I have always felt that the close reason "caused by a problem that can no longer be reproduced" was a bit awkward. The wording "no longer" suggests that the problem was demonstrably reproducible, and indeed reproduced, up to a certain point and then stopped being reproducible. This is not something I can usually judge; I have no idea what the OP was doing in their private time before posting on Stack Overflow; presumably the problem was never reproducible in the first place.
Would any meaning be lost if we simplified the first part of ths close reason into:
This question was caused by a problem that cannot be reproduced
Or:
The problem described in this question cannot be reproduced, or it is due to a simple typographical error.
Or even:
Not reproducible, or trivial.
This simpler phrasing would make this rather important close reason much easier to find, and it would also correspond more closely to traditional bug tracking close reasons (e.g. "working as intended", "not reproducible", "invalid").