Law enforcement officials are still unsure of British TV personality Peaches Geldof's cause of death, after a Wednesday autopsy report came back inconclusively.
A medical examiner told the BBC that police are now waiting for results from the toxicology probe to determine what exactly led to the 25-year-old writer's sudden and mysterious death.
Kent County Council members told BBC News that it might take "some weeks" to come up with finalized results.
Geldof, who is survived by her two children and husband Thomas Cohen, was found dead in her Wrotham home on Monday afternoon.
Kent officials were called to the house after receiving "a report of concern for the welfare of a woman."
Police at the time described her death as "non-suspicious but unexplained and sudden."
Her body was immediately transferred to Darent Valley Hospital in Dartford, a council spokesperson told the Independent, adding that Dr. Peter Jerreat would be carrying out the autopsy.
"Arrangements are in hand for the post mortem to be carried out tomorrow at the hospital," a Tuesday statement from the Kent County Council read. "After the results of the post mortem have been received, the Coroner will officially open an investigation and decide whether an inquest is necessary."
Some are worried that Peaches' extreme dieting could have contributed to her early death. Others say she might have taken drugs.
But in a 2012 interview with Elle, the socialite said her mother's struggle with addiction served as a constant reminder of what could happen if things got out of control.
"I did experiment with drugs, I did get drunk and go to parties, but I was never that wild," she told the Independent. "I could have been, I could have let myself spiral but all the time I remembered what happened to my mum."
Peaches' father, musician Bob Geldof, released a short statement on behalf of his wife Jeanne and Peaches' siblings Fifi, Pixie and Tiger after the death.
"Peaches has died," he said. "We are beyond pain. She was the wildest, funniest, cleverest, wittiest and the most bonkers of all of us. Writing 'was' destroys me afresh. What a beautiful child. How is this possible that we will not see her again? How is that bearable?"