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Contributions of prescribed and non-prescribed opioids to opioid related deaths: population based cohort study in Ontario, Canada

BMJ 2018; 362 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k3207 (Published 29 August 2018) Cite this as: BMJ 2018;362:k3207

Linked editorial

Opioid deaths in Ontario, Canada

  1. Tara Gomes, scientist1,
  2. Wayne Khuu, senior analyst2,
  3. Diana Martins, research program manager1,
  4. Mina Tadrous, research associate1,
  5. Muhammad M Mamdani, director3,
  6. J Michael Paterson, scientist2,
  7. David N Juurlink, scientist4
  1. 1Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada
  2. 2Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, ON, Canada
  3. 3Li Ka Shing Centre for Healthcare Analytics Research and Training at St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada
  4. 4The Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada
  1. Correspondence to: T Gomes GomesT{at}smh.ca(or @Tara_Gomes on Twitter)
  • Accepted 9 July 2018

Abstract

Objective To describe the contributions of prescribed and non-prescribed opioids to opioid related deaths.

Design Population based cohort study.

Setting Ontario, Canada, from 1 January 2013 to 31 December 2016.

Participants All Ontarians who died of an opioid related cause.

Exposure Active opioid prescriptions, defined as those with a duration overlapping the date of death, and recent opioid prescriptions, defined as those dispensed in the 30 and 180 days preceding death. Postmortem toxicology results from the Drug and Drug/Alcohol Related Death database were used to characterise deaths on the basis of presence of prescribed and non-prescribed (that is, diverted or illicit) opioids, overall and stratified by year and age.

Results 2833 opioid related deaths occurred. An active opioid prescription on the date of death was relatively common but declined slightly throughout the study period (38.2% (241/631) in 2013 and 32.5% (278/855) in 2016; P for trend=0.03). Older people and women were relatively more likely to have an active opioid prescription at time of death. In 2016, 46% (169/364) of people aged 45-64 had an active opioid prescription compared with only 12% (8/69) among those aged 24 or younger (P for trend<0.001). Similarly, 46% (124/272) of women had an active opioid prescription at time of death compared with 26.4% (154/583) of men (P<0.001). Among people with active opioid prescriptions at time of death, 37.8% (375/993) also had evidence of a non-prescribed opioid on postmortem toxicology. By 2016, the non-prescribed opioid most commonly identified after death was fentanyl (41%; 47 of 115 cases). Among people without an active opioid prescription at time of death, fentanyl was detected in 20% (78/390) of deaths in 2013, increasing to 47.5% (274/577) by 2016 (P<0.001).

Conclusions Prescribed, diverted, and illicit opioids all play an important role in opioid related deaths. Although more than half of all opioid related deaths still involved prescription drugs (either dispensed or diverted) in 2016, the increased rate of deaths involving fentanyl between 2015 and 2016 is concerning and suggests the need for a multifactorial approach to this problem that considers both the prescribed and illicit opioid environments.

Introduction

The North American opioid overdose crisis has been attributed, in part, to the widespread use of prescription opioids to treat chronic non-cancer pain over the past two decades.1 In particular, long term and high dose opioid prescribing has been associated with serious adverse events, including risks of developing an opioid use disorder, overdose, and death.123 Furthermore, combined use of opioids with other depressants of the central nervous system, most commonly benzodiazepines, has been highlighted as an important risk factor for death due to overdose.4 Despite recent evidence of decreasing rates of opioid prescribing across Canada,5 the prevalence of exposure to opioids remains high with an opioid being prescribed to one in eight Ontarians to manage pain in 2016.6 Similarly, more than 42 000 opioid related deaths (13.1 per 100 000 population) are estimated to have occurred in the United States and nearly 3000 in Canada (8.1 per 100 000 population) in that year.78 The burden of this early loss of life is clear. In Ontario, the most populous province in Canada, 1 in 133 deaths in 2015 were opioid related, leading to nearly 30 000 years of life lost.9 Since this time, the policy response has primarily focused on improving the care of people with opioid use disorders, reducing diversion of prescribed opioids, and promoting safe, appropriate opioid prescribing, as evidenced by new clinical practice guidelines for opioids in chronic non-cancer pain published for both the US and Canada in 2016 and 2017.1011

Shifts in prescribed opioid formulations,5 restrictions on accessibility of prescription drugs,12 and the growing presence of clandestinely manufactured opioids have caused the illicit opioid market to become considerably more toxic since 2012.1314 In particular, the emergence of clandestinely manufactured fentanyl (and its analogues) has been associated with a sharp increase in opioid related fatalities in parts of North America, as these potent drugs are contaminating the illicit opioid market.15161718 For example, in British Columbia, Canada, 1156 deaths due to drug overdose involving illicit fentanyl occurred in 2017, representing a 73% increase over the same period the previous year.18 In Ontario, a 62% increase in the rate of fentanyl related deaths was observed between 2015 and 2016.19 Consequently, researchers and policy makers have called for timely data on trends in the relative contributions of prescribed and non-prescribed (that is, diverted and illicit) opioids to opioid related deaths.2021 This information can be a crucial component of evidence informed policy responses that comprehensively address the roles that prescribers, pharmacists, harm reduction workers, and law enforcement can play in tackling the ongoing opioid crisis.2223

An understanding of this problem requires linked data from both prescription claims and postmortem toxicological investigations—data that are rarely available at a population level. Here, we used two such databases to study the relative contributions of prescribed and non-prescribed opioids to opioid related deaths in Ontario, the most populous province in Canada. Specifically, our primary objective was to estimate the proportion of people dying of an opioid related cause who had an active opioid prescription at time of death and to evaluate how this has changed over time.

Methods

Setting

We conducted a population based cohort study of all people who died of an opioid related cause in Ontario between 1 January 2013 (when sufficient comprehensive data on all opioid prescriptions were available in the province) and 31 December 2016. In Ontario, a medical coroner investigates all deaths that are sudden or unexpected to determine the cause of death. Deaths to which an opioid contributed, either alone or in combination with another drug or alcohol, are defined as opioid related and included in this analysis.

Data sources

We used the Drug and Drug/Alcohol Related Death (DDARD) database to identify all deaths determined to be opioid related in Ontario over the study period. This database is created through chart abstraction of coronial investigations and includes details on manner of death (accidental, suicide, undetermined) and drug concentrations from postmortem toxicology (see supplementary materials for opioids captured in postmortem toxicology).24 We used the Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) Registered Persons Database, which contains information on every Ontarian ever issued a health card, to identify demographic information and the Ontario Narcotics Monitoring System (NMS) database to identify all prescriptions for opioids and benzodiazepines dispensed from community pharmacies. This database includes all prescriptions dispensed, regardless of payer. We also used the Ontario Drug Benefit (ODB) claims database to identify publicly funded prescription drugs dispensed to eligible residents of Ontario over the study period, and the OHIP Claims History Database to identify services rendered by physicians. We identified all diagnoses and procedures occurring in emergency departments and hospital admissions by using the Canadian Institute for Health Information’s National Ambulatory Care Reporting System and Discharge Abstract Database, respectively. All datasets were linked using unique, encoded identifiers, and were analysed at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES; www.ices.on.ca).

Identification of patients

We identified all people who died of an opioid related cause over our study period and excluded those with invalid patient identifiers who could not be linked to the ICES data repository. In all analyses, we defined the index date as the date of death.

Opioid exposure definition

In our primary analysis, we defined active opioid prescriptions as those with a day’s supply overlapping the index date. In a secondary analysis, we defined recent opioid prescriptions as those dispensed in the 30 days, 180 days, one year, two years, and three years before the index date. To investigate the contribution of benzodiazepines to opioid related deaths, we defined active benzodiazepine prescriptions as those with a day’s supply overlapping the index date and measured the prevalence of concomitant active prescriptions for both opioids and benzodiazepines. In a sensitivity analysis to explore the role of fentanyl in any temporal changes in prevalence of active opioid prescriptions, we replicated our primary analysis, excluding all deaths for which fentanyl was present on postmortem toxicology. Finally, in a post hoc secondary analysis to test the generalisability of these findings to non-fatal overdoses, we replicated our analysis among people visiting the emergency department with an opioid related toxicity by using ICD-10 (International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision) diagnosis codes T40.0, T40.1, T40.2, T40.3, T40.4, and T40.6.

Patient characteristics

We used linked databases to identify sociodemographic characteristics, including age, sex, urban/rural location of residence, and fifth of neighbourhood income. Furthermore, we determined the prevalence of previous diagnoses of mental health problems and addictions, including alcohol use disorder (previous three years), hospital visits (emergency department visit or inpatient hospital admission) for an opioid overdose (previous year), and emergency department visits for other mental health diagnoses (anxiety disorders, deliberate self harm, mood disorders, schizophrenia, and substance related disorders; previous three years). See the supplementary materials for the ICD-10 codes we used to define each of these comorbidities. Finally, we used postmortem toxicology to characterise involvement of other drugs in opioid related deaths, including cocaine, benzodiazepines, antipsychotics, antihistamines, stimulants, tetrahydrocannabinol, tricyclic antidepressants, and other antidepressants.

Statistical analysis

We summarised patients’ characteristics over the study period by using descriptive statistics, and we stratified the analysis according to whether the patient had an active opioid prescription at time of death. We used χ2 and one way analysis of variance test statistics to compare categorical and continuous characteristics, respectively, between cohorts. In our primary analysis, we reported the prevalence of active and recent opioid prescriptions and active concomitant benzodiazepine prescriptions before opioid related deaths in Ontario. In a secondary analysis, we measured the prevalence of active opioid prescriptions, stratified by age and sex. Finally, we studied the relative contribution of prescribed and non-prescribed opioids to each death in each year of the study period by using postmortem toxicology results. We used two tailed, exact Cochran-Armitage trend tests to determine whether significant trends existed in the prevalence of prescribed and non-prescribed opioids over the study period and the Kruskal-Wallis test to compare medians over time. We adjusted all postmortem drug concentrations for the potential prevalence of opioid metabolites wherever possible (see supplementary materials for details of these adjustments). In particular, we determined heroin involvement on the basis of the presence of 6-monoacetylmorphine in postmortem toxicology. We used SAS software (version 9.4) for all analyses and a type 1 error rate of 0.05 as the threshold for statistical significance.

Patient involvement

No patients were involved in setting the research question or the outcome measures, nor were they involved in developing plans for design or implementation of the study. No patients were asked to advise on interpretation or writing up of results. There are no plans to disseminate the results of the research to study participants. However, study results will be disseminated to patients and citizens involved in the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network Citizens’ Panel and the Ontario Opioid Drug Observatory.

Results

We identified 2910 opioid related deaths in Ontario over the study period, of which 2833 (97.4%) had valid identifiers permitting their analysis. On average, decedents were 43 (SD 13.5) years of age, 67.5% (n=1911) were male, and 34.1% (n=966) resided in the neighbourhood with the lowest fifth of income (table 1). Previous diagnoses of mental health disorders and addictions were relatively common, with 8.6% (n=244) having been admitted to hospital for an opioid overdose in the year before death, 25.8% (n=730) having a diagnosis of alcohol use disorder, and 41.9% (n=1188) having a visit to an emergency department for a mental health disorder in the previous three years. Overall, patients’ demographic characteristics and involvement of other drugs in death differed considerably according to whether the patient had an active opioid prescription at time of death. In particular, people with no active opioid prescriptions tended to be younger, were more likely to be men, were slightly more likely to reside in higher income neighbourhoods, and were more likely to have cocaine or stimulants present in postmortem toxicology at time of death (table 1). In contrast, we observed little difference in the patterns of use of health services, diagnoses of alcohol use disorder, and mental health diagnoses between patient groups.

Table 1

Demographic characteristics of patients who died from an opioid related cause in Ontario, 2013 to 2016. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

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In 2013, 38.2% (241/631) of people who died from an opioid related cause had an active opioid prescription on their date of death. Although the absolute number of deaths involving an active prescription increased by 15.4% between 2013 and 2016 (from 241 to 278 deaths), the proportion of all deaths with an active opioid prescription declined significantly to 32.5% (278/855) in 2016 (P=0.03; table 2). When considering recent opioid prescribing (previous 30 days), we found a similar trend over time, but these reductions did not achieve statistical significance. In contrast, we observed no apparent trend in the prevalence of more remote opioid prescribing (from six months to three years before the index date). By 2016, 59.4% (n=508) had received an opioid in the preceding 180 days, rising to 76.4% (n=653) when we considered a three year lookback period. Although prevalence declined over our study period, active benzodiazepine prescriptions remained common in 2016, with 27.6% (n=236) of people who died of an opioid related cause having an active benzodiazepine prescription at time of their death and 16.1% (n=138) having active prescriptions for both benzodiazepines and opioids. In our sensitivity analysis, we found that, after exclusion of deaths involving fentanyl, a significant change in the prevalence of active opioid prescriptions at time of opioid related death (36.8% in 2013 v 39.8% in 2016; P=0.18) was no longer apparent. This suggests that the changes in trend observed in our primary analysis were being driven by deaths involving fentanyl.

Table 2

Prevalence of opioid prescriptions among patients who died from opioid related cause in Ontario, 2013 to 2016. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

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In our analysis stratified by age and sex, people aged 45 years and older and women were more likely to have an active opioid prescription at their time of death (table 3). In particular, 46% (169/364) of patients aged 45-64 had an active opioid prescription in 2016 compared with only 12% (8/69) among those aged 24 or younger (P<0.001; table 3). Similarly, 46% (124/272) of women had an active opioid prescription at time of death compared with 26.4% (154/583) of men (P<0.001; table 3).

Table 3

Prevalence of active prescription for opioid dispensed on date of opioid related death in Ontario, stratified by age and sex, 2013 to 2016. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

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Among the 278 patients who had an active opioid prescription at time of death in 2016, approximately two thirds (64%; n=179) had their opioid prescription reimbursed by the public drug programme, and the median number of days between the date of the last opioid prescription dispensed and the date of the opioid related death was 4 (interquartile range 1-10) days (supplementary materials). Among people with only prescribed opioids detected on postmortem toxicology, the prevalence of specific opioid drugs changed between 2013 and 2016, with fentanyl (from 23% to 15%; P=0.04) and morphine (from 16% to 8%; P=0.01) becoming less frequently involved, and methadone (from 10% to 17%; P=0.02) becoming more frequently involved (table 4). Furthermore, 37.8% (375/993) of people with active opioid prescriptions also had evidence on postmortem toxicology of an opioid that was not prescribed to them. By 2016, the most common non-prescribed opioid involved in these deaths was fentanyl (41%; 47/115). Finally, among people with no active opioid prescription at time of death, the contribution of various opioids changed significantly over time. By 2016, nearly half (47.5%; 274/577) of these deaths involved fentanyl (compared with 20% in 2013; P<0.001), whereas involvement of oxycodone (from 22% to 17%; P=0.02), methadone (from 27% to 18%; P<.001), and codeine (from 21% to 12%; P<.001) fell over this same period. It is important to note that only a small number (<3%) of methadone prescriptions active at time of death were for a pain indication, highlighting the role of methadone used to treat opioid use disorder in these deaths. In an exploratory analysis, among decedents in 2016 in whom fentanyl was detected after death but for whom no active fentanyl prescription was present at time of death, just 2% (6/321) were dispensed a fentanyl prescription in the six months preceding death.

Table 4

Prevalence of prescribed and non-prescribed opioids in fatal opioid overdoses, Ontario, 2013 to 2016. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

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In our secondary analysis exploring opioid prescribing before 12 847 emergency department visits for an opioid toxicity, our results were generally consistent with those from the mortality analysis. Specifically, we found a significant reduction in previous dispensations of active opioid prescription between 2013 and 2016 (from 44.2% to 39.5%; P<0.001; table 5). In 2016, 80.0% (3058/3821) of people visiting an emergency department for an opioid toxicity event had received a prescription opioid in the previous three years.

Table 5

Prevalence of opioid prescriptions among patients who had emergency department visits for opioid overdose in Ontario, 2013 to 2016. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise

View this table:

Discussion

In this population based cohort study of nearly 3000 opioid related deaths, we found that in 2016, whereas only one third of patients had an active opioid prescription at time of death, more than three quarters of decedents had been dispensed an opioid in the three years before death. Furthermore, 40% of the deaths with evidence of an active opioid prescription had additional opioids involved in the death, suggesting an important contribution of either remotely prescribed or illicitly obtained drugs in these deaths. Finally, the role of non-prescribed fentanyl in opioid related deaths increased substantially between 2013 and 2016, among both people actively being prescribed opioids and those with no evidence of prescription opioid use. These findings highlight the important inter-relations between the prescribed and illicit opioid markets among people dying due to opioids in Ontario and the growing role of clandestinely manufactured fentanyl in these trends.

Comparison with other studies

Our findings are similar to those reported in other jurisdictions, including in British Columbia and Alberta, Canada. In British Columbia, Gladstone et al reported the proportion of deaths related to prescription opioids in 2013 in which an opioid had been prescribed in the previous 60 days.25 In this analysis, women were more likely than men to have been recently dispensed an opioid (54% v 29%), which aligns closely with our findings of 48% of women and 33% of men having an active opioid prescription at time of death that same year. Similarly, in Alberta, 32% of opioid related deaths in 2017 occurred in people dispensed an opioid in the previous 30 days,26 which is slightly lower than our finding of 43% in 2016. This could reflect inter-jurisdictional differences in the role of non-prescribed opioids in fatal overdoses, which has been shown elsewhere,16 or might indicate growth in overdoses attributable to clandestinely manufactured synthetic opioids in 2017.27 Importantly, in Alberta in 2017, only 23% of deaths involving fentanyl had an opioid prescription in the previous 30 days.26

An emerging concern across North America is the contamination of the illicit opioid supply with synthetic fentanyl and its analogues.151627 Given the potency of these drugs, the lack of regulation and control over the amount consumed, and the proliferation of counterfeit pills containing fentanyl,27 jurisdictions across the US and Canada have reported large increases in fentanyl related deaths in 2016 and 2017.15171826 In our study, we found evidence of the increasing contributions of fentanyl and its analogues to opioid related deaths in Ontario. In particular, among people who died of an opioid related cause but had no active opioid prescriptions at time of death, only 20% of deaths involved fentanyl in 2013 compared with nearly 50% in 2016. Although this clearly shows the growing role of non-prescribed fentanyl in these deaths across the province, it is important to highlight the large contribution of prescribed and diverted prescription opioids to these deaths. Half of the deaths without active opioid prescriptions involved non-fentanyl opioids, suggesting diversion of prescriptions, and approximately 20% of people who died of an opioid related cause in 2016 had only prescribed opioids in their system at time of death. Finally, the absolute number of people with an active opioid prescription who died of an overdose increased by 15% over our study period. This reinforces the need for responses to the opioid crisis that address all avenues through which people can access these drugs, including prescriptions, diverted drugs, and illicitly manufactured products.

Strengths and limitations of study

This study has several strengths, including its use of medical coronial data to identify postmortem toxicological findings for all opioid related deaths occurring in Ontario and the use of comprehensive, linked prescription data to determine the contribution of prescription opioids to these deaths. However, several limitations warrant emphasis. For example, we could not examine more remote opioid prescriptions, and we cannot exclude the possibility that some deaths seeming to involve diverted opioids might have involved older prescriptions to the same person. We characterised this by doing sensitivity analyses, investigating any opioid prescriptions dispensed in the previous three years (when data allowed). Secondly, we cannot differentiate between diverted prescription fentanyl patches and illicitly produced fentanyl by using postmortem toxicology. However, in an exploratory analysis, we confirmed that less than 2% of people with fentanyl present on toxicology at time of death and no active fentanyl prescription had been dispensed fentanyl at any point in the previous six months. This, in conjunction with the introduction of fentanyl patch-for-patch programmes across Ontario that were designed to reduce diversion of fentanyl patches,2829 suggests that the recent growth of involvement of fentanyl in deaths is most likely attributable to illicitly manufactured fentanyl. Finally, we defined heroin involvement in deaths on the basis of presence of 6-monoacetylmorphine in postmortem toxicology. However, owing to its rapid metabolism, this may underestimate the true prevalence of heroin involvement in deaths.

Conclusions and policy implications

The prescribed and illicit opioid environment continues to evolve, with recent focus on the important role of illicitly produced fentanyl in rising rates of opioid related deaths. This study of all opioid related deaths in Ontario over a four year period describes the ongoing combined roles of prescribed, diverted, and illicit opioids in this market and highlights the emerging contributions of non-prescribed fentanyl to fatal overdoses across the province. Although more than half of all opioid related deaths still involved prescription drugs (either dispensed or diverted) in 2016, the increased prevalence of deaths involving non-prescribed fentanyl between 2015 and 2016 is alarming. In light of these trends, the success of programmes and policies designed to tackle the ongoing opioid crisis cannot focus solely on the prescribed or illicit environment but must consider the multifactorial contributions of various sources of opioids to this public health problem.

What is already known on this topic

  • Opioid related deaths continue to climb in North America

  • This growing problem has been associated with the widespread prescribing of opioids over the past 20 years

  • Use of non-prescribed (diverted or illicit) opioids is thought to be the major contributor to opioid related deaths

What this study adds

  • Prescribed, diverted, and illicit opioids all play an important role in opioid related deaths

  • One third of opioid related deaths were among people actively treated with a prescription opioid

  • A concerning trend of increased involvement of non-prescribed fentanyl in 2016 aligns with the recent introduction of illicit fentanyl to the market

Acknowledgments

We thank the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario, which, as part of its public safety mandate, made available the relevant data on opioid related deaths in Ontario. We also thank Brogan, Ottawa, for use of its Drug Product and Therapeutic Class Database.

Footnotes

  • Contributors: TG, WK, DM, MT, MMM, JMP, and DNJ were involved in the conception and design of the study. TG and WK acquired the data. TG, WK, DM, MT, MMM, JMP, and DNJ analysed and interpreted the data. TG drafted the article. WK, DM, MT, MMM, JMP, and DNJ revised the article critically for important intellectual content. TG, WK, DM, MT, MMM, JMP, and DNJ gave final approval of the version to be published. All authors had access to the data in the study and take responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. TG attests that all listed authors meet authorship criteria and that no others meeting the criteria have been omitted. She is the guarantor.

  • Funding: This study was supported by a grant from the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (MOHLTC; grant #06673) and the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (grant #153070). It was also supported by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES), a non-profit research institute sponsored by the Ontario MOHLTC. The opinions, results, and conclusions reported in this paper are those of the authors and are independent from the funding sources. No endorsement by ICES or the Ontario MOHLTC is intended or should be inferred.

  • Competing interests: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the corresponding author) and declare: TG received grant funding from the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care to support this work; MMM has received personal fees from Celgene, NovoNordisk, and Allergan outside the submitted work; no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.

  • Ethical approval: The study protocol was approved by the research ethics board of Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario.

  • Data sharing: The dataset from this study is held securely in coded form at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES). Although data sharing agreements prohibit ICES from making the dataset publicly available, access may be granted to those who meet pre-specified criteria for confidential access, available at www.ices.on.ca/DAS.

  • Transparency statement: The lead author (the manuscript’s guarantor) affirms that this manuscript is an honest, accurate, and transparent account of the study being reported; that no important aspects of the study have been omitted; and that any discrepancies from the study as planned (and, if relevant, registered) have been explained.

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References