| Literature DB >> 31407190 |
Doaa Shalabi1, Nish Vadalia1, Neda Nikbakht2.
Abstract
Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides (FMF) is an aggressive variant of mycosis fungoides (MF) characterized by infiltration of the hair follicle epithelium by neoplastic T cells. FMF demonstrates poor response rates to standard skin-directed therapies such as phototherapy and topical corticosteroids. Imiquimod, an immunomodulatory agent that stimulates the antitumor immune response, has been used successfully in treatment of early-stage MF. We report a 21-year-old patient with unilesional FMF who achieved clinical remission with imiquimod application. This case highlights a potential for use of imiquimod as a treatment option for patients with FMF and limited skin involvement.Entities:
Keywords: Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides; Imiquimod; Toll-like receptor 7 agonist
Year: 2019 PMID: 31407190 PMCID: PMC6828915 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-019-00317-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Fig. 1a, b Atypical CD4+ lymphocytes infiltrating the dermis (a; H&E, 40 ×) and follicular epithelium (b H&E, 100×). c Immunohistochemistry analysis showing predominantly CD4+ T cells in the infiltrate (CD4 stain, 40×)
Fig. 2a Shallow ulceration with surrounding erythema on left breast after two months of imiquimod therapy. b Atrophic pink patch seen one month after imiquimod therapy discontinuation
Cases of imiquimod therapy in mycosis fungoides
| Author (year) | Patient(s) and MF presentation | Prior treatment(s) | Duration of imiquimod treatment | Adverse events (AEs) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suchin et al. (2002) [ | 52-year-old female Stage IA, one lesion on abdomen | TS, NM, and carmustine | Nightly × 4 months | Erythema, vesiculation, erosions, xerosis, pruritus during month 1 of treatment • Therapy discontinued for 2 days | Biopsy-proven CR of lesion No recurrence 10 months after therapy completion |
| Dummer et al. (2003) [ | 65-year-old male* Multiple lesions on face, trunk, extremities | PUVA, acitretin | Daily × 8 weeks only to facial plaques • PUVA continued on trunk and extremities | Ulceration during day 10 of treatment | CR of all facial and trunk/extremity lesions No recurrence 12 months after therapy completion |
| Chong et al. (2004) [ | 4 male patients, ages 39–61 years All stage IB | Not specified | Daily × 16 weeks One patient received placebo | Mild lesional irritation** | Mean decrease in surface area of 8.9% of treated lesions Mean increase in surface area of 39.9% of distant control lesions Mild improvements in erythema and lesion thickness Patient on placebo had increase in lesion thickness, surface area, and scaling |
| Deeths et al. (2005) [ | 2 male and 4 female patients, ages 41–79 years Stage IA ( | None in 2 patients PUVA, NM, EB, SR, TS, IMQ, IFN, and MTX in 4 patients | 3× weekly × 12 weeks on selected lesions Concurrent PUVA in 2 patients (stage IB and IIB) Concurrent IFN in 1 patient (stage IB) | Application-site irritation in 4 patients Erosion during week 3 of treatment in 1 patient Ulcer and erythema during week 3 of treatment in another patient Therapy frequency decreased in some patients | No change in 1 patient Slight improvement in 2 patients Moderate improvement in 1 patient Marked improvement in 1 patient Almost clear in 1 patient |
| Coors et al. (2006) [ | 4 male patients, ages 43–78 years Stage IA ( | PUVA in all patients, IFN in 2 patients, and SR in 1 patient | 3–7× weekly × 8–24 weeks depending on initial response Concurrent PUVA in 1 patient Concurrent chlorambucil and prednisolone in 1 patient | Erythema, papules, and pruritus** | CR of treated lesions in 2 patients after 8 and 16 weeks of treatment PD in 1 patient No change in 1 patient |
| Chiam et al. (2007) [ | 32-year old male Stage 1A, penile plaque | TS | Every other day × 4–5 months | Local pain during week 1 of treatment Skin erosion during month 3 of treatment | CR of lesion No recurrence 6 months after treatment completion |
| Martínez-González et al. (2008) [ | 1: 70-year-old male • Stage IIB (tumor) 2: 62-year-old male • Stage IA 3: 79-year-old male • Stage IA 4: 60-year-old female* | 1: TS, XRT, PUVA, IFN, NM 2: TS, PUVA 3: TS, PUVA 4: TS, nbUVB, PUVA | 1: 3× weekly × 3 months 2: 3× weekly × 14 months 3: 3× weekly × 7 months 4: 3× weekly × 4 months | 1: Erythema and ulcerations at month 1 2: Not specified 3: Minimal erythema 4: Intense inflammatory response during initial days | 1: CR of treated lesions, CR of some nearby untreated lesions 2: CR of treated lesion; new lesion elsewhere 3: CR of treated lesions; CR 3 months after treatment completion 4: CR of treated lesion |
| Gordon et al. (2015) [ | 1:80-year-old female • Stage IB (folliculotropic) 2:60-year-old male • Stage IIB (tumor) | 1: TS, carmustine, TR, PUVA, MTX 2: TS, nbUVB | 1: 2× weekly titrated to 3× weekly × 6 months; concomitant INF therapy 2: 5 × weekly × 3 months | 1: Mild erythema during initial few weeks 2: Inflammatory response during 2 months of treatment | 1: CR of treated lesion; no recurrence of lesions 10 months after treatment, but new lesions elsewhere 2: CR of treated lesions; no recurrence of lesions 9 months after treatment, but new lesions elsewhere |
| Lewis et al. (2017) [ | 1: 68-year-old male • Stage IIB 2: 65-year-old female • Stage IIB with LCT | 1: XRT, SR, NM, TS 2: SR, nbUVB | 1: Nightly × 4 weeks 2: 5× weekly × 4 weeks | 1: None 2: Irritation and flu-like symptoms** | 1: CR of treated lesion; no recurrence of lesion 8 years after treatment; new lesions elsewhere 2: CR of treated lesion; no recurrence 2 years after treatment |
PUVA psoralen plus ultraviolet A light, NM nitrogen mustard, EB electron beam, SR systemic retinoids, TS topical steroids, IMQ imiquimod, IFN interferon, MTX methotrexate, TR topical retinoids, nbUVB narrow-band ultraviolet B phototherapy, XRT radiation, LCT large cell transformation, PD progressive disease
*Staging not specified
**Timing of AE not specified