Ghislaine Scélo

Ghislaine Scélo
  • International Agency for Research on Cancer

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224
Publications
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9,539
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Current institution
International Agency for Research on Cancer

Publications

Publications (224)
Article
Full-text available
Mycotoxins have been hypothesized to contribute to a diversity of adverse health effects in humans, even at low concentrations. Certain mycotoxins are established human carcinogens, whereas for others research suggests potential carcinogenic effects. The aim of this study was to determine the association between dietary exposure to mycotoxins and h...
Article
Biological mechanisms related to cancer development can leave distinct molecular fingerprints in tumours. By leveraging multi-omics and epidemiological information, we can unveil relationships between carcinogenesis processes that would otherwise remain hidden. Our integrative analysis of DNA methylome, transcriptome, and somatic mutation profiles...
Article
Full-text available
International differences in the incidence of many cancer types indicate the existence of carcinogen exposures that have not yet been identified by conventional epidemiology make a substantial contribution to cancer burden¹. In clear cell renal cell carcinoma, obesity, hypertension and tobacco smoking are risk factors, but they do not explain the g...
Article
Full-text available
Here, in a multi-ancestry genome-wide association study meta-analysis of kidney cancer (29,020 cases and 835,670 controls), we identified 63 susceptibility regions (50 novel) containing 108 independent risk loci. In analyses stratified by subtype, 52 regions (78 loci) were associated with clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and 6 regions (7 loci)...
Article
Full-text available
Large-scale biorepositories and databases are essential to generate equitable, effective, and sustainable advances in cancer prevention, early detection, cancer therapy, cancer care, and surveillance. The Mutographs project has created a large genomic dataset and biorepository of over 7,800 cancer cases from 30 countries across five continents with...
Preprint
Full-text available
Endogenous and exogenous processes are associated with distinctive molecular marks in somatic tissues, including human tumours. Here, we used integrative multi-omics analyses to infer sources of inter-patient somatic variation within clear cell renal cell carcinomas (ccRCC) and used them to explore how the disease aetiology and progression are refl...
Preprint
Full-text available
International differences in the incidence of many cancer types indicate the existence of carcinogen exposures which make a substantial contribution to cancer burden, vary geographically, and have underlying agents thus far unidentified by conventional epidemiology. This pertains to clear cell renal cell carcinomas (ccRCC), for which obesity, hyper...
Article
Background: The shared inherited genetic contribution to risk of different cancers is not fully known. In this study, we leverage results from twelve cancer genome-wide association studies (GWAS) to quantify pair-wise genome-wide genetic correlations across cancers and identify novel cancer susceptibility loci. Methods: We collected GWAS summary...
Article
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Purpose: Patients with resected localized clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) remain at variable risk of recurrence. Incorporation of biomarkers may refine risk prediction and inform adjuvant treatment decisions. We explored the role of tumor genomics in this setting, leveraging the largest cohort to date of localized ccRCC tissues subjected t...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Mycotoxins have been suggested to contribute to a spectrum of adverse health effects in humans, including at low concentrations. The recognition of these food contaminants being carcinogenic, as co-occurring rather than as singularly present, has emerged from recent research. The aim of this study was to assess the potential associatio...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Uveal melanoma (UM), a rare malignant tumor of the eye, is predominantly observed in populations of European ancestry. UMs carrying a monosomy 3 (M3) frequently relapse mainly in the liver, whereas UMs with disomy 3 (D3) are associated with more favorable outcome. Here, we explored the UM genetic predisposition factors in a large genom...
Article
Full-text available
There are unexplained geographical variations in the incidence of kidney cancer with the high rates reported in Baltic countries, as well as eastern and central Europe. Having access to a large and well-annotated collection of “tumor/non-tumor” pairs of kidney cancer patients from the Czech Republic, Romania, Serbia, UK, and Russia, we aimed to ana...
Preprint
Full-text available
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) shows a remarkable variation in incidence which is not fully explained by known lifestyle and environmental risk factors. It has been speculated that an unknown exogenous exposure(s) could be responsible. Here we combine the fields of mutational signature analysis with cancer epidemiology to study 552 ESCC...
Article
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Background Vitamin B6 insufficiency has been linked to increased risk of cancer and other chronic diseases. The circulating concentration of pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP) is a commonly used measure of vitamin B6 status. Ratios of substrates indicating PLP coenzymatic function and metabolism may be useful complementary measures to further explore the...
Article
Full-text available
Germline variation and smoking are independently associated with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). We conducted genome-wide smoking interaction analysis of PDAC using genotype data from four previous genome-wide association studies in individuals of European ancestry (7,937 cases and 11,774 controls). Examination of expression quantitative t...
Article
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Sexual dimorphism in cancer incidence and outcome is widespread. Understanding the underlying mechanisms is fundamental to improve cancer prevention and clinical management. Sex disparities are particularly striking in kidney cancer: across diverse populations, men consistently show unexplained two-fold increased incidence and worse prognosis. We h...
Article
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Recent studies suggest that rare variants exhibit stronger effect sizes and might play a crucial role in the etiology of lung cancers (LC). Whole exome plus targeted sequencing of germline DNA was performed on 1045 LC cases and 885 controls in the discovery set. To unveil the inherited causal variants, we focused on rare and predicted deleterious v...
Article
Background: Early detection of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) has the potential to improve disease outcomes. No screening programme for sporadic RCC is in place. Given relatively low incidence, screening would need to focus on people at high risk of clinically meaningful disease so as to limit overdiagnosis and screen-detected false-positives. Method...
Article
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PurposeLittle is known about the aetiology of renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Components of one-carbon (1C) metabolism, which are required for nucleotide synthesis and methylation reactions, may be related to risk of RCC but existing evidence is inconclusive. We conducted a systematic review and independent exposure-specific meta-analyses of dietary in...
Article
Full-text available
Few germline mutations are known to affect lung cancer risk. We performed analyses of rare variants from 39,146 individuals of European ancestry and investigated gene expression levels in 7,773 samples. We find a large-effect association with an ATM L2307F (rs56009889) mutation in adenocarcinoma for discovery (adjusted Odds Ratio = 8.82, P = 1.18 ×...
Article
Full-text available
Simple Summary The gold standard method for the diagnosis of bladder cancer (BC) is the invasive and expensive cystoscopy. Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoter mutations occur frequently (60–90%) in BC. In this study, we developed highly sensitive droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) assays for detecting low-allelic fraction TERT promoter mutati...
Article
Background: Whether circulating polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) levels are associated with pancreatic cancer risk is uncertain. Mendelian randomization (MR) represents a study design using genetic instruments to better characterize the relationship between exposure and outcome. Methods: We utilized data from genome-wide association studies wi...
Article
Clinical trial results have recently demonstrated that inhibiting inflammation by targeting the interleukin-1β pathway can offer a significant reduction in lung cancer incidence and mortality, highlighting a pressing and unmet need to understand the benefits of inflammation-focused lung cancer therapies at the genetic level. While numerous genome-w...
Conference Paper
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of most lethal malignancies with few known risk factors and biomarkers. Identification of disease biomarkers is critical for understanding the pathogenesis of this cancer and identifying high risk individuals for close surveillance. Several blood protein biomarkers have been linked to PDAC in previous...
Article
It is of great scientific interest to identify interactions between genetic variants and environmental exposures that may modify the risk of complex diseases. However, larger sample sizes are usually required to detect gene‐by‐environment interaction (G × E) than required to detect genetic main association effects. To boost the statistical power an...
Article
Background: Much of the heritable risk of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) associated with common genetic variation is unexplained. New analytic approaches have been developed to increase the discovery of risk variants in genome-wide association studies (GWAS), including multi-locus testing through pathway analysis. Methods: We conducted a pathway ana...
Article
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Registry-based epidemiologic studies suggest associations between chronic inflammatory intestinal diseases and pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). As genetic susceptibility contributes to a large proportion of chronic inflammatory intestinal diseases, we hypothesize that the genomic regions surrounding established genome-wide associated varian...
Article
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Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have led to the identification of hundreds of susceptibility loci across cancers, but the impact of further studies remains uncertain. Here we analyse summary-level data from GWAS of European ancestry across fourteen cancer sites to estimate the number of common susceptibility variants (polygenicity) and under...
Article
Full-text available
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have led to the identification of hundreds of susceptibility loci across cancers, but the impact of further studies remains uncertain. Here we analyse summary-level data from GWAS of European ancestry across fourteen cancer sites to estimate the number of common susceptibility variants (polygenicity) and under...
Article
Background: Obesity and diabetes are major modifiable risk factors for pancreatic cancer. Interactions between genetic variants and diabetes/obesity have not previously been comprehensively investigated in pancreatic cancer at the genome-wide level. Methods: We conducted a gene-environment interaction (GxE) analysis including 8,255 cases and 11,...
Article
Full-text available
The emergence of next-generation sequencing (NGS) has revolutionized the way of reaching a genome sequence, with the promise of potentially providing a comprehensive characterization of DNA variations. Nevertheless, detecting somatic mutations is still a difficult problem, in particular when trying to identify low abundance mutations, such as subcl...
Article
Background: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the most lethal malignancies with few known risk factors and biomarkers. Several blood protein biomarkers have been linked to PDAC in previous studies, but these studies have assessed only a limited number of biomarkers usually in small samples. In this study, we evaluated associations...
Article
Full-text available
Few germline mutations are known to affect lung cancer risk. We performed analyses of rare variants from 39,146 individuals of European ancestry and investigated gene expression levels in 7,773 samples. We find a large-effect association with an ATM L2307F (rs56009889) mutation in adenocarcinoma for discovery (adjusted Odds Ratio = 8.82, P = 1.18 ×...
Article
Full-text available
Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), the first step in the kynurenine pathway (KP), is upregulated in some cancers and represents an attractive therapeutic target given its role in tumour immune evasion. However, the recent failure of an IDO inhibitor in a late phase trial raises questions about this strategy. Matched renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and n...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background There are unexplained geographical variations in the incidence of kidney cancer with the high rates reported in Baltic countries, as well as eastern and central Europe. Analysis of non-neoplastic tissues is a way to better understand the carcinogenesis. Methods Having access to a rich, well-annotated collection of “tumor/non-tumor” pair...
Article
Full-text available
Background The DNA released into the bloodstream by malignant tumours· called circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA), is often a small fraction of total cell-free DNA shed predominantly by hematopoietic cells and is therefore challenging to detect. Understanding the biological properties of ctDNA is key to the investigation of its clinical relevance as a n...
Article
Background: The association among gallbladder disease, cholecystectomy, and pancreatic cancer is unclear. Moreover, time interval between gallbladder disease or cholecystectomy and pancreatic cancer diagnosis is not considered in most previous studies. Aim: To quantify the association among gallbladder disease, cholecystectomy, and pancreatic ca...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Detecting pre-clinical bladder cancer (BC) using urinary biomarkers may provide a valuable opportunity for screening and management. Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoter mutations detectable in urine have emerged as promising BC biomarkers. Methods: We performed a nested case-control study within the population-based pros...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Although 20 pancreatic cancer susceptibility loci have been identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in individuals of European ancestry, much of its heritability remains unexplained and the genes responsible largely unknown. Methods: To discover novel pancreatic cancer risk loci and possible causal genes, we perform...
Article
Full-text available
Impaired lung function is often caused by cigarette smoking, making it challenging to disentangle its role in lung cancer susceptibility. Investigation of the shared genetic basis of these phenotypes in the UK Biobank and International Lung Cancer Consortium (29,266 cases, 56,450 controls) shows that lung cancer is genetically correlated with reduc...
Preprint
We analyzed summary-level data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of European ancestry across fourteen cancer sites to estimate the number of common susceptibility variants (polygenicity) contributing to risk, as well as the distribution of their associated effect sizes. All cancers evaluated showed polygenicity, involving at a minimum tho...
Preprint
Full-text available
The emergence of Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) has revolutionized the way of reaching a genome sequence, with the promise of potentially providing a comprehensive characterization of DNA variations. Nevertheless, detecting somatic mutations is still a difficult problem, in particular when trying to identify low abundance mutations such as subclo...
Preprint
Full-text available
Impaired lung function is an indicator of obstructive pulmonary disease and may be a consequence of cigarette smoking, making it challenging to disentangle its role in lung cancer etiology. We investigated the shared genetic basis of pulmonary dysfunction and lung cancer susceptibility using genome-wide data from the UK Biobank (>370,000 individual...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Recurrent mutations in the promoter of the telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) gene (C228T and C250T) detected in tumours and cells shed into urine of urothelial cancer (UC) patients are putative biomarkers for UC detection and monitoring. However, the possibility of detecting these mutations in cell-free circulating DNA (cfDNA) in...
Article
Background: Pancreatic cancer is the fourth-leading cause of cancer death in both men and women in the United States. The currently identified common susceptibility loci account for a small fraction of estimated heritability. We sought to estimate overall heritability of pancreatic cancer and partition the heritability by variant frequencies and f...
Article
Full-text available
The development of cancer is driven by the accumulation of many oncogenesis-related genetic alterationsand tumorigenesis is triggered by complex networks of involved genes rather than independent actions. To explore the epistasis existing among oncogenesis-related genes in lung cancer development, we conducted pairwise genetic interaction analyses...
Article
Full-text available
Background Several obesity-related factors have been associated with renal cell carcinoma (RCC), but it is unclear which individual factors directly influence risk. We addressed this question using genetic markers as proxies for putative risk factors and evaluated their relation to RCC risk in a mendelian randomization (MR) framework. This methodol...
Article
Full-text available
Recently, we identified unique processing patterns of apolipoprotein A2 (ApoA2) in patients with pancreatic cancer. Our study provides a first prospective evaluation of an ApoA2 isoform (“ApoA2‐ATQ/AT”), alone and in combination with carbohydrate antigen 19–9 (CA19‐9), as an early detection biomarker for pancreatic cancer. We performed ELISA measur...
Article
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Lung cancer has several genetic associations identified within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC); although the basis for these associations remains elusive. Here, we analyze MHC genetic variation among 26,044 lung cancer patients and 20,836 controls densely genotyped across the MHC, using the Illumina Illumina OncoArray or Illumina 660W SN...
Article
Full-text available
Background: We applied a training and testing approach to develop and validate a plasma metabolite panel for the detection of early-stage pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) alone and in combination with a previously validated protein panel for early-stage PDAC. Methods: A comprehensive metabolomics platform was initially applied to plasmas...
Article
Full-text available
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identified the chromosome 15q25.1 locus as a leading susceptibility region for lung cancer. However, the pathogenic pathways, through which susceptibility SNPs within chromosome 15q25.1 affects lung cancer risk, have not been explored. We analyzed three cohorts with GWAS data consisting 42,901 individuals and...
Article
Background: Evidence from observational studies of telomere length (TL) has been conflicting regarding its direction of association with cancer risk. We investigated the causal relevance of TL for lung and head and neck cancers using Mendelian Randomization (MR) and mediation analyses. Methods: We developed a novel genetic instrument for TL in c...
Article
Purpose: Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) has the potential for cure with surgery when diagnosed at an early stage. Kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) has been shown to be elevated in the plasma of RCC patients. We aimed to test whether plasma KIM-1 could represent a means of detecting RCC prior to clinical diagnosis. Experimental design: KIM-1 concentr...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are widely used to map genomic regions contributing to lung cancer (LC) susceptibility but they typically do not identify the precise disease-causing genes/variants. To unveil the inherited causal LC variants, we performed focused exome sequencing analyses on genes located in 121 GWAS loci previou...
Article
Full-text available
Despite efforts for extensive molecular characterization of cancer patients, such as the international cancer genome consortium (ICGC) and the cancer genome atlas (TCGA), the heterogeneous nature of cancer and our limited knowledge of the contextual function of proteins have complicated the identification of targetable genes. Here, we present Aberr...
Article
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Widespread remodeling of the transcriptome is a signature of cancer; however, little is known about the post-transcriptional regulatory factors, including RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) that regulate mRNA stability, and the extent to which RBPs contribute to cancer-associated pathways. Here, by modeling the global change in gene expression based on th...
Article
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In 2020, 146,063 deaths due to pancreatic cancer are estimated to occur in Europe and the United States combined. To identify common susceptibility alleles, we performed the largest pancreatic cancer GWAS to date, including 9040 patients and 12,496 controls of European ancestry from the Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium (PanScan) and the Pancreat...
Article
Full-text available
In 2020, 146,063 deaths due to pancreatic cancer are estimated to occur in Europe and theUnited States combined. To identify common susceptibility alleles, we performed the largest pancreatic cancer GWAS to date, including 9040 patients and 12,496 controls of European ancestry from the Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium (PanScan) and the Pancreati...
Article
Head and neck cancer (HNC) is a preventable malignancy that continues to cause substantial morbidity and mortality worldwide. Using data from the ARCAGE and Rome studies, we investigated the main predictors of survival after larynx, hypopharynx and oral cavity (OC) cancers. We used the Kaplan-Meier method to estimate overall survival, and Cox propo...
Article
Full-text available
Uveal melanoma, a rare malignant tumor of the eye, is predominantly observed in populations of European ancestry. A genome-wide association study of 259 uveal melanoma patients compared to 401 controls all of European ancestry revealed a candidate locus at chromosome 5p15.33 (region rs421284: OR = 1.7, CI 1.43–2.05). This locus was replicated in an...
Article
Full-text available
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the most common type of lung cancer. Both environmental and genetic risk factors contribute to lung carcinogenesis. We conducted a genome-wide interaction analysis between SNPs and smoking status (never vs ever smokers) in a European-descent population. We adopted a two-step analysis strategy in the discovery s...
Article
Full-text available
Trichloroethylene (TCE), an industrial chemical and environmental contaminant, is a human carcinogen. Reactive metabolites are implicated in renal carcinogenesis associated with TCE exposure, yet the toxicity mechanisms of these metabolites and their contribution to cancer and other adverse effects remain unclear. We employed an integrated function...
Article
Objectives: Associations between parental occupational pesticide exposure and childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) vary across studies, likely due to different exposure assessment methodologies. Methods: We assessed parental occupational pesticide exposure from the year before pregnancy to the child's third year of life for 669 children...
Article
Circulating miRNAs have shown great promises as non-invasive diagnostic and predictive biomarkers in several solid tumors. While the miRNA profiles of renal tumors have been extensively explored, knowledge of their circulating counterparts is limited. Our study aimed to provide a large-scale genome-wide profiling of plasma circulating miRNA in clea...
Article
Full-text available
Although several lung cancer susceptibility loci have been identified, much of the heritability for lung cancer remains unexplained. Here 14,803 cases and 12,262 controls of European descent were genotyped on the OncoArray and combined with existing data for an aggregated genome-wide association study (GWAS) analysis of lung cancer in 29,266 cases...
Article
Full-text available
Previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified six risk loci for renal cell carcinoma (RCC). We conducted a meta-analysis of two new scans of 5,198 cases and 7,331 controls together with four existing scans, totalling 10,784 cases and 20,406 controls of European ancestry. Twenty-four loci were tested in an additional 3,182 cases an...
Article
Full-text available
Background Assessing the relationship between lung cancer and metabolic conditions is challenging because of the confounding effect of tobacco. Mendelian randomization (MR), or the use of genetic instrumental variables to assess causality, may help to identify the metabolic drivers of lung cancer. Methods and findings We identified genetic instrum...
Data
Forest plot of lung cancer risk for each SD increase of waist-to-hip ratio observed in a likelihood-based MR approach. 95%CI: 95% Confidence Interval; P: P value. I2: between-strata heterogeneity. PHet: P value of between-strata heterogeneity. (PDF)
Data
Forest plot of lung cancer risk for each SD increase in triglycerides observed in a likelihood-based MR approach using the main instrument set of common SNPs. 95%CI: 95% Confidence Interval; P: P value. I2: between-strata heterogeneity. PHet: P value of between-strata heterogeneity. (PDF)
Data
Power calculations for Mendelian randomization analyses on lung cancer using genetic instruments accounting for different proportion of phenotypic variance (15.0, 10.0, 5.0, 2.5, and 1.0%). (PDF)
Data
Forest plot of lung cancer risk for each SD increase in HDL observed in a likelihood-based MR approach using the instrument set of common SNPs. 95%CI: 95% Confidence Interval; P: P value. I2: between-strata heterogeneity. PHet: P value of between-strata heterogeneity. (PDF)
Data
Forest plot of lung cancer risk for each SD increase in triglycerides observed in a likelihood-based MR approach using the instrument set of rare SNPs. 95%CI: 95% Confidence Interval; P: P value. I2: between-strata heterogeneity. PHet: P value of between-strata heterogeneity. (PDF)
Data
Forest plot of lung cancer risk for each SD increase in LDL observed in a likelihood-based MR approach using the instrument set of rare SNPs. 95%CI: 95% Confidence Interval; P: P value. I2: between-strata heterogeneity. PHet: P value of between-strata heterogeneity. (PDF)
Data
Funnel plots for the distribution of risk estimates of waist-to-hip ratio-instrumental SNPs along with MR causal effect lung cancer subtypes. OR: Odds ratio; Int: Intercept; P: P value. (PDF)
Data
Forest plot of lung cancer risk for each SD increase in HDL observed in a likelihood-based MR approach using the instrument set of rare SNPs. 95%CI: 95% Confidence Interval; P: P value. I2: between-strata heterogeneity. PHet: P value of between-strata heterogeneity. (PDF)
Data
Funnel plots for the distribution of risk estimates of HDL instrumental common SNPs along with MR causal effect lung cancer subtypes. OR: Odds ratio; Int: Intercept; P: P value. (PDF)
Data
Funnel plots for the distribution of risk estimates of triglycerides instrumental rare SNPs along with MR causal effect lung cancer subtypes. OR: Odds ratio; Int: Intercept; P: P value. (PDF)
Data
Funnel plots for the distribution of risk estimates of HDL instrumental rare SNPs along with MR causal effect lung cancer subtypes. OR: Odds ratio; Int: Intercept; P: P value. (PDF)
Data
Funnel plots for the distribution of risk estimates of triglycerides instrumental common SNPs along with MR causal effect lung cancer subtypes. OR: Odds ratio; Int: Intercept; P: P value. (PDF)

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