Background: Granulomatous cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs) are rare and represent a diagnostic challenge. Only limited data on the clinicopathological and prognostic features of granulomatous CTCLs are available. We studied 19 patients with granulomatous CTCLs to further characterize the clinicopathological, therapeutic, and prognostic features. Observations: The group included 15 patients with granulomatous mycosis fungoides (GMF) and 4 with granulomatous slack skin (GSS) defined according to the World Health Organization-European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer classification for cutaneous lymphomas. Patients with GMF and GSS displayed overlapping histologic features and differed only clinically by the development of bulky skin folds in GSS. Histologically, epidermotropism of lymphocytes was not a prominent feature and was absent in 9 of 19 cases (47%). Stable or progressive disease was observed in most patients despite various treatment modalities. Extracutaneous spread occurred in 5 of 19 patients (26%), second lymphoid neoplasms developed in 4 of 19 patients (21%), and 6 of 19 patients (32%) died of their disease. Disease-specific 5-year survival rate in GMF was 66%. Conclusions: There are clinical differences between GMF and GSS, but they show overlapping histologic findings and therefore cannot be discriminated by histologic examination alone. Development of hanging skin folds is restricted to the intertriginous body regions. Granulomatous CTCLs show a therapy-resistant, slowly progressive course. The prognosis of GMF appears worse than that of classic nongranulomatous mycosis fungoides.

Granulomatous mycosis fungoides and granulomatous slack skin: a multicenter study of the cutaneous lymphoma histopathology task force group of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) / W. Kempf, S. Ostheeren-Michaelis, M. Paulli, M. Lucioni, J. Wechsler, H. Audring, C. Assaf, T. Rüdiger, R. Willemze, C.J.L.M. Meijer, E. Berti, L. Cerroni, M. Santucci, C. Hallermann, M. Berneburg, S. Chimenti, A. Robson, M. Marschalko, D.V. Kazakov, T. Petrella, S. Fraitag, A. Carlotti, P. Courville, H. Laeng, R. Knobler, P. Golling, R. Dummer, G. Burg. - In: ARCHIVES OF DERMATOLOGY. - ISSN 0003-987X. - 144:12(2008), pp. 1609-1617.

Granulomatous mycosis fungoides and granulomatous slack skin: a multicenter study of the cutaneous lymphoma histopathology task force group of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC)

E. Berti;
2008

Abstract

Background: Granulomatous cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs) are rare and represent a diagnostic challenge. Only limited data on the clinicopathological and prognostic features of granulomatous CTCLs are available. We studied 19 patients with granulomatous CTCLs to further characterize the clinicopathological, therapeutic, and prognostic features. Observations: The group included 15 patients with granulomatous mycosis fungoides (GMF) and 4 with granulomatous slack skin (GSS) defined according to the World Health Organization-European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer classification for cutaneous lymphomas. Patients with GMF and GSS displayed overlapping histologic features and differed only clinically by the development of bulky skin folds in GSS. Histologically, epidermotropism of lymphocytes was not a prominent feature and was absent in 9 of 19 cases (47%). Stable or progressive disease was observed in most patients despite various treatment modalities. Extracutaneous spread occurred in 5 of 19 patients (26%), second lymphoid neoplasms developed in 4 of 19 patients (21%), and 6 of 19 patients (32%) died of their disease. Disease-specific 5-year survival rate in GMF was 66%. Conclusions: There are clinical differences between GMF and GSS, but they show overlapping histologic findings and therefore cannot be discriminated by histologic examination alone. Development of hanging skin folds is restricted to the intertriginous body regions. Granulomatous CTCLs show a therapy-resistant, slowly progressive course. The prognosis of GMF appears worse than that of classic nongranulomatous mycosis fungoides.
English
T-cell lymphoma; of-the-literature; sezary-syndrome; Hodgkins-disease; classification; progression; patterns; annulare; variant; lesions
Settore MED/35 - Malattie Cutanee e Veneree
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2008
144
12
1609
1617
9
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
crossref
pubmed
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Granulomatous mycosis fungoides and granulomatous slack skin: a multicenter study of the cutaneous lymphoma histopathology task force group of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) / W. Kempf, S. Ostheeren-Michaelis, M. Paulli, M. Lucioni, J. Wechsler, H. Audring, C. Assaf, T. Rüdiger, R. Willemze, C.J.L.M. Meijer, E. Berti, L. Cerroni, M. Santucci, C. Hallermann, M. Berneburg, S. Chimenti, A. Robson, M. Marschalko, D.V. Kazakov, T. Petrella, S. Fraitag, A. Carlotti, P. Courville, H. Laeng, R. Knobler, P. Golling, R. Dummer, G. Burg. - In: ARCHIVES OF DERMATOLOGY. - ISSN 0003-987X. - 144:12(2008), pp. 1609-1617.
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
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262
Article (author)
si
W. Kempf, S. Ostheeren-Michaelis, M. Paulli, M. Lucioni, J. Wechsler, H. Audring, C. Assaf, T. Rüdiger, R. Willemze, C.J.L.M. Meijer, E. Berti, L. Cerroni, M. Santucci, C. Hallermann, M. Berneburg, S. Chimenti, A. Robson, M. Marschalko, D.V. Kazakov, T. Petrella, S. Fraitag, A. Carlotti, P. Courville, H. Laeng, R. Knobler, P. Golling, R. Dummer, G. Burg
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/436012
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