A new prenylated naphthoquinone dimer named microphyllaquinone (1), a mixture of 6-methoxy- and 7-methoxy-naphtho[2,3-b]-furan-4,9-quinones (2a/2b) and tecomaquinone I (3), were isolated from roots of Lippia microphylla. The structures were elucidated by spectroscopic methods, including detailed 1D and 2D (COSY, NOESY, HMQC, HMBC) NMR data. Unpublished 13C NMR data of 2a and 2b are reported. The in vitro cytotoxic activity of the isolated compounds was tested against five types of tumor cells.
ObjectiveTo investigate the incidence and risk factors of infiltration of the central
nervous system after the initial treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in
patients treated at Santa Casa de Misericórdia de São Paulo. MethodsA total of 133 patients treated for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma from January
2001 to April 2008 were retrospectively analyzed in respect to the incidence and
risk factors of secondary central nervous system involvement of lymphoma.
Intrathecal prophylaxis was not a standard procedure for patients considered to be
at risk. This analysis includes patients whether they received rituximab as
first-line treatment or not. ResultsNine of 133 (6.7%) patients developed central nervous system disease after a mean
observation time of 29 months. The median time to relapse or progression was 7.9
months after diagnosis and all but one patient died despite the treatment
administered. Twenty-six (19.5%) patients of this cohort received rituximab as
first-line treatment and nine (7.1%) received intrathecal chemoprophylaxis. Of the
nine patients that relapsed, seven (77.7%) had parenchymal central nervous system
involvement; seven (77.7%) had stage III or IV disease; one (11.1%) had bone
marrow involvement; two (22.2%) had received intrathecal chemoprophylaxis; and 3
(33.3%) had taken rituximab. In a multivariate analysis, the risk factors for this
infiltration were being male, previous use of intrathecal chemotherapy and
patients that were refractory to initial treatment. ConclusionCentral nervous system infiltration in this cohort is similar to that of previous
reports in the literature. As this was a small cohort with a rare event, only
three risk factors were important for this infiltration
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