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1.
Ann Surg Open ; 5(2): e429, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38911666

RESUMO

Objective: To determine whether certain patients are vulnerable to errant triage decisions immediately after major surgery and whether there are unique sociodemographic phenotypes within overtriaged and undertriaged cohorts. Background: In a fair system, overtriage of low-acuity patients to intensive care units (ICUs) and undertriage of high-acuity patients to general wards would affect all sociodemographic subgroups equally. Methods: This multicenter, longitudinal cohort study of hospital admissions immediately after major surgery compared hospital mortality and value of care (risk-adjusted mortality/total costs) across 4 cohorts: overtriage (N = 660), risk-matched overtriage controls admitted to general wards (N = 3077), undertriage (N = 2335), and risk-matched undertriage controls admitted to ICUs (N = 4774). K-means clustering identified sociodemographic phenotypes within overtriage and undertriage cohorts. Results: Compared with controls, overtriaged admissions had a predominance of male patients (56.2% vs 43.1%, P < 0.001) and commercial insurance (6.4% vs 2.5%, P < 0.001); undertriaged admissions had a predominance of Black patients (28.4% vs 24.4%, P < 0.001) and greater socioeconomic deprivation. Overtriage was associated with increased total direct costs [$16.2K ($11.4K-$23.5K) vs $14.1K ($9.1K-$20.7K), P < 0.001] and low value of care; undertriage was associated with increased hospital mortality (1.5% vs 0.7%, P = 0.002) and hospice care (2.2% vs 0.6%, P < 0.001) and low value of care. Unique sociodemographic phenotypes within both overtriage and undertriage cohorts had similar outcomes and value of care, suggesting that triage decisions, rather than patient characteristics, drive outcomes and value of care. Conclusions: Postoperative triage decisions should ensure equality across sociodemographic groups by anchoring triage decisions to objective patient acuity assessments, circumventing cognitive shortcuts and mitigating bias.

2.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 8442, 2024 04 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38600110

RESUMO

Using clustering analysis for early vital signs, unique patient phenotypes with distinct pathophysiological signatures and clinical outcomes may be revealed and support early clinical decision-making. Phenotyping using early vital signs has proven challenging, as vital signs are typically sampled sporadically. We proposed a novel, deep temporal interpolation and clustering network to simultaneously extract latent representations from irregularly sampled vital signs and derive phenotypes. Four distinct clusters were identified. Phenotype A (18%) had the greatest prevalence of comorbid disease with increased prevalence of prolonged respiratory insufficiency, acute kidney injury, sepsis, and long-term (3-year) mortality. Phenotypes B (33%) and C (31%) had a diffuse pattern of mild organ dysfunction. Phenotype B's favorable short-term clinical outcomes were tempered by the second highest rate of long-term mortality. Phenotype C had favorable clinical outcomes. Phenotype D (17%) exhibited early and persistent hypotension, high incidence of early surgery, and substantial biomarker incidence of inflammation. Despite early and severe illness, phenotype D had the second lowest long-term mortality. After comparing the sequential organ failure assessment scores, the clustering results did not simply provide a recapitulation of previous acuity assessments. This tool may impact triage decisions and have significant implications for clinical decision-support under time constraints and uncertainty.


Assuntos
Escores de Disfunção Orgânica , Sepse , Humanos , Doença Aguda , Fenótipo , Biomarcadores , Análise por Conglomerados
3.
J Vasc Surg ; 80(1): 260-267.e2, 2024 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38493897

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Gender disparities in surgical training and assessment are described in the general surgery literature. Assessment disparities have not been explored in vascular surgery. We sought to investigate gender disparities in operative assessment in a national cohort of vascular surgery integrated residents (VIRs) and fellows (VSFs). METHODS: Operative performance and autonomy ratings from the Society for Improving Medical Professional Learning (SIMPL) application database were collected for all vascular surgery participating institutions from 2018 to 2023. Logistic generalized linear mixed models were conducted to examine the association of faculty and trainee gender on faculty and self-assessment of autonomy and performance. Data were adjusted for post-graduate year and case complexity. Random effects were included to account for clustering effects due to participant, program, and procedure. RESULTS: One hundred three trainees (n = 63 VIRs; n = 40 VSFs; 63.1% men) and 99 faculty (73.7% men) from 17 institutions (n = 12 VIR and n = 13 VSF programs) contributed 4951 total assessments (44.4% by faculty, 55.6% by trainees) across 235 unique procedures. Faculty and trainee gender were not associated with faculty ratings of performance (faculty gender: odds ratio [OR], 0.78; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.27-2.29; trainee gender: OR, 1.80; 95% CI, 0.76-0.43) or autonomy (faculty gender: OR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.41-2.39; trainee gender: OR, 1.23; 95% CI, 0.62-2.45) of trainees. All trainees self-assessed at lower performance and autonomy ratings as compared with faculty assessments. However, women trainees rated themselves significantly lower than men for both autonomy (OR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.43-0.74) and performance (OR, 0.40; 95% CI, 0.30-0.54). CONCLUSIONS: Although gender was not associated with differences in faculty assessment of performance or autonomy among vascular surgery trainees, women trainees perceive themselves as performing with lower competency and less autonomy than their male colleagues. These findings suggest utility for exploring gender differences in real-time feedback delivered to and received by trainees and targeted interventions to align trainee self-perception with actual operative performance and autonomy to optimize surgical skill acquisition.


Assuntos
Competência Clínica , Educação de Pós-Graduação em Medicina , Internato e Residência , Autonomia Profissional , Cirurgiões , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Vasculares , Humanos , Feminino , Masculino , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Vasculares/educação , Cirurgiões/educação , Cirurgiões/psicologia , Fatores Sexuais , Médicas , Estados Unidos , Sexismo , Docentes de Medicina , Adulto
5.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37818350

RESUMO

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) in the context of type 2 diabetes is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in the United States. DN is graded based on glomerular morphology and has a spatially heterogeneous presentation in kidney biopsies that complicates pathologists' predictions of disease progression. Artificial intelligence and deep learning methods for pathology have shown promise for quantitative pathological evaluation and clinical trajectory estimation; but, they often fail to capture large-scale spatial anatomy and relationships found in whole slide images (WSIs). In this study, we present a transformer-based, multi-stage ESRD prediction framework built upon nonlinear dimensionality reduction, relative Euclidean pixel distance embeddings between every pair of observable glomeruli, and a corresponding spatial self-attention mechanism for a robust contextual representation. We developed a deep transformer network for encoding WSI and predicting future ESRD using a dataset of 56 kidney biopsy WSIs from DN patients at Seoul National University Hospital. Using a leave-one-out cross-validation scheme, our modified transformer framework outperformed RNNs, XGBoost, and logistic regression baseline models, and resulted in an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.97 (95% CI: 0.90-1.00) for predicting two-year ESRD, compared with an AUC of 0.86 (95% CI: 0.66-0.99) without our relative distance embedding, and an AUC of 0.76 (95% CI: 0.59-0.92) without a denoising autoencoder module. While the variability and generalizability induced by smaller sample sizes are challenging, our distance-based embedding approach and overfitting mitigation techniques yielded results that suggest opportunities for future spatially aware WSI research using limited pathology datasets.

6.
Ann Surg Open ; 4(1): e256, 2023 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37600892

RESUMO

Objectives: This study tests the null hypotheses that overall sentiment and gendered words in verbal feedback and resident operative autonomy relative to performance are similar for female and male residents. Background: Female and male surgical residents may experience training differently, affecting the quality of learning and graduated autonomy. Methods: A longitudinal, observational study using a Society for Improving Medical Professional Learning collaborative dataset describing resident and attending evaluations of resident operative performance and autonomy and recordings of verbal feedback from attendings from surgical procedures performed at 54 US general surgery residency training programs from 2016 to 2021. Overall sentiment, adjectives, and gendered words in verbal feedback were quantified by natural language processing. Resident operative autonomy and performance, as evaluated by attendings, were reported on 5-point ordinal scales. Performance-adjusted autonomy was calculated as autonomy minus performance. Results: The final dataset included objective assessments and dictated feedback for 2683 surgical procedures. Sentiment scores were higher for female residents (95 [interquartile range (IQR), 4-100] vs 86 [IQR 2-100]; P < 0.001). Gendered words were present in a greater proportion of dictations for female residents (29% vs 25%; P = 0.04) due to male attendings disproportionately using male-associated words in feedback for female residents (28% vs 23%; P = 0.01). Overall, attendings reported that male residents received greater performance-adjusted autonomy compared with female residents (P < 0.001). Conclusions: Sentiment and gendered words in verbal feedback and performance-adjusted operative autonomy differed for female and male general surgery residents. These findings suggest a need to ensure that trainees are given appropriate and equitable operative autonomy and feedback.

7.
Surgery ; 174(3): 709-714, 2023 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37316372

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Acute kidney injury is a common postoperative complication affecting between 10% and 30% of surgical patients. Acute kidney injury is associated with increased resource usage and chronic kidney disease development, with more severe acute kidney injury suggesting more aggressive deterioration in clinical outcomes and mortality. METHODS: We considered 42,906 surgical patients admitted to University of Florida Health (n = 51,806) between 2014 and 2021. Acute kidney injury stages were determined using the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes serum creatinine criteria. We developed a recurrent neural network-based model to continuously predict acute kidney injury risk and state in the following 24 hours and compared it with logistic regression, random forest, and multi-layer perceptron models. We used medications, laboratory and vital measurements, and derived features from past one-year records as inputs. We analyzed the proposed model with integrated gradients for enhanced explainability. RESULTS: Postoperative acute kidney injury at any stage developed in 20% (10,664) of the cohort. The recurrent neural network model was more accurate in predicting nearly all categories of next-day acute kidney injury stages (including the no acute kidney injury group). The area under the receiver operating curve and 95% confidence intervals for recurrent neural network and logistic regression models were for no acute kidney injury (0.98 [0.98-0.98] vs 0.93 [0.93-0.93]), stage 1 (0.95 [0.95-0.95] vs. 0.81 [0.80-0.82]), stage 2/3 (0.99 [0.99-0.99] vs 0.96 [0.96-0.97]), and stage 3 with renal replacement therapy (1.0 [1.0-1.0] vs 1.0 [1.0-1.0]. CONCLUSION: The proposed model demonstrates that temporal processing of patient information can lead to more granular and dynamic modeling of acute kidney injury status and result in more continuous and accurate acute kidney injury prediction. We showcase the integrated gradients framework's utility as a mechanism for enhancing model explainability, potentially facilitating clinical trust for future implementation.


Assuntos
Injúria Renal Aguda , Aprendizado Profundo , Humanos , Injúria Renal Aguda/diagnóstico , Injúria Renal Aguda/epidemiologia , Injúria Renal Aguda/etiologia , Modelos Logísticos , Previsões , Rim
8.
medRxiv ; 2023 Feb 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36865174

RESUMO

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) in the context of type 2 diabetes is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in the United States. DN is graded based on glomerular morphology and has a spatially heterogeneous presentation in kidney biopsies that complicates pathologists' predictions of disease progression. Artificial intelligence and deep learning methods for pathology have shown promise for quantitative pathological evaluation and clinical trajectory estimation; but, they often fail to capture large-scale spatial anatomy and relationships found in whole slide images (WSIs). In this study, we present a transformer-based, multi-stage ESRD prediction framework built upon nonlinear dimensionality reduction, relative Euclidean pixel distance embeddings between every pair of observable glomeruli, and a corresponding spatial self-attention mechanism for a robust contextual representation. We developed a deep transformer network for encoding WSI and predicting future ESRD using a dataset of 56 kidney biopsy WSIs from DN patients at Seoul National University Hospital. Using a leave-one-out cross-validation scheme, our modified transformer framework outperformed RNNs, XGBoost, and logistic regression baseline models, and resulted in an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.97 (95% CI: 0.90-1.00) for predicting two-year ESRD, compared with an AUC of 0.86 (95% CI: 0.66-0.99) without our relative distance embedding, and an AUC of 0.76 (95% CI: 0.59-0.92) without a denoising autoencoder module. While the variability and generalizability induced by smaller sample sizes are challenging, our distance-based embedding approach and overfitting mitigation techniques yielded results that sugest opportunities for future spatially aware WSI research using limited pathology datasets.

9.
World J Emerg Surg ; 18(1): 13, 2023 02 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36747289

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Common bile duct exploration (CBDE) is safe and effective for managing choledocholithiasis, but most US general surgeons have limited experience with CBDE and are uncomfortable performing this procedure in practice. Surgical trainee exposure to CBDE is limited, and their learning curve for achieving autonomous, practice-ready performance has not been previously described. This study tests the hypothesis that receipt of one or more prior CBDE operative performance assessments, combined with formative feedback, is associated with greater resident operative performance and autonomy. METHODS: Resident and attending assessments of resident operative performance and autonomy were obtained for 189 laparoscopic or open CBDEs performed at 28 institutions. Performance and autonomy were graded along validated ordinal scales. Cases in which the resident had one or more prior CBDE case evaluations (n = 48) were compared with cases in which the resident had no prior evaluations (n = 141). RESULTS: Compared with cases in which the resident had no prior CBDE case evaluations, cases with a prior evaluation had greater proportions of practice-ready or exceptional performance ratings according to both residents (27% vs. 11%, p = .009) and attendings (58% vs. 19%, p < .001) and had greater proportions of passive help or supervision only autonomy ratings according to both residents (17% vs. 4%, p = .009) and attendings (69% vs. 32%, p < .01). CONCLUSIONS: Residents with at least one prior CBDE evaluation and formative feedback demonstrated better operative performance and received greater autonomy than residents without prior evaluations, underscoring the propensity of feedback to help residents achieve autonomous, practice-ready performance for rare operations.


Assuntos
Coledocolitíase , Internato e Residência , Laparoscopia , Humanos , Feedback Formativo , Coledocolitíase/cirurgia , Ducto Colédoco/cirurgia
10.
J Am Coll Surg ; 236(2): 279-291, 2023 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36648256

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In single-institution studies, overtriaging low-risk postoperative patients to ICUs has been associated with a low value of care; undertriaging high-risk postoperative patients to general wards has been associated with increased mortality and morbidity. This study tested the reproducibility of an automated postoperative triage classification system to generating an actionable, explainable decision support system. STUDY DESIGN: This longitudinal cohort study included adults undergoing inpatient surgery at two university hospitals. Triage classifications were generated by an explainable deep learning model using preoperative and intraoperative electronic health record features. Nearest neighbor algorithms identified risk-matched controls. Primary outcomes were mortality, morbidity, and value of care (inverted risk-adjusted mortality/total direct costs). RESULTS: Among 4,669 ICU admissions, 237 (5.1%) were overtriaged. Compared with 1,021 control ward admissions, overtriaged admissions had similar outcomes but higher costs ($15.9K [interquartile range $9.8K to $22.3K] vs $10.7K [$7.0K to $17.6K], p < 0.001) and lower value of care (0.2 [0.1 to 0.3] vs 1.5 [0.9 to 2.2], p < 0.001). Among 8,594 ward admissions, 1,029 (12.0%) were undertriaged. Compared with 2,498 control ICU admissions, undertriaged admissions had longer hospital length-of-stays (6.4 [3.4 to 12.4] vs 5.4 [2.6 to 10.4] days, p < 0.001); greater incidence of hospital mortality (1.7% vs 0.7%, p = 0.03), cardiac arrest (1.4% vs 0.5%, p = 0.04), and persistent acute kidney injury without renal recovery (5.2% vs 2.8%, p = 0.002); similar costs ($21.8K [$13.3K to $34.9K] vs $21.9K [$13.1K to $36.3K]); and lower value of care (0.8 [0.5 to 1.3] vs 1.2 [0.7 to 2.0], p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Overtriage was associated with low value of care; undertriage was associated with both low value of care and increased mortality and morbidity. The proposed framework for generating automated postoperative triage classifications is reproducible.


Assuntos
Aprendizado Profundo , Adulto , Humanos , Estudos Longitudinais , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Triagem , Estudos de Coortes , Estudos Retrospectivos
11.
Physiol Meas ; 44(2)2023 02 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36657179

RESUMO

Objective. In 2019, the University of Florida College of Medicine launched theMySurgeryRiskalgorithm to predict eight major post-operative complications using automatically extracted data from the electronic health record.Approach. This project was developed in parallel with our Intelligent Critical Care Center and represents a culmination of efforts to build an efficient and accurate model for data processing and predictive analytics.Main Results and Significance. This paper discusses how our model was constructed and improved upon. We highlight the consolidation of the database, processing of fixed and time-series physiologic measurements, development and training of predictive models, and expansion of those models into different aspects of patient assessment and treatment. We end by discussing future directions of the model.


Assuntos
Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde , Aprendizado de Máquina , Humanos , Previsões
12.
Ann Surg ; 277(2): 179-185, 2023 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35797553

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: We test the hypothesis that for low-acuity surgical patients, postoperative intensive care unit (ICU) admission is associated with lower value of care compared with ward admission. BACKGROUND: Overtriaging low-acuity patients to ICU consumes valuable resources and may not confer better patient outcomes. Associations among postoperative overtriage, patient outcomes, costs, and value of care have not been previously reported. METHODS: In this longitudinal cohort study, postoperative ICU admissions were classified as overtriaged or appropriately triaged according to machine learning-based patient acuity assessments and requirements for immediate postoperative mechanical ventilation or vasopressor support. The nearest neighbors algorithm identified risk-matched control ward admissions. The primary outcome was value of care, calculated as inverse observed-to-expected mortality ratios divided by total costs. RESULTS: Acuity assessments had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.92 in generating predictions for triage classifications. Of 8592 postoperative ICU admissions, 423 (4.9%) were overtriaged. These were matched with 2155 control ward admissions with similar comorbidities, incidence of emergent surgery, immediate postoperative vital signs, and do not resuscitate order placement and rescindment patterns. Compared with controls, overtraiged admissions did not have a lower incidence of any measured complications. Total costs for admission were $16.4K for overtriage and $15.9K for controls ( P =0.03). Value of care was lower for overtriaged admissions [2.9 (2.0-4.0)] compared with controls [24.2 (14.1-34.5), P <0.001]. CONCLUSIONS: Low-acuity postoperative patients who were overtriaged to ICUs had increased total costs, no improvements in outcomes, and received low-value care.


Assuntos
Hospitalização , Unidades de Terapia Intensiva , Humanos , Estudos Longitudinais , Estudos Retrospectivos , Estudos de Coortes
13.
Surgery ; 173(4): 950-956, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36517292

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Laparoscopic common bile duct exploration is safe and effective for managing choledocholithiasis, but laparoscopic common bile duct exploration is rarely performed, which threatens surgical trainee proficiency. This study tests the hypothesis that prior operative or simulation experience with laparoscopic common bile duct exploration is associated with greater resident operative performance and autonomy without adversely affecting patient outcomes. METHODS: This longitudinal cohort study included 33 consecutive patients undergoing laparoscopic common bile duct exploration in cases involving postgraduate years 3, 4, and 5 general surgery residents at a single institution during the implementation of a laparoscopic common bile duct exploration simulation curriculum. For each of the 33 cases, resident performance and autonomy were rated by residents and attendings, the resident's prior operative and simulation experience were recorded, and patient outcomes were ascertained from electronic health records for comparison among 3 cohorts: prior operative experience, prior simulation experience, and no prior experience. RESULTS: Operative approach was similar among cohorts. Overall morbidity was 6.1% and similar across cohorts. The operative performance scores were higher in prior experience cohorts according to both residents (3.0 [2.8-3.0] vs 2.0 [2.0-3.0]; P = .01) and attendings (3.0 [3.0-4.0]; P < .001). The autonomy scores were higher in prior experience cohorts according to both residents (2.0 [2.0-3.0] vs 2.0 [2.0-2.0]; P = .005) and attendings (2.5 [2.0-3.0] vs 2.0 [1.0-2.0]; P = .001). Prior simulation and prior operative experience had similar associations with performance and autonomy. CONCLUSION: Simulation experience with laparoscopic common bile duct exploration was associated with greater resident operative performance and autonomy, with effects that mimic prior operative experience. This illustrates the potential for simulation-based training to improve resident operative performance and autonomy for laparoscopic common bile duct exploration.


Assuntos
Colecistectomia Laparoscópica , Coledocolitíase , Laparoscopia , Esfincterotomia , Humanos , Salas Cirúrgicas , Estudos Longitudinais , Coledocolitíase/cirurgia , Currículo , Ducto Colédoco/cirurgia
14.
Nat Rev Nephrol ; 18(7): 452-465, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35459850

RESUMO

Kidney pathophysiology is often complex, nonlinear and heterogeneous, which limits the utility of hypothetical-deductive reasoning and linear, statistical approaches to diagnosis and treatment. Emerging evidence suggests that artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled decision support systems - which use algorithms based on learned examples - may have an important role in nephrology. Contemporary AI applications can accurately predict the onset of acute kidney injury before notable biochemical changes occur; can identify modifiable risk factors for chronic kidney disease onset and progression; can match or exceed human accuracy in recognizing renal tumours on imaging studies; and may augment prognostication and decision-making following renal transplantation. Future AI applications have the potential to make real-time, continuous recommendations for discrete actions and yield the greatest probability of achieving optimal kidney health outcomes. Realizing the clinical integration of AI applications will require cooperative, multidisciplinary commitment to ensure algorithm fairness, overcome barriers to clinical implementation, and build an AI-competent workforce. AI-enabled decision support should preserve the pre-eminence of wisdom and augment rather than replace human decision-making. By anchoring intuition with objective predictions and classifications, this approach should favour clinician intuition when it is honed by experience.


Assuntos
Sistemas de Apoio a Decisões Clínicas , Nefrologia , Algoritmos , Inteligência Artificial , Humanos
15.
Surgery ; 170(1): 329-332, 2021 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33436272

RESUMO

Patients and physicians make essential decisions regarding diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. These actions should be performed or deferred under time constraints and uncertainty regarding patients' diagnoses and predicted response to treatment. This may lead to cognitive and judgment errors. Reinforcement learning is a subfield of machine learning that identifies a sequence of actions to increase the probability of achieving a predetermined goal. Reinforcement learning has the potential to assist in surgical decision making by recommending actions at predefined intervals and its ability to utilize complex input data, including text, image, and temporal data, in the decision-making process. The algorithm mimics a human trial-and-error learning process to calculate optimum recommendation policies. The article provides insight regarding challenges in the development and application of reinforcement learning in the medical field, with an emphasis on surgical decision making. The review focuses on challenges in formulating reward function describing the ultimate goal and determination of patient states derived from electronic health records, along with the lack of resources to simulate the potential benefits of suggested actions in response to changing physiological states during and after surgery. Although clinical implementation would require secure, interoperable, livestreaming electronic health record data for use by virtual model, development and validation of personalized reinforcement learning models in surgery can contribute to improving care by helping patients and clinicians make better decisions.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde , Aprendizado de Máquina , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Operatórios , Algoritmos , Tomada de Decisão Clínica , Técnicas de Apoio para a Decisão , Humanos
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