| Literature DB >> 29606946 |
Anthony M Maher1, Chloé E Ward2, Steven Glassman2, Ivan V Litvinov2,3.
Abstract
Papuloerythroderma of Ofuji (PEO) is an erythroderma-like eruption with flat-topped papules that spare the skin folds (a "deck-chair sign" finding). Many infections, medications, and systemic diseases have been associated with PEO, including cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCL). The relationship between the clinical presentation of PEO and CTCL remains poorly elucidated. Clinical, laboratory, and histopathological data were obtained from the Lymphoma Clinic at the Ottawa Hospital, Canada. We report 5 patients with deck-chair-sign-positive CTCL, mycosis fungoides, and Sézary syndrome variants. We contend that PEO should be viewed as a diagnosis of exclusion and that these patients should be monitored carefully for possible emergence of CTCL. Skin biopsy alone is not sufficient to exclude CTCL in these patients. A skin eruption demonstrating a positive deck-chair sign may signify systemic/leukemic CTCL and, therefore, warrants a thorough investigation, including skin biopsy, flow cytometry, and T-cell receptor clonality studies.Entities:
Keywords: Cutaneous T-cell lymphomas; Deck-chair sign; Erythroderma; Mycosis fungoides; Papuloerythroderma of Ofuji; Sézary syndrome
Year: 2018 PMID: 29606946 PMCID: PMC5869582 DOI: 10.1159/000487473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Dermatol ISSN: 1662-6567
Patient characteristics in the present case series
| Case 1 | Case 2 | Case 3 | Case 4 | Case 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 75 | 72 | 89 | 82 | 86 |
| Sex | Male | Female | Male | Male | Female |
| Skin phototype | II | II | II | II | V |
| Country of origin | Canada | Canada | Canada | Canada | Guyana |
| Skin involvement | 80% BSA, plaque lesions with deck-chair-sign skin findings | 80% BSA, patch lesions with deck-chair-sign skin findings | ~30% BSA, patch lesions with deck-chair-sign skin findings | ~20% BSA, plaque lesions with deck-chair-sign skin findings | 75% BSA, plaque lesions with deck-chair-sign skin findings |
| Laboratory findings | |||||
| LDH | High | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Blood involvement | |||||
| Sézary count | 80% | 38% | 44% | - | 8% |
| TCR clonality analysis | |||||
| Blood | TCR β clonality | TCR β, δ, and γ clonality | TCR β and γ clonality | TCR β clonality | Clonality not detected |
| Skin biopsy | Diagnostic of MF / Sézary syndrome with CD30+ cells | Skin biopsy initially not diagnostic of MF | Skin biopsy not diagnostic of MF | Skin biopsy diagnostic of CTCL | Skin biopsy diagnostic of CTCL |
| Imaging studies | Extensive disease | Bilateral, enlarged, inguinal, and axillary lymph nodes on CT thorax, abdomen, and pelvis | No lymphadenopathy or visceral disease | No lymphadenopathy or visceral disease | - |
| Treatments | Topical steroids; antibiotics; isotretinoin; IFN-α; ECP; brentuximab vedotin | Topical steroids; NBUVB; PUVA; alitretinoin; IFN-α | Topical steroids; NBUVB; isotretinoin; IFN-α | Topical steroids; NBUVB; alitretinoin | Topical steroids; NBUVB; alitretinoin |
| Diagnosis | Sézary syndrome | Leukemic CTCL | Leukemic CTCL | MF with evidence of blood clonality | Leukemic CTCL |
| Clinical disease outcome | Rapidly progressing, T1a to stage IVA disease in months with lymph-node and high blood tumor burden | Indolent stage IB patch MF for 4 years, progressed to stage IVA leukemic CTCL with lymph-node involvement as confirmed by a CT scan | Patient with a 2-year history of nonresolving eruption on the trunk that spared skin folds | Patient with a 5-year history of itchy rash on the trunk that did not respond to topical steroids and was sparing skin folds | Indolent stage IB patch/plaque MF for 6 years, progressed to leukemic CTCL with a high proportion of CD30+ T cells in the blood |
BSA, body surface area; CTCL, cutaneous T-cell lymphoma; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; HTVL-1, human T-lymphotropic virus-1; CD, cluster designation; TCR, T-cell rearrangement gene study; NBUVB, narrow-band ultraviolet B phototherapy; PUVA, psoralen with ultraviolet A phototherapy; MF, mycosis fungoides; ECP, extracorporeal photophoresis.
Fig. 1Positive deck-chair-sign (arrows) skin eruption on the trunk of patient 1 (a), who was found to have Sézary syndrome, and on the trunks of patients 2–5 (b–e), who were diagnosed with mycosis fungoides / cutaneous T-cell lymphoma with evidence of blood involvement.
Proposed work-up to confirm or exclude a “deck-chair sign” or papuloerythroderma of Ofuji-like cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) based on present study findings and recent review [15]
| Age |
| Sex |
| Ethnicity and geographic place of origin |
| History of presenting illness |
| Onset and progression |
| Previous and current treatments |
| Past medical history |
| Family history |
| Cutaneous involvement |
| Patch, plaque, tumor |
| Alopecia (folliculotropic presentation) |
| Presence of ectropion |
| Deck-chair-sign skin eruption |
| Body surface area involvement based on the modified severity-weighted assessment tool (mSWAT) |
| Systemic involvement |
| Palpable lymph node(s) |
| Hepatosplenomegaly |
| Histopathological examination of skin biopsy consistent with CTCL |
| Flow cytometry |
| B1 Sézary cell count (>5%) |
| B2 Sézary cell count (≥1,000 cells/µL) with a positive clone or |
| Increased CD4+ or CD3+ cells with a CD4:CD8 ratio of ≥10 or |
| Increased CD4+ cells and CD4+CD7− cells ≥40% or |
| Increased CD4+ cells and CD4+CD26− ≥30% |
| T-cell rearrangement in blood and skin (PCR analysis) |
| LDH (blood) |
| HTLV-1 status (serology) |
| Immunophenotype analysis (skin biopsy) |
| Presence of large-cell transformation (skin biopsy) |
| CD30+ positivity (skin biopsy and flow cytometry analysis) |
PCR, polymerase chain reaction; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; HTLV-1, human T-lymphotropic virus-1.