1,4-Disubstituted-1H-1,2,3-triazoles 1 can easily be distinguished from the isomeric 1,5-disubstituted-1H-1,2,3-triazoles 2 by simple one-dimensional (13)C NMR spectroscopy using gated decoupling. The C(5) signal of 1 appears at δ ∼120 ppm, while the C(4) signal of 2 appears at δ ∼133 ppm. Computational studies also predict the upfield shift of C(5) of 1 relative to C(4) in 2.
BACKGROUND
Wnt-MB infers an excellent prognosis, and metastatic disease is rare. However, specific treatment strategies and patterns of failure for patients with recurrent Wnt-MB are unknown. We report two cases of recurrent beta-catenin nucleopositive Wnt-MBs treated with an irradiation-sparing strategy, incorporating HDCx/AuHPCR. PATIENT 1: A nine-year-old female experienced local recurrence of a non-metastatic Wnt-MB nine months after gross total resection (GTR) followed by 18Gy craniospinal irradiation (CSI) with primary site boost to 54Gy, accompanied by weekly vincristine, followed by a maintenance regimen of nine cycles of cisplatin/lomustine/vincristine alternating with cyclophosphamide/vincristine every third cycle. GTR of the relapsed tumor was followed by three cycles of HDCx/AuHPCR. She is disease-free for over three years following relapse treatment. PATIENT 2: A 17-year-old male initially underwent GTR, followed by 23.4Gy CSI with 54Gy posterior fossa boost with concomitant weekly vincristine, followed by a maintenance regimen that included nine alternating cycles of vincristine/lomustine/cisplatin and cyclophosphamide/vincristine. Isolated right frontal horn metastatic recurrence developed 19 months post-treatment; three cycles of irinotecan/temozolomide/bevacizumab and gamma-knife radiosurgery produced complete response. A second isolated metastatic recurrence within the left frontal horn occurred 13 months post-treatment, which was treated with two cycles of cyclophosphamide/etoposide followed by two cycles of HDCx/AuHPCR. MRI of the brain showed no residual tumor one month post-treatment. He currently awaits follow-up stereotactic radiosurgery.
CONCLUSION
Patients with recurrent Wnt-MB may be treated with curative intent using a multi-disciplinary approach that includes HDCx/AuHPCR, and minimization or avoidance of re-irradiation.
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