1. Phenotypic switch in mycosis fungoides: A tertiary cancer center experience.
- Author
-
Ronen S, McAfee JL, Curry JL, Nagarajan P, Aung PP, Ivan D, Prieto VG, Tetzlaff MT, and Torres-Cabala C
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Aged, Phenotype, Biopsy, Disease Progression, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Mycosis Fungoides therapy, Mycosis Fungoides diagnosis, Mycosis Fungoides pathology
- Abstract
Background: Changes in immunophenotype in mycosis fungoides (MF) are rarely reported, making this phenomenon a diagnostic challenge with unclear significance for the disease's biological behavior. This study examines a large series of MF patients who exhibited a phenotype switch (PS) and analyzes their clinical and histopathologic characteristics., Design: Institutional files were searched for MF cases exhibiting PS between 2010 and 2020. Clinical, follow-up, and histopathological data were collected., Results: Forty-two biopsies from 32 patients (13 women and 19 men, median age 67.5) showed PS. Eight patients (25 %) experienced multiple PS during their disease course. The median time for PS was 22 months from the initial diagnosis. In 5 cases tested, identical TCR clone peaks were detected in the immunophenotypically distinct lesions. Median follow-up was 14.5 months. Among deceased patients, median time from MF diagnosis to PS was 20.6 months, while among the patients who were still alive, median time was 44.1 months., Conclusion: MF biopsies can show PS during the course of the disease and may indicate a change in clinical behavior. 28.1 % of patients displayed more than one PS, further indicating high plasticity of MF cells. No obvious association was found between PS and therapy initiation or response. Features that appeared to portend a worse clinical course were earlier PS in the course of the disease and PS from CD4-/CD8-to CD8
+ , and CD8+ to CD4-/CD8-. Awareness of this phenomenon is crucial to avoid misdiagnosing phenotypically distinct lymphomas as second primaries and to alert clinicians about potential changes in the disease's clinical course., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest No relevant conflicts., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF