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Effect of receiving a heart transplant: analysis of a national
cohort entered on to a waiting list, stratified by heart failure
severity
Mario C Deng a Department of
Cardiothoracic Surgery, Muenster University, D-48129 Muenster, Germany, b Eurotransplant Foundation, PO Box 2304, 2301 CH
Leiden, Netherlands, c Institute for Biomathematics, Muenster University, D-48129
Muenster, Germany
Correspondence to: M C Deng, Heart Failure
Center, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New
York, NY 10032, USA md785{at}columbia.edu
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Abstract |
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Objective:
To determine whether there is a survival
benefit associated with cardiac transplantation in Germany.
The survival benefit of cardiac transplantation as compared with
conventional treatment in advanced heart failure has not been tested in
a prospective randomised trial. The main reason has probably been the
assumption that, since the introduction of cyclosporin (ciclosporin) in
1980, the benefit of cardiac transplantation over conventional
treatment is clinically evident.1 Meanwhile, opposing
developments have occurred. On the one hand, scientific advances have
improved medical and surgical treatment for advanced heart
failure.2-4 On the other hand, listing of more critically ill patients and use of so called marginal donor hearts, driven by the
increasing scarcity of donors, have been associated with a lack of
improvement of outcomes after cardiac
transplantation,
5 6
even with better transplant
management. As a result, the survival benefit of cardiac
transplantation over other treatment options is less clear than it
seemed 10-20 years ago. Consequently, the presently liberal practice of
listing patients with heart failure for transplantation must be
questioned until clear evidence of the benefits is available. This
reasoning is in line with the current reassessment of treatment options
for patients with end stage liver, lung, and renal
disease.7-9
Since a randomised trial to test the survival benefit of cardiac
transplantation would be hampered by ethical concerns,10 we performed a prospective observational study. Such a method requires
the assessment of clinical and prognostic profiles in order to analyse
the effect of the intention to treat by transplantation. In advanced
heart failure only one validated prognostic tool is currently
available Patients, parameters, and data acquisition
Design:
Prospective observational cohort study.
Setting:
All 889 adult patients listed for a first heart transplant in Germany in 1997.
Main outcome measure:
Mortality, stratified by heart
failure severity.
Results:
Within 1 year after listing, patients with a
predicted high risk had the highest global death rate (51%
v 32% and 29% for medium and low risk patients
respectively; P<0.0001), had the highest risk of dying on the waiting
list (32% v 20% and 20%; P=0.0003), and were more likely
to receive a transplant (48% v 45% and 41%; P=0.01).
Differences between the risk groups in outcome after transplantation
did not reach significance (P=0.2). Transplantation was not associated
with a reduction in mortality risk for the total cohort, but it did
provide a survival benefit for the high risk group.
Conclusion:
Cardiac transplantation in Germany is
currently associated with a survival benefit only in patients with a
predicted high risk of dying on the waiting list. Patients with a
predicted low or medium risk have no reduction in mortality risk
associated with transplantation; they should be managed with organ
saving approaches rather than transplantation.
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Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Patients and methods
Results
Discussion
Appendix
References
the heart failure survival score,11 which is an
index for predicting mortality in stable patients awaiting a heart
transplant. Much as the Child-Pugh and the Mayo scores are used to
guide clinical decisions at the time of listing for liver
transplantation,12 we applied the heart failure survival score as an index of disease severity to our unselected cohort of
patients with advanced heart failure in order to assess differences in
outcomes. Specifically, we analysed global mortality, waiting list
mortality, and mortality after transplantation as well as the effect of
cardiac transplantation on survival for the first time in a complete
national cohort of candidates for heart transplantation stratified by
disease severity at the time of listing.
![]()
Patients and methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Patients and methods
Results
Discussion
Appendix
References
The study originated in a consensus decision of the Heart
Committee of the German Transplantation Society and the Eurotransplant
International Foundation (Eurotransplant). Eurotransplant is the organ
exchange organisation in which transplant centres in Austria, Belgium,
Luxembourg, Germany, and the Netherlands collaborate with their donor
hospitals and tissue typing laboratories. The goal was to create a
continuous database to monitor quality of care in compliance with the
new German transplant law, which was enacted in November 1997. The
project was named the "comparative outcomes and clinical profiles in
transplantation (COCPIT)" study.
Heart failure survival score
The original heart failure survival score was derived and
validated between 1986 and 1995 in two US cohorts of stable outpatient
candidates for a cardiac transplant.11 It is the weighted
sum of seven non-invasive clinical parameters, the weighting reflecting
the strength and direction of the association between each parameter
and outcome. Outcome was defined as composite end points of death on
the waiting list and urgent transplantation. These parameters were the
presence of coronary artery disease (impact of aetiology); the presence
of intraventricular conduction delay (degree of cardiac damage); left
ventricular ejection fraction (extent of impairment of left ventricular
function); heart rate and serum sodium concentration (measures of
activation of the sympathetic nervous system and renin-angiotensin
system); and mean arterial pressure and peak oxygen uptake (reflections
of the systemic impact of chronic heart failure).
0.0464 + (heart rate) × 0.0216 + (sodium concentration) ×
0.0470 + (mean arterial pressure) ×
0.0255 + (peak oxygen
uptake) ×
0.0546|.
By means of multivariate modelling and definition of
arbitrary cut-off points, three groups of disease severity were defined in the derivation cohort for the heart failure survival score (1986-91)
and thereafter confirmed in the validation cohort (1993-5). The low
risk, medium risk, and high risk patients had a one year event-free
survival of 93%, 72%, and 43% respectively in the derivation cohort
and 88%, 60%, and 35% in the validation cohort.
For each patient in our study we calculated a heart failure survival
score using the same methodology. We used the mean values of the
derivation cohort for missing covariates in our COCPIT cohort (see
table). We chose this approach in order to use the same cut-off values
for the definition of the three risk groups.
Statistical methods
Patients were followed up to 1 January 2000, giving a minimum
follow up of two years after registration. Waiting list outcome
consisted of one of the following: transplantation, death on the
waiting list, removal from the list because of worsening condition, and
removal because of clinical improvement. We used the competing risk
method to calculate the probability of each waiting list
outcome
13 14
and the Kaplan-Meier method to analyse the survival rates. To analyse global mortality we ignored whether patients had received a transplant.
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Results |
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Patients' baseline characteristics
The table shows the patients' characteristics. The range and
distribution of the heart failure survival score was similar in the
score's original derivation cohort and in the COCPIT cohort. In our
study, 12%, 41%, and 47% of patients were high risk, medium risk,
and low risk respectively, compared with 21%, 35%, and 44%, in the
original derivation cohort.
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Outcome after listing
One year after listing, 33% of our total cohort had died either
before or after transplantation. Those patients who were high risk
according to heart failure survival score had a significantly higher
chance of dying than patients at medium and low risk (51%
v 32% and 29% respectively; P<0.0001) (fig
1).
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Waiting list outcome
One year after registration, 424 patients (48%) had undergone
cardiac transplantation (358 in the general urgency category, 62 in the
special urgency category, and four in the high urgency category); 196 patients (22%) had been removed from the list because of death (n=182)
or deterioration (n=14); 79 patients (9%) had been removed from the
list because of improvement in their condition; and 190 (21%) were
still on the waiting list. Figure 2 shows the mortality of
patients on the waiting list without transplantation, stratified by
heart failure survival score. Twenty per cent of the high risk patients
died within two months of listing, and this proportion gradually
increased to 32% at one year after listing. In the medium and low risk
groups the probability of dying while waiting was significantly lower
(P=0.0003) and without the initial high mortality seen in the high risk
group. The likelihood of transplantation was also significantly higher
in the high risk group than in the medium and low risk groups (P=0.01):
by two months and 12 months of listing respectively, 27% and 48% of
high risk patients, 17% and 44% of medium risk patients, and 11% and 41% of the low risk patients had received transplants (fig
3).
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Outcome after transplantation
Survival at one year after transplantation for all patients was
71% (95% confidence interval 68% to 74%). Survival at one year for
the high risk group was 64%, not significantly different from the 76%
and 75% for the medium and low risk groups respectively (P=0.2) (fig
4).
Transplantation effect
For the total cohort there was no survival benefit from
transplantation (data not shown). For high risk patients, however, a
mortality risk reduction was observed within two weeks of
transplantation (relative risk<1.0). This benefit disappeared after
eight months (fig 5). On the other hand, the relative risk did not fall
below one for the medium and low risk patients at any time after
transplantation.
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Discussion |
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In this complete national cohort of adult patients consecutively listed for cardiac transplantation in Germany in 1997 no survival benefit accrued from transplantation for the group as a whole. Yet, transplantation had a beneficial effect in the high risk group as early as two weeks after transplantation. Use of the heart failure survival score allowed us to detect differences between risk groups not only with regard to the transplant effect but also with regard to mortality while on the waiting list and global mortality.
Rationale for study
Since the introduction of cyclosporin in 1980 cardiac
transplantation has been considered superior to conventional treatment
for heart failure, though the survival benefit of transplantation has
never been examined in depth. The Registry of the International Society
for Heart and Lung Transplantation reported a one year survival of 78%
in 1999 that had remained constant over the previous five
years,6 but the Henry Mondor Hospital in Paris, a large and experienced cardiac transplant centre, reported a much lower survival rate at one year after transplantation of 62%.5
An examination of the survival benefit from transplantation is
therefore warranted. A randomised trial has been viewed as ethically
unacceptable because one of the principles of such trials is that there
is genuine uncertainty about the comparative therapeutic merits of each
arm in a clinical trial. When the medical community has judged one
proposed treatment to be better than another, randomised trials cannot
be truly free of bias and may be considered
unethical.
10 15 16
Furthermore, the application of
results from randomised trials is restricted to patients with
characteristics similar to those of the cohort examined in the
trials.17 Therefore, we considered an outcome analysis
based on a prospective observational study to be a reasonable approach
to test our hypothesis. On the basis of our results, the need for a
randomised trial in cardiac transplantation should be debated.
Implications of study
The high risk patients in our cohort had a global mortality of
51% at one year after listing. This rate reflects the cumulative
mortality of patients on the waiting list and after transplantation. To
our knowledge, no other studies have used the same combined end point
because patients are usually censored at the time of transplantation.
The high global death rate warrants a closer clinical surveillance at
the time of listing of high risk patients.
Limitations of study
Our study cohort had a 71% survival at one year after
transplantation, compared with the 78% reported by the Registry of the
International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation and the 62%
reported by the Henry Mondor Hospital. Possible explanations for these
differences include variations in selection of recipients and donors
for heart transplantation, interdisciplinary cooperation, and
management protocols as well as considerable variability between centres and regions. The German Transplantation Society has initiated an audit to investigate the influence of these factors.19
Whether our results are specific to the German situation or may be
generalised to other countries needs to be
investigated.
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What is already known on this topic
Heart transplantation is considered the treatment of choice for end stage heart failure because it is assumed to improve survival and quality of life of recipients This assumption has not been tested in randomised trials or observational cohort studies What this study addsIn this complete national German cohort of patients listed for cardiac transplantation during 1997 a survival benefit from transplantation was found only in the subgroup at high risk of dying without transplantation, whereas the medium risk and low risk groups did not derive a survival benefit These findings challenge the current role of cardiac transplantation in heart failure management and may support the initiative for a randomised trial |
Conclusions
In this complete national cohort of German candidates for cardiac
transplantation we found a survival benefit from transplantation only
for patients with a predicted high risk of dying on the waiting list.
This observation suggests that heart transplantation listing in Germany
should currently be limited to the sickest patients. Patients with a
predicted low or medium risk had no mortality risk reduction from
transplantation; they should instead be managed with organ saving treatments.
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank Professor G Breithardt for critical comments on the manuscript and Mrs Lilian Streeder for her work in data entry and management. We thank all the participating centres for their enthusiasm and continued support in this national consensus project.
Contributors: MCD jointly initiated the formulation of the primary study hypothesis; coordinated the research; discussed core ideas; jointly designed the protocol, particularly documentation of clinical data; and participated in data collection and analysis and writing the paper. HHS jointly initiated the formulation of the primary study hypothesis; coordinated the research; discussed core ideas; jointly designed the protocol, particularly documentation of clinical data; was instrumental in promoting continued consensus among all German transplant centres; and participated in data analysis and editing the paper. JMJDM jointly initiated the research, discussed essential ideas, was responsible for data collection at the Eurotransplant office and continuously advised from the Eurotransplant perspective, and participated substantially in data analysis and writing the paper. JMAS discussed core ideas of the study hypothesis and design, designed and performed the statistical analysis, and contributed substantially to writing the paper. JH contributed to the statistical analysis of data. All centres mentioned in the Appendix contributed to study design, data collection, and critical discussion of the data.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: Eurotransplant International Foundation.
Competing interests: None declared.
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Appendix: Participating centres in comparative outcome and clinical profiles in transplantation (COCPIT) study (including chairmen of the cardiothoracic surgery departments at start of study) |
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Aachen University (Professor B Messmer), Heart Center Bad Krozingen (Dr H Tollenaere), Kerckhoff Center Bad Nauheim (Professor W P Kloevekorn), Heart Center Nordrhein-Westfalia Bad Oeynhausen (Professor R Koerfer), German Heart Center Berlin (Professor R Hetzer), Charite University Berlin (Professor W Konertz), Bochum University (Professor A Laczkovics), Heart Center Dresden (Professor S Schueler), Düsseldorf University (Professor E Gams), Essen University (Professor J C Reidemeister), Frankfurt University (Professor A Moritz), Freiburg University (Professor F Beyersdorf), Heart Center Fulda (Professor T Stegmann), Gießen University (Professor F W Hehrlein), Göttingen University (Professor H Dalichau), Halle University (Professor H R Zerkowski), Hamburg University (Professor R Kalmar), Hannover Medical School (Professor A Haverich), Heidelberg University (Professor S Hagl), Homburg University (Professor H J Schaefers), Heart Center Kaiserslautern (Professor W Seyboldt-Epting), Heart Center Karlsruhe (Dr A Posival), Kiel University (Professor D Regensburger), Köln University (Professor E R De Vivie), Leipzig University (Professor F W Mohr), Mainz University (Professor H Oelert), German Heart Center München (Professor H Meisner), München University (Professor B Reichart), Münster University (Professor H H Scheld), Regensburg University (Professor D Birnbaum), Tübingen University (Professor G Ziemer), Würzburg University (Professor R E Silber).
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References |
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| 1. | Hunt SA. 24th Bethesda conference: cardiac transplantation. J Am Coll Cardiol 1993; 22: 1-64[Medline]. |
| 2. | Swedberg K for Consensus Trial Study Group. Effects of enalapril on mortality in severe congestive heart failure. N Engl J Med 1987; 316: 1429-1435[Abstract]. |
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Packer M, Bristow MR, Cohn JN, Colucci WS, Fowler MB, Gilbert EM, et al, for the US Carvedilol Heart Failure Study Group.
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Hosenpud JD, Bennett LE, Keck BM, Fiol B, Boucek MM, Novick RJ.
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| 7. | Edwards EB, Bennett LE, Daily OP, Detre K. Risk of mortality for UNOS status 3 liver recipients: a comparison of the risk posttransplant to the risk on the waiting list. Transplant Proc 1997; 29: 459-460[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 8. | Hosenpud JD, Bennett LE, Keck BM, Edwards EB, Novick RJ. Effect of diagnosis on survival benefit of lung transplantation for end-stage lung disease. Lancet 1998; 351: 24-27[CrossRef][Medline]. |
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Wolfe RA, Ashby VB, Milford EL, Ojo AO, Ettenger RE, Agodoa LYC, et al.
Comparison of mortality in all patients on dialysis, patients on dialysis awaiting transplantation, and recipients of a first cadaveric transplant.
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Aaronson KD, Schwartz JS, Chen TMC, Wong KL, Goin JE, Mancini DM.
Development and prospective validation of a clinical index to predict survival in ambulatory patients referred for cardiac transplant evaluation.
Circulation
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| 13. | Smits JMA, van Houwelingen HC, de Meester JMJ, Persijn GG, Claas FHJ. Analysis of the renal transplant waiting list. Application of a parametric competing risk method. Transplantation 1998; 66: 1146-1153[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 14. | De Meester J, Smits JMA, Persijn GG, Haverich A. Lung transplant waiting list: differential outcome of type of end-stage lung disease, one year after registration. J Heart Lung Transplant 1999; 18: 563-571[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 15. | Byar DP, Simon RM, Friedewald WT, Schlesselman J, DeMets DL, Ellenberg JH, et al. Randomized clinical trials. N Engl J Med 1976; 295: 74-80[Abstract]. |
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Jadad AR, Rennie D.
The randomized controlled trial gets a middle-aged checkup.
JAMA
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| 18. | Stevenson LW, Hamilton MA, Tillisch IH, Moriguchi JD, Kobashigawa J, Creaser JA, et al. Decreasing survival benefit from cardiac transplantation for outpatients as the waiting list lengthens. J Am Coll Cardiol 1991; 18: 919-925[Abstract]. |
| 19. | Deng MC, DeMeester J, Scheld HH. Development of cardiac transplant policy in Germany. Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2000; 48: 183-185[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 20. |
Gibbons RD, Meltzer D, Duan N, other members of the Institute of Medicine Committee on Organ Procurement and Transplantation.
Waiting for organ transplantation.
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(Accepted 10 August 2000)
Tom Treasure St George's
Hospital Medical School, St George's Hospital, London SW17 0QT
Correspondence to: T Treasure Tom.Treasure{at}ukgateway.net
In their report on cardiac transplantation in Germany Deng
et al conclude that, apart from patients with the highest risk of dying
on the waiting list, there is no survival advantage. The overall
impression given is that there is little to be gained from heart
transplantation. This is at odds with the strongly held beliefs of
those involved, both doctors and patients. Many transplant recipients
are enjoying full and active lives some years after transplantation.
Their enjoyment of life and continuing survival are attributed to their
new hearts. This difference in perception prompts the question: would a
controlled trial resolve the issue?
The German study concentrates on survival at one year, which for
transplanted patients was 71% (95% confidence interval 68% to 74%).
Better survival is reported by the Registry of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation, at 78%,1 and
by UK transplant units, at 79% (77% to 82%) (audited nationally
under the auspices of the Clinical Effectiveness Unit of the Royal
College of Surgeons of England).2 Thereafter, the death
rate for heart recipients has been found to be constant at about 4% a
year for the next 14 years.1 Five year survival in Britain
is 66% (56% to 73%).
In the absence of a controlled trial, what is the best comparison
group? The non-transplanted patients on the waiting list selected in
the German study are not directly comparable. Furthermore, a comparison
at one year is heavily biased against the operated group, who face
their highest risk at operation and in the following weeks. In recent
clinical trials of heart failure the annual death rate ranged from
about 10% to 20% and was more or less constant over the two to three
years of the trials.3-5 Against such a reference
population a survival advantage would become evident in the second year
and would then widen. The worse the natural course of the selected
group the greater the difference in survival.
Not only must comparison of survival be made over a more realistic time
span, but there must be recognition of the often dramatic restoration
of wellbeing seen in clinical practice and demonstrated objectively.6
All the usual obstacles to performing a trial can be raised. Numbers
are part of the problem. The German study reports 424 adult cardiac
transplant operations among 32 units A common ethical obstacle to trials is that treatment believed to be
effective is denied to the control group, but many patients deemed
clinically suitable are denied a heart transplant because of the
limited number of donor organs. This makes transplantation unusual in
that there is an explicit external constraint that limits volume,
however much funding were to be made available. It follows that if we
are to get the maximum benefit out of the limited number of donor
hearts we should use them where the most quality years can be gained. A
strategy aimed at maximising the benefit gained by each donor organ may
be more logical than selecting the most desperate recipients, the
policy which would flow from the interpretation of the German data. If
there is real doubt about where maximum benefits can be gained the best
way to resolve this is by clinical trial. There are insufficient organs
to go round,7 and once beliefs about case selection are
challenged by reports such as this one from Germany it may be as
ethical to allocate the limited supply of hearts within carefully
designed clinical trials as by the clinical decisions of individuals.
that is, 13 cases per unit,
barely one a month. In the United States the average unit volume is
similar. Currently eight units carry out all the 300 adult heart
transplantations performed in Britain,2 and we believe
that there are good arguments for a reduction rather than an increase
in the number of units. Centralisation of resources makes trials easier.
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References
1.
Hosenpud JD, Bennett LE, Keck BM, Fiol B, Boucek MM, Novick RJ.
The Registry of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation: sixteenth official report
1999.
J Heart Lung Transplant
1999;
18:
611-626.
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Anyanwu AC, Rogers CA, Murday AJ.
Review of the current state of thoracic transplantation: a national prospective cohort study.
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The cardiac insufficiency bisoprolol study II (CIBIS-II): a randomised trial.
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Pitt B, Zannad F, Remme WJ, Cody R, Castaigne A, Perez A, et al.
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N Engl J Med
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O'Brien BJ, Buxton MJ, Ferguson BA.
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Organ donation in the 21st century.
London: BMA, 2000.
© BMJ 2000
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