were associated with cancer or connective tissue disease. A cohort of women having their first augmentation mammoplasty prior to 19887 were identified in the medical records from the implanting plastic surgeon and information was abstracted from the record on the surgery and the implant. Women were subsequently located, contacted by mail, and asked to complete a questionnaire. The protocol for the current study was reviewed and approved by 5 institutional review boards and a Certificate of Confidentiality was obtained from the Department of Health and Human Services. Women who had responded to the questionnaire in the NCI study and still lived in Alabama at the time of that questionnaire were eligible for the current cohort. Of 1247 eligible women, 907 responded to a computer assisted telephone interview that focused on past surgeries in which implants were removed or replaced (the results of this study have been submitted elsewhere). Women were also asked questions regarding their current health status including whether they had certain symptoms or disease diagnosed by their doctors. Of these 907 women, 837 reported still having implants and of those, 654 reported having either single or double lumen silicone gel breast implants. Women were invited to undergo an MRI to determine the status of their implants after completing the telephone interview providing there were no contraindications for undergoing an MRI (metal implant or battery activated stimulator, pregnancy, tattoos, body weight exceeding 300 pounds, or a history of metal fragments in the eye). The order in which women were called and invited to participate in the study was random in that the order in which women were interviewed was random. The study had funding for up to 400 MRI examinations and was also constrained by the contract period the FDA had with the MRI facility. Women were invited to participate in the examination until all possible appointments were filled. Initially, only women within a 50 mile radius of the clinic were invited to participate. As the study progressed, women outside of the area were called back and invited, as were subsequent contacts. Of the 445 women invited to participate in the study, 359 (80.7%) accepted during the allotted time period. Fourteen with saline breast implants and one woman with no implants in either breast were excluded. The remaining 344 women with silicone gel breast implants comprised our study population. A comparison between the women accepting and undergoing the examination and other women has been described8. Women gave informed consent prior to receiving an MRI. The telephone interviews were completed between December 1, 1997 and May 20, 1998 and the MRI were completed between January 6 and May 26, 1998. Radiological assessment. Three radiologists independently assessed the MR images for evidence of breast implant rupture. Implants were rated as having no evidence of rupture (intact), indeterminate (suspicious for rupture, but not certain), or ruptured. The agreement between radiologists was almost perfect9 as has been reported8. Radiologists also assessed the images of the breasts for the presence of extracapsular silicone that had migrated out of the fibrous scar capsule that forms around the implant. The agreement between radiologists for extracapsular silicone was moderate to substantial8,9. Analyses. Women with ruptured implants were compared to all others (intact or indeterminate) and women with extracapsular silicone were compared to all others. Rupture and extracapsular silicone were examined for association with increases in self-reported symptoms or physician-diagnosed diseases. The associations were measured with exact p values based on the Fisher-Freeman-Halton test for 2 by C tables, which generalizes Fisher's exact test for 2 by 2 tables. Significant associations were reassessed by stratifying the data on a number of covariates. The possible covariates were implant satisfaction, participant age, implant age (from time of mammoplasty), current problems with implants, perceived rupture, implant manufacturer (Surgitek, -Uphoff International, Dow Corning, Mentor or Heyer-Schulte, and McGhan or 3M/McGhan), implant type (single or double lumen), and implant location (subglandular or submuscular). After stratifying on a covariate, homogeneity of stratum-specific odds ratios (OR) was tested with Zelen's test. If this hypothesis was not rejected, then a common OR across strata was assumed and was tested against a value of one by the uniformly most powerful (UMP) test based on the conditional distribution given by Gart. The p value of the test was computed by the horizontal line method of summing all probabilities of data sets with probability less than or equal to the probability of the data set observed. An exact maximum likelihood estimate of the common OR was computed with respect to the conditional distribution. An approximate 95% CI was computed by inverting the UMP test by the method of and using the mid p value adjustment to compute upper and lower bounds. All of these calculations were made in StatExact10. Logistic regression was used to compute OR simultaneously adjusted for multiple covariates. In addition to the covariates mentioned above, the logistic models included site of surgery practice and interactions between covariates. P values were adjusted for multiple comparisons by computing an upper bound on the smallest familywise significance level at which the comparison would still be significant, where familywise significance level is the probability of a falsely significant result among any of the comparisons in the family. The upper bound was based on Sidek's inequality and is 1 - (1 - p)k, where p is the unadjusted p value and k is the number of comparisons in the family11. RESULTS The mean age for the 344 women at the time of their first mammoplasty was 34.1 ± 7.9 years and their mean age at the time of the MRI was 51.4 ± 8.4 years. Women received their first implant between 1970 and 1988 and the mean implant age was 16.5 ± 3.4 years. As reported8, the radiologists found that 236 (68.6%) women had at least one ruptured implant. While a majority of women had a ruptured implant, 73 (21.2%) had extracapsular silicone gel that had migrated outside of the fibrous scar capsule that forms around the implant. Of the 265 women with either a ruptured or indeterminate implant, 72 (27.2%) had extracapsular silicone gel. One woman had extracapsular silicone but no evidence of implant rupture or self-reported explantation of a previous implant. Overall 378 (55.0%) of 687 implants had ruptured and 85 (12.4%) had extracapsular silicone gel. Table 1 shows the distribution of women with ruptured implants or with extracapsular silicone according to satisfaction with implants, self-perceived health, participant age, and report of current local complication with implants, including self-perceived rupture of implants(s). Women with ruptured implants did not differ from other women (with intact or indeterminate implants) with respect to satisfaction with their implant(s), self-perceived health, age, or report of current implant problems. Women with ruptured implants were also no more likely than other women to report that they suspected that their implants were ruptured. Women with extracapsular silicone did not differ from other women with respect to satisfaction with implants or report of current problems with implants, but were more likely to report poor health status. Women with extracapsular silicone depicted by MRI were also more likely to suspect that their implant(s) were ruptured. Table 1. Satisfaction with implant, self-perceived health, age group, current problem with implant, and self-perceived rupture by implant status among 344 women with silicone gel breast implants (column percents). Table 2 shows the prevalence of women with ruptured implants or with extracapsular silicone according to implant type, implant location, implant age, and implant manufacturer. The prevalence of rupture differed significantly among manufacturers, implant age groups, and locations of the implant (submuscular or subglandular). The prevalence of extracapsular silicone did not differ significantly among the levels of any variable. Table 2. Implant location, implant type, and implant manufacturer by implant status. During the interview, women were asked whether they currently had any of 5 symptoms. Neither rupture nor extracapsular silicone was associated with an increase in the report of any symptom by women (Table 3) nor were they associated with the number of symptoms reported (latter results not shown). Women were also asked whether they currently had each of 7 physician-diagnosed conditions (Table 4). While rupture was not associated with an increase in any of these diagnoses, extracapsular silicone was significantly associated with fibromyalgia (FM, p = 0.004) and other connective tissue disease (p = 0.008), which included dermatomyositis, polymyositis, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, mixed connective tissue disease, pulmonary fibrosis, eosinophilic fasciitis, and polymyalgia. Extracapsular silicone was also borderline significantly associated with Raynaud's phenomenon (p = 0.086). Adjustments for multiple comparisons had little impact on the conclusions. Multiplicity adjusted p values based on applying Sidek's inequality to the family of 7 diagnoses tested for association with extracapsular silicone were 0.028 for FM, 0.055 for other connective tissue disease, and 0.467 for Raynaud's (Table 4). A logistic regression was used to calculate the odds ratio that at least one of a woman's implants had extracapsular silicone for each of the symptoms and diagnoses in Tables 3 and 4. The OR was 2.7 (95% CI = 1.4 to 5.2) for FM, indicating that the odds of self-reported FM were 2.7 times greater for women with extracapsular silicone than women without extracapsular silicone. The OR was 2.9 (95% CI = 1.0 to 8.7) for Raynaud's, and 3.7 (95% CI = 1.4 to 9.4) for other CTD. Statistically significant or borderline associations of extracapsular silicone with diagnosis were reassessed by stratifying by the participant's age group at time of MRI, self-perceived implant status, and self-perceived health, (Table 5) and by implant age group, implant location, and implant manufacturer (Table 6). Stratification variables were considered one variable at a time. For each diagnosis, stratum-specific OR were not significantly different for each variable, according to Zelen's exact test, the smallest p value being 0.135 for FM stratified on implant age. We therefore assumed a common OR across strata and tested the hypothesis that the common OR is one. Under this assumption, associations with extracapsular silicone that were borderline before stratification (Raynaud's) remained borderline or became statistically significant. Associations with extracapsular silicone that were statistically significant (FM and other CTD) continued to be statistically significant except in the case of other CTD stratified on self-perceived health, which was borderline (p = 0.078). P values were adjusted for multiple comparisons within the family of 7 diagnoses considered by applying Sidek's inequality. Borderline associations (Raynaud's) became insignificant and statistically significant associations (FM and other CTD) remained significant except for other CTD stratified on implant age, which just missed being significant (p = 0.051). Table 3. Persistent symptoms reported by implant status. Table 4. Self-reported physician diagnosis by implant status. Table 5. Raynaud's phenomenon, FM, and other CTD by extracapsular silicone stratified on participant age, self-perceived health and self-perceived implant rupture. Table 6. Raynaud's phenomenon, FM, and other CTD by extracapsular silicone stratified on implant location, implant age, or implant manufacturer. Logistic regression was used to compute OR of diagnoses, comparing women with and without extracapsular silicone, that were adjusted simultaneously for multiple covariates. The logistic models included the variables listed in Tables 5 and 6, except for patient age, which was not a significant predictor of extracapsular silicone. The models also included implant type, site of surgery practice, implant manufacturer by implant age interaction, and implant manufacturer by site interaction. These extra 4 variables were significant predictors of women with ruptured implants or ruptured or indeterminate implants as explained elsewhere8. Implant age was modeled as a continuous variable with a linear effect on the log scale rather than as a categorical variable as in Tables 2 and 6. The OR were 4.2 (95% CI 1.1-16.0, p = 0.037) for Raynaud's, 2.8 (95% CI 1.2-6.3, p = 0.013) for FM, and 2.7 (95% CI = 0.8-8.5, p = 0.102) for other CTD. DISCUSSION Extracapsular silicone was associated with an increase in self-reported physician-diagnosed fibromyalgia and other connective tissue disease in women with silicone gel breast implants. These associations remained statistically significant after separately controlling for the woman's age, implant age, location, and manufacturer. After an adjustment for multiple comparisons, the association with FM remained significant. Breast implant rupture alone was not associated with self-reported physician-diagnosed FM or other CTD. The natural history of breast implant rupture is not completely understood but it is believed in some cases that rupture with intracapsular containment of silicone gel may progress to extracapsular silicone gel. In a report on 29 patients with ruptured silicone gel implants diagnosed during open capsulotomy, 17.2% tested positive for antinuclear antibody (ANA), which was not significantly different than control subjects12. Whether the implant rupture was extracapsular was not stated in this study. A positive test for ANA may be seen in undifferentiated connective tissue disease but it is not a hallmark of FM. Another study reported the presence of positive ANA in women with breast implants referred by rheumatologists to be 18/24 (75%) of patients, but there was no comparison or control group13. The authors of this study also reported that a history of trauma to the breast, which was presumed to cause implant rupture, accelerated the onset of CTD. However, no evidence of the rupture status, either by imaging or explantation, was provided. Epidemiologic studies have ruled out a large increase in CTD associated with breast implants3-5,14,15 but the status of implants with respect to rupture or extracapsular silicone in these studies was unknown. American College of Rheumatology criteria for FM include a history of widespread pain and tenderness at specified tender points16 and it has been estimated that FM occurs with a prevalence of 2% in the US and 3.4% for women17. Symptoms reported by women with silicone gel breast implants are common in patients diagnosed with FM, suggesting that the atypical syndrome in women with breast implants reported by rheumatologists18-21 may be FM22. In one study, the most common diagnosis for women with breast implants referred for evaluation was FM (27/70, 38.6%) but the status of their implants with respect to rupture or extracapsular silicone was not known23. In another study of patients with breast implants referred to a rheumatology practice, 124/300 (41.3%) met the criteria for a diagnosis of FM24. In a study of women having their implants removed, 10/100 (10%) patients had FM25. While it was reported that 57% of the implants in that study had ruptured, any association between ruptured implants or extracapsular silicone and FM was not reported. s, et al did report that although there was an initial improvement after removal of implants in women with FM, symptoms of FM recurred within the next 6 to 12 months25. Not all clinicians regard the diagnosis of FM as definitive, and some consider FM and other syndromes whose diagnoses rely on subjective symptoms as functional somatic syndromes, implying that the pathogenesis is psychosomatic or related to litigation26. Others describe the pathophysiology of this syndrome in terms of pain amplification due to biochemical imbalances in the nervous or immune system27. Women in our study were more likely to think that their implants were ruptured when extracapsular silicone was present (Table 1). However, after adjusting for self-perceived rupture status, the association between self-reported physician-diagnosed FM and extracapsular silicone remained significant. Women in our study were also asked whether a physician had diagnosed them with other CTD such as dermatomyositis, polymyositis, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, mixed connective tissue disease, pulmonary fibrosis, eosinophilic fasciitis, or polymyalgia. Women with extracapsular silicone gel were more likely to report that they had other CTD than were other women in the study. It is not possible to determine whether any of these disorders predominated. Our category of other CTD is artificial and therefore those results are difficult to interpret. Raynaud's phenomenon may occur in isolation or be present in association with CTD such as scleroderma. We found the association between extracapsular silicone and Raynaud's syndrome had borderline statistical significance while there was no significant association observed for scleroderma and extracapsular silicone. The 3 cases of scleroderma reported to us were by women whose implants had ruptured but who did not have extracapsular silicone. The principle limitation of our study was its small size It would not be possible to rule out rare diseases (such as scleroderma) in association with ruptured implants, ruptured or indeterminate implants, or extracapsular silicone. Our study is cross-sectional in that we only have information on current implant status and current self-reported symptoms and diseases. We were unable to determine whether symptoms or disease occurred before or after the development of extracapsular silicone or whether it was before or after the implant was surgically implanted. Also, the results from this study were based on self-report of physician-diagnosed disease and therefore have the weaknesses attributed to self-reported disease. However, since the women did not know the status of their implants with respect to rupture, any error in disease misclassification would be expected to dilute the association of disease with rupture. We cannot know what effect the media or litigation had on participation in this study: anecdotal evidence suggests that some litigants were encouraged to participate in the NCI study and others were discouraged by their attorney(s) or others. Despite these limitations, the results of this study are valuable because it is the first study in which the implant status has been evaluated for all women. The women for the MRI study were invited to participate from a larger population of women with breast implants from Alabama without regard to their health status or knowledge of their implant status. While not definitive, our study does raise the question of whether implant status, especially implant rupture with extracapsular spread of silicone gel, may have a bearing on the health status of implanted women. It should be noted that we did not compare women with implants to those without. It is possible that there may be an increased prevalence of disease or symptoms in women with breast implant rupture compared to women without implants but we could not make this comparison. Our results indicate that women with extracapsular silicone gel may be at an increased risk for FM. If future studies confirm our findings, consideration as to whether women with silicone gel breast implants should be screened for implant rupture should be considered. Clearly, if the risk of rupture and subsequent extracapsular silicone increases the risk of fibromyalgia, women considering augmentation or reconstruction mammoplasty with silicone gel breast implants should be informed. ACKNOWLEDGMENT. We acknowledge the contributions of the women who participated in this study and appreciate the contributions of Drs. Louise Brinton and Jay Lubin from the National Cancer Institute who graciously provided access to the NCI cohort. Cay Burich, Vargish, Marilyn Sawyer, and Jon Schmalz from Abt Associates, Inc. in Chicago are to be commended for their work on this study. We thank Audrey Sheppard and Dr. Margaret of the FDA Office of Women's Health for their continued support for this work and thank the many reviewers of this study including Drs. al and Larry Kessler. From the Office of Surveillance and Biometrics, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Food and Drug Administration Rockville; Division of Breast Imaging, Department of Radiology and Greenebaum Cancer Center, University of land School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Department of Radiology, Duke South Hospital, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; Department of Radiology, University of California at San Diego School of Medicine, San Diego, CA, USA. Supported in part by the Food and Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health, and the US Department of Health and Human Services. S.L. Brown, PhD, MPH, Senior Research Scientist Officer; G. Pennello, PhD, Mathematical Statistician, Office of Surveillance and Biometrics, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Food and Drug Administration; W.A. Berg, MD, PhD, Director of Breast Imaging, Division of Breast Imaging, Department of Radiology and Greenebaum Cancer Center, University of land School of Medicine; M. Soo, MD, Assistant Professor of Radiology, Department of Radiology, Duke South Hospital, Duke University Medical Center; M.S. Middleton, MD, PhD, Radiologist, Department of Radiology, University of California at San Diego School of Medicine. The opinions or assertions presented herein are the private views of the authors and are not to be construed as conveying either an official endorsement or criticism by the US Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, or the Food and Drug Administration. Address reprint requests to Dr. S.L. Brown, Office of Surveillance and Biometrics, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, Food and Drug Administration, 1350 Piccard Drive, HFZ-541, Rockville, MD 20850, USA. Submitted March 15, 2000 revision accepted November 10, 2000. REFERENCES 1. Controversy over the silicone gel breast implant: Current status and clinical implications. Texas Med 1993;89:52-8. 2. Kessler DA. The basis of the FDA's decision on breast implants. 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Silicone breast implants and autoimmune disease. J Am Med Wom Assoc 1998;53:21-4. 16. Wolfe F, Smythe HA, Yunus MB, et al. The American College of Rheumatology 1990 criteria for the classification of fibromyalgia: report of the multicenter criteria committee. Arthritis Rheum 1990;33:160-72. 17. Goldenberg DL. Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and myofascial pain. Curr Opin Rheumatol 1996;8:113-23. 18. Freundlich B, Altman C, Sandorfi N, Greenberg M, Tomaszewski J. A profile of symptomatic patients with silicone breast implants: a Sjögrens-like syndrome. Semin Arthritis Rheum 1994; 24 Suppl 1:44-53. 19. Borenstein D. Siliconosis. A spectrum of illness. Semin Arthritis Rheum 1994;24 Suppl 1:1-7. 20. G. A clinical and laboratory profile of symptomatic women with silicone breast implants. Semin Arthritis Rheum 1994; 24 Suppl 1:29-37. 21. Vasey FB, Havice DL, Bocanegra TS, et al. Clinical findings in symptomatic women with silicone breast implants. Semin Arthritis Rheum 1994;24 Suppl 1:22-8. 22. Wolfe F. Silicone related symptoms are common in patients with fibromyalgia: no evidence for a new disease. J Rheumatol 1999;26:1172-5. 23. Blackburn Jr WD, Grotting JC, Everson MP. Lack of evidence of systemic inflammatory rheumatic disorders in symptomatic women with breast implants. Plast Reconstr Surg 1997;99:1054-60. 24. Cuellar ML, Gluck O, Molina JF, Gutierrez S, C, Espinoza R. Silicone breast implant-associated musculoskeletal manifestations. Clin Rhematol 1995 14:667-72. 25. s W, D, Fornasier V, Lugowski S, Ibanez D. An outcome analysis of 100 women after explantation of silicone gel breast implants. Ann Plast Surg 1997;39:9-19. 26. Barsky AJ, Borus JF. Functional somatic syndromes. Ann Intern Med 1999;130:910-21. 27. Wallace DJ. The fibromyalgia syndrome. Ann Med 1997;29:9-21. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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