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Research ArticleInterventional

Imaging Triage of Patients with Late-Window (6–24 Hours) Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Comparative Study Using Multiphase CT Angiography versus CT Perfusion

M.A. Almekhlafi, W.G. Kunz, R.A. McTaggart, M.V. Jayaraman, M. Najm, S.H. Ahn, E. Fainardi, M. Rubiera, A.V. Khaw, A. Zini, M.D. Hill, A.M. Demchuk, M. Goyal and B.K. Menon
American Journal of Neuroradiology January 2020, 41 (1) 129-133; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6327
M.A. Almekhlafi
aFrom the Department of Clinical Neurosciences (M.A.A., M.N., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
bCalgary Stroke Program, Department of Radiology (M.A.A., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
cDepartment of Community Health Sciences (M.A.A., M.D.H., B.K.M.)
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W.G. Kunz
eDepartment of Radiology (W.G.K.), University Hospital, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich, Germany
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R.A. McTaggart
fDepartments of Neurology, Diagnostic Imaging, and Neurosurgery (R.A.M., M.V.J.), Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island
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M.V. Jayaraman
fDepartments of Neurology, Diagnostic Imaging, and Neurosurgery (R.A.M., M.V.J.), Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island
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M. Najm
aFrom the Department of Clinical Neurosciences (M.A.A., M.N., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
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S.H. Ahn
gDepartment of Neurology (S.H.A.), Chosun University School of Medicine, Gwang Ju, South Korea
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E. Fainardi
hDepartment of Neurosciences and Rehabilitation (E.F.), University Hospital, Ferrara, Italy
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M. Rubiera
iDepartment of Neurology (M.R.), Hospital Vall d’Hebron, Passeig de la Vall d’Hebron, Barcelona, Spain
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A.V. Khaw
jDepartment of Clinical Neurosciences (A.V.K.), University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
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A. Zini
kDepartment of Neurology and Stroke Center (A.Z.), Istituto Di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico Istituto di Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna, Maggiore Hospital, Bologna, Italy.
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M.D. Hill
aFrom the Department of Clinical Neurosciences (M.A.A., M.N., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
bCalgary Stroke Program, Department of Radiology (M.A.A., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
cDepartment of Community Health Sciences (M.A.A., M.D.H., B.K.M.)
dDepartment of Medicine (M.D.H.), Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Cumming School of Medicine University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada
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A.M. Demchuk
aFrom the Department of Clinical Neurosciences (M.A.A., M.N., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
bCalgary Stroke Program, Department of Radiology (M.A.A., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
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M. Goyal
aFrom the Department of Clinical Neurosciences (M.A.A., M.N., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
bCalgary Stroke Program, Department of Radiology (M.A.A., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
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B.K. Menon
aFrom the Department of Clinical Neurosciences (M.A.A., M.N., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
bCalgary Stroke Program, Department of Radiology (M.A.A., M.D.H., A.M.D., M.G., B.K.M.)
cDepartment of Community Health Sciences (M.A.A., M.D.H., B.K.M.)
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The role of collateral imaging in selecting patients for endovascular thrombectomy beyond 6 hours from onset has not been established. To assess the comparative utility of collateral imaging using multiphase CTA in selecting late window patients for EVT.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used data from a prospective multicenter observational study in which all patients underwent imaging with multiphase CT angiography as well as CTP. Two blinded reviewers evaluated patients’ eligibility for endovascular thrombectomy using published collateral imaging (multiphase CTA) criteria compared with CTP using the selection criteria of the Clinical Mismatch in the Triage of Wake Up and Late Presenting Strokes Undergoing Neurointervention with Trevo (DAWN) and Endovascular Therapy Following Imaging Evaluation for Ischemic Stroke 3 (DEFUSE-3) trials. CTP images were processed using automated commercial software. The outcomes of patients eligible for endovascular thrombectomy according to multiphase CTA, DAWN, or DEFUSE-3 criteria were compared using multivariable logistic regression modeling. Model characteristics were compared using the C-statistic for the receiver operating characteristic curve, the Akaike information criterion, and the Bayesian information criterion.

RESULTS: Eighty-six patients presented beyond 6 hours from onset/last known well (median, 9.6 hours; interquartile range, 4.1 hours). Thirty-five patients (40.7%) received endovascular thrombectomy, of whom good functional outcome (90-day mRS, 0–2) was achieved in 16/35 (47%). Collateral-based imaging paradigms significantly modified the treatment effect of endovascular thrombectomy on 90-day mRS 0–2 (Pinteraction = .007). The multiphase CTA–based regression model best fit the data for the 90-day outcome (C-statistic, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.77–0.94) and was associated with the least information loss (Akaike information criterion, 95.7; Bayesian information criterion, 114.9) compared with CTP-based models.

CONCLUSIONS: The collateral-based imaging paradigm using multiphase CTA compares well with CTP in selecting patients for endovascular thrombectomy in the late time window.

ABBREVIATIONS:

AIC
Akaike information criterion
BIC
Bayesian information criterion
EVT
endovascular thrombectomy
IQR
interquartile range
LVO
large-vessel occlusion
mCTA
multiphase CTA

Endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) has become the standard of care in patients with acute ischemic stroke with large-vessel occlusion (LVO) presenting within 6 hours from symptom onset.1,2 The treatment time window can be further extended to capture patients with salvageable tissue up to 24 hours from last known well. Two randomized trials have shown an overwhelming benefit of EVT over medical treatment in patients presenting up to 16 hours (Endovascular Therapy Following Imaging Evaluation for Ischemic Stroke 3 [DEFUSE-3])3 and 24 hours (Clinical Mismatch in the Triage of Wake Up and Late Presenting Strokes Undergoing Neurointervention with Trevo [DAWN]) from last known well.4 Both studies used CT perfusion imaging to identify patients with LVO with a limited-size-predicted infarct core or substantial salvageable brain tissue (target mismatch) for inclusion.

The Endovascular Treatment for Small Core and Proximal Occlusion Ischemic Stroke (ESCAPE) trial showed that an imaging paradigm based on measuring collateral status beyond target occlusion is capable of selecting patients with LVO who would benefit from EVT up to 12 hours from onset/last known well.5,6 Multiphase CTA (mCTA) is a reliable and well-validated tool for measuring collateral status beyond the target LVO.7⇓⇓⇓-11 Collateral assessments on mCTA, even at the brain region level, compare well with CTP-based blood flow measurements in predicting final tissue fate.7 Some of the shortcomings of CTP (eg, patient motion, limited brain coverage, larger radiation dose, additional contrast, time, and cost of image postprocessing software) are avoided using mCTA.12,13

Recent studies have reported that patient selection using noncontrast CT and single-phase CTA14,15 or mCTA in the “late window” after stroke onset is an effective method of selecting patients for EVT.16 We compared patient selection using mCTA versus CTP in patients with late-window stroke with LVO using appropriate clinical treatment decisions and 90-day clinical outcomes to assess the comparative utility of each approach.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Data are from the Precise and Rapid Assessment of Collaterals Using Multi-Phase CTA in the Triage of Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke for IV or IA Therapy (PRove-IT) study.7,8,17⇓-19 This was a prospective, multicenter international observational study to assess the value of multimodal imaging in the triage of patients with acute ischemic stroke. All patients had noncontrast CT of the brain, CTA of the head and neck, mCTA, and CTP at baseline as described previously.8 For this analysis, only patients who presented ≥6 hours from stroke symptom onset/last known well time were included. Images were scored by consensus of 2 readers blinded to all clinical data (except the side of stroke), treatment allocation, and outcome data. In separate sessions and using random patient ordering, the same 2 readers scored the NCCT ASPECTS and then the collateral score on mCTA using a 6-point ordinal pial arterial filling scale as previously described.8 CT perfusion images were postprocessed using an automated commercial software.20 Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage was defined using the European Cooperative Acute Stroke Study III (ECASS) III criteria.21

For each imaging paradigm, readers assessed whether a patient would be a candidate for EVT (EVT eligibility) based on the following criteria:

  1. NCCT and mCTA session: ASPECTS ≥ 5 and an mCTA-based collateral score of 4–6.8

  2. DEFUSE-3 trial criteria: predicted core volume of <70 mL, predicted penumbra volume of ≥15 mL, and mismatch ratio of ≥1.8.3

  3. DAWN trial criteria: predicted core volume of <21 mL for patients older than 80 years of age 31–51 mL if younger than 80 years.4

We assessed the predictive validity of each imaging paradigm for functional outcomes by comparing logistic regression models generated using data regarding EVT eligibility from each of the above imaging paradigms. For each paradigm, a model was fitted for each of the following outcomes: early neurologic improvement (defined as ≥50% drop in the NIHSS score during 24 hours) and 90-day functional independence (defined as mRS score of 0–2) using logistic regression and ordinal logistic regression with adjustment for key prognostic variables (age, sex, baseline NIHSS score, baseline ASPECTS, onset/last known well to imaging time, and treatment given). Modification of the effect of treatment (EVT versus no EVT) on clinical outcomes by the imaging paradigm was assessed using a multiplicative interaction term. The area under the curve of the receiver operating characteristic properties of the models was compared using the χ2 test as described by Gönen.22 In addition, information content of the various models was compared using the Akaike information criterion (AIC) and the Bayesian information criterion (BIC).23 These methods aim to identify the model that best approximates the outcome data (ie, the model that minimizes data/information loss) while applying a penalty for model complexity (ie, having too many variables). While the values of AIC or BIC do not have a simple interpretation, the model with the lowest values is the one that is better.

The PRove-IT study was approved by the local ethics review committees. Analyses were performed using STATA 15 software (StataCorp, College Station, Texas).

RESULTS

Baseline Clinical Data

Among 614 patients in PRove-IT, 86 patients were included in this analysis as patients with late-window stroke. The median age was 71 years (interquartile range [IQR], 14 years), and 48.8% were women, while the median baseline NIHSS score was 12 (IQR, 11). The median time from last known well/stroke symptom onset to baseline CT was 9.6 hours (IQR, 4.1 hours). Table 1 summarizes the baseline characteristics of this cohort according to the imaging paradigm and the treatment received.

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Table 1:

Baseline characteristics of the cohort according to actual treatment with endovascular therapy

Baseline Imaging Data

NCCT and mCTA were available in all patients; CTP, however, could not be processed in 6/86 patients (7%) due to acquisition- or patient motion–related technical limitations. These 6 patients were assumed to be ineligible for EVT using DAWN and DEFUSE-3 criteria. The median ASPECTS was 9 (IQR, 3). The distribution of the occlusion site was as follows: isolated intracranial ICA (11.6%), L- or T-type occlusions (12.8%), M1 MCA (33.7%), M2 MCA (22.1%), posterior cerebral artery (1/86, 1.2%), distal occlusions (9/86, 10.5%), and no occlusions (10/86, 11.6%). The mean and median baseline infarct volumes were 18.7  ± 28.2 mL and 8 mL (range, 0–162 mL), and penumbra volumes were 109.5 ± 10.7 mL and 94 mL (range, 0–753 mL), respectively.

Treatment and Outcome Data

Of 86 patients, 35 patients (40.7%) received EVT, while 51 (59.3%) were treated conservatively. Among EVT-treated patients, successful reperfusion (modified TICI 2b/3) was achieved in 71.4% (25/35) patients. The median 24-hour NIHSS score in the overall cohort was 7 (IQR, 13). Early neurologic improvement was seen in 27/86 patients (31.4%) in the cohort overall and in 54.3% (19/35) of those treated with EVT (72%; 18/25 of those with successful reperfusion). Four of 86 patients (4.7%) had symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage; all received EVT (4/35, 11.4% of EVT-treated patients). Of the patients with symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, all (4/4) met the DEFUSE-3 criteria for EVT, while 3/4 met the mCTA and DAWN criteria for EVT eligibility. Functional outcome data at 90 days were available for 83 of 86 patients (96.5%). Independent outcome (mRS, 0–2) was achieved in 47% (39/83) in the overall cohort and in 51.4% (18/35) of those treated with EVT (72%, 18/25 of those with successful reperfusion).

Eligibility for EVT and Predictive Validity of Imaging Paradigms

Of the 83 patients in this cohort with available 90-day outcomes, 63 patients (75.9%) were considered eligible for EVT according to the mCTA criteria, compared with 58 patients (69.9%) according to the DEFUSE-3 criteria and only 32 patients (38.6%) according to DAWN criteria (Fig 1A). Among the 35 EVT-treated patients in our cohort, 33 patients (94.3%) were considered good EVT candidates according to the mCTA criteria compared with 28 patients (80%), according to DEFUSE-3 criteria, and only 18 patients (51.4%), according to DAWN criteria for EVT eligibility. Among EVT-treated patients, the proportion of patients with the highest early neurologic improvement and independent 90-day functional outcome were those who were good treatment candidates according to mCTA paradigm. Similarly, patients who were not EVT candidates according to mCTA paradigm had the lowest likelihood of having early neurologic improvement and an independent 90-day functional outcome.

Fig 1.
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Fig 1.

A, Proportion of patients eligible for EVT according to each imaging criterion. B, Adjusted predicted probability of achieving 90-day mRS score of 0–2 in those meeting none, some, or all the imaging criteria when treated with EVT (green) versus not (red).

The predictive validity of each imaging paradigm in determining prespecified clinical outcomes was assessed using logistic regression models (Table 2 and Fig 1B). All imaging paradigms performed well in predicting 90-day functional outcome versus early neurologic improvement. Patients who had a favorable mCTA imaging profile had significantly better 90-day functional outcome when they were treated with EVT (mCTA/EVT, Pinteraction = .007). This was also noted for the paradigm based on DEFUSE-3 criteria (Pinteraction = .028) but not for the DAWN criteria (Pinteraction = .065). The probability of 90-day independent functional outcome was highest among patients meeting DEFUSE-3 criteria both with and without EVT (Fig 1B).

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Table 2:

Comparison of the ability of imaging paradigms in discriminating clinical outcomes using logistic regression modelinga

For both outcomes, models using mCTA were not significantly better than the next-best model for clinical outcomes when comparing the C-statistic (χ2 test for model comparisons, P > .05). For both outcomes however, models using the mCTA criteria minimized information loss (AIC and BIC values) better than either of the models that used CTP. For the 90-day mRS, after the mCTA model, the next-best model was the DEFUSE-3-based perfusion criteria (0.19 times as probable as the mCTA-based model to minimize information loss). For both outcomes, the next-best model was the perfusion imaging paradigm using the DEFUSE-3 criteria. Similarly, when using ordinal logistic regression for 90-day outcome, the model using the mCTA criteria best minimized information loss (lowest AIC and BIC values) compared with models that used CTP.

DISCUSSION

This analysis shows that collateral-based imaging paradigms using mCTA are at least as good as perfusion-based imaging paradigms in selecting patients presenting late for EVT. Models using mCTA had the highest likelihood of discriminating those who would have good clinical outcome when treated with EVT versus those who would not. Models using DEFUSE-3 selection criteria had better predictive validity in determining good clinical outcomes among EVT-treated patients than the DAWN paradigm. Models using mCTA or DEFUSE-3 criteria may result in more patients being offered EVT (Fig 1A).

In patients presenting within 6 hours from symptom onset/last known well, current guidelines recommend the use of NCCT and CTA in determining patient eligibility for EVT. The primary goal of imaging selection in these patients is to identify a patient with an ASPECTS of ≥6 and a proximal intracranial occlusion.1 In patients presenting beyond 6 hours, current guidelines suggest identifying LVO using CTA and the DAWN or DEFUSE-3 eligibility criteria for patient selection. Most interesting, the American Heart Association guidelines suggest that the benefit with EVT was independently demonstrated for both the subgroup of patients who met DAWN eligibility criteria and for the subgroup who did not.1 This is important because the findings of DAWN and DEFUSE-3 trials do not role out EVT befits in patients who do not fit their imaging selection criteria.

Although perfusion imaging variability and interpretation have benefited from the use of automated software, challenges related to perfusion imaging such as time delays with acquisition, training of technologists, motion sensitivity, and the risks with extra radiation and contrast persist. In this analysis, 7% of patients’ perfusion images could not be analyzed by postprocessing software. Moreover, a recent study suggests that perfusion-based selection criteria disqualified more patients from EVT compared with other selection paradigms, without improving outcomes.24 While our analyses showed that patients meeting the DEFUSE-3 criteria had the highest predicted probability of functional independence, those patients did equally well with and without EVT. The treatment effect (ie, the difference in the proportion of good outcome when treated with EVT versus not having it) was higher in patients selected using the mCTA criteria alone rather than with other criteria (Fig 1B).

NCCT and CTA continue to be the workhorses of acute stroke diagnosis. Thus, using these modalities for determining eligibility, even in the extended time window, is a logical next step. Recent studies have shown that stroke centers that use an NCCT- and mCTA-based imaging paradigm to select patients for EVT in the extended time window achieve results that are comparable with those obtained in patients who received EVT in the DAWN and DEFUSE-3 trials.14⇓-16 A post hoc analysis of the ESCAPE trial restricted to patients who presented late showed that patients receiving EVT had similar prospects of good clinical outcome (48.5%) versus those in the DAWN (49%) and DEFUSE-3 (45%) trials.6 Taken together, this analysis and other previous analyses provide more evidence to support the construct that an mCTA-based imaging paradigm is at least as good as current perfusion-based imaging paradigms in selecting patients presenting late for EVT.8 The adoption of NCCT-/mCTA-based imaging selection for the 6- to 24-hour time window would also have implications for stroke systems of care because this simplified imaging paradigm can be used at Primary Stroke Centers to triage patients for EVT without the need for implementing perfusion imaging.13,25

Our study has limitations. First, a nonrandomized study of this nature is vulnerable to selection bias. Our inclusion of patients who did not receive EVT is an attempt to mitigate any effects of bias related to selecting patients for EVT based on nonimaging factors (eg, age or stroke symptom severity). Second, this analysis did not differentiate between patients who had wake-up strokes from those with a witnessed onset that was 6 hours prior. Third, the images were read by 2 expert readers and not in real life. Automating collateral assessments and even NCCT ASPECTS interpretation using validated algorithms could be potential solutions to address this latter concern.

CONCLUSIONS

In this prospective study of patients presenting after 6 hours from onset/time last known well, an mCTA collateral-based paradigm is at least as good as guideline-approved perfusion imaging–based paradigms in selecting patients for EVT.

Footnotes

  • Disclosures: Mohammed Almekhlafi—UNRELATED: Employment: University of Calgary; Grants/Grants Pending: Canadian Institutes of Health Research.* Alexander V. Khaw—UNRELATED: Grants/Grants Pending: Lawson Health Research Institute, Comments: grant for investigator-initiated study.* Andrea Zini—UNRELATED: Board Membership: Stryker, Boehringer Ingelheim; Consultancy: Medtronic, Boehringer Ingelheim; Payment for Lectures Including Service on Speakers Bureaus: Medtronic, Cerenovus*; Travel/Accommodations/Meeting Expenses Unrelated to Activities Listed: Medtronic, Boehringer Ingelheim, Stryker.* Michael D. Hill—UNRELATED: Consultancy: Boehringer Ingelheim, Comments: COLUMBUS registry, involvement completed June 2019; Grants/Grants Pending: NoNO Inc, Medtronic, Stryker, Comments: ESCAPE-NA1 trial, HERMES collaboration, UNMASK EVT study.* Andrew Demchuk—RELATED: Grant: CIHR*; Consulting fee or honorarium: Medtronic; UNRELATED: Employment: University of Calgary; Patents (planned, pending or issued): Circle NVI, Comments: Stroke imaging software. Mayank Goyal—UNRELATED: Consultancy: Medtronic, Stryker, Mentice, MicroVention, Comments: advice regarding acute stroke devices and procedures; Grants/Grants Pending: Stryker, Comments: unrestricted grant to University of Calgary concerning the UNMASK EVT study*; Other: GE Healthcare, Comments: licensing agreement related to Systems of Acute Stroke Diagnosis. Bijoy K. Menon—UNRELATED: Grant: PRoveIT Canadian Institutes of Health Research.* *Money paid to the institution.

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  • Received July 30, 2019.
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  • © 2020 by American Journal of Neuroradiology
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Imaging Triage of Patients with Late-Window (6–24 Hours) Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Comparative Study Using Multiphase CT Angiography versus CT Perfusion
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M.A. Almekhlafi, W.G. Kunz, R.A. McTaggart, M.V. Jayaraman, M. Najm, S.H. Ahn, E. Fainardi, M. Rubiera, A.V. Khaw, A. Zini, M.D. Hill, A.M. Demchuk, M. Goyal, B.K. Menon
Imaging Triage of Patients with Late-Window (6–24 Hours) Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Comparative Study Using Multiphase CT Angiography versus CT Perfusion
American Journal of Neuroradiology Jan 2020, 41 (1) 129-133; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A6327

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Imaging Triage of Patients with Late-Window (6–24 Hours) Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Comparative Study Using Multiphase CT Angiography versus CT Perfusion
M.A. Almekhlafi, W.G. Kunz, R.A. McTaggart, M.V. Jayaraman, M. Najm, S.H. Ahn, E. Fainardi, M. Rubiera, A.V. Khaw, A. Zini, M.D. Hill, A.M. Demchuk, M. Goyal, B.K. Menon
American Journal of Neuroradiology Jan 2020, 41 (1) 129-133; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A6327
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