| Literature DB >> 35159143 |
Gabriele Roccuzzo1, Silvia Giordano1, Gianluca Avallone1, Marco Rubatto1, Silvia Canonico1, Ada Funaro2, Erika Ortolan2, Rebecca Senetta3, Paolo Fava1, Maria Teresa Fierro1, Simone Ribero1, Pietro Quaglino1.
Abstract
Sézary syndrome is a rare subtype of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma characterized by erythroderma, peripheral lymphadenopathies, and circulating atypical cerebriform T-cells. To date, no definite staging system has been developed for these patients. In this retrospective analysis of the archive of the Dermatological Clinic of the University of Turin, Italy, erythrodermic SS patients were classified according to clinical records and photographs into three main presentations: erythematous, infiltrated, or melanodermic. The pattern of erythroderma was found to be associated with disease outcome, as better survivals were recorded in patients with erythematous and infiltrative erythroderma. Patients in the melanodermic group, though less represented in our investigation, seemed to show a worse trend in survival. According to this preliminary evidence, a new prognostic classification, with a revised score specific for Sézary syndrome patients, can be proposed to usefully integrate the current staging system. The correlation displayed in our research will be hopefully confirmed by prospective studies with larger cohorts, with the aim of identifying significant prognostic features in this subset of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma patients.Entities:
Keywords: CTCL; Sézary syndrome; cutaneous lymphoma; erythrodermic; mycosis fungoides
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35159143 PMCID: PMC8834570 DOI: 10.3390/cells11030333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1(a) The erythematous presentation (b) The infiltrative presentation (c) The melanodermic presentation.
Patients’ characteristics at diagnosis.
| Parameters | N° Patients | Erythematous (E1) | Infiltrative (E2) | Melanoderma (E3) | Confluent Patches/Plaques/ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N° patients | 144 | 86 | 27 | 9 | 22 |
| Gender M-F | 88–56 | 51–35 | 22–5 | 5–4 | 10–12 |
| Age (years) | 70 (25–97) | 70 (25–97) | 69 (50–84) | 73 (55–86) | 67 (49–93) |
| Previous MF | 40 (27.8%) | 23/86 (26.7%) | 8/27 (29.6%) | 1/9 (11.1%) | 8/22 (36.4%) |
| Circulating SC (median; range)(/mm3) | 2691 (147–52,419) | 3228 (147–44,153) | 1698 (212–13,349) | 4398 (420–52,419) | 3160 (261–50,730) |
Figure 2Percentage of erythematous erythrodermic patients who showed a clinical downgrading or evolution to infiltrative/melanodermic patterns.
Figure 3Percentage of infiltrative erythrodermic patients who showed a clinical evolution to melanoderma.
Figure 4Overall survival in months according to erythrodermic subtype.
New staging proposal according to SS features.
| SS Subtype | Proposed Staging | Clinical Presentation | Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patches, Plaques, Sub-erythroderma | E0 |
| No frank erythroderma. It may characterize early as well as atypical forms of SS. |
| Erythematous Erythroderma | E1 |
| Widespread reddening, with or without exfoliation, affecting at least 80% of body surface area. No appreciable signs of increased skin fold thickness. |
| Infiltrative Erythroderma | E2 |
| Widespread reddening, with or without exfoliation, affecting at least 80% of body surface area and clear features of increased skin fold thickness. |
| Melanoderma | E3 |
| Widespread darkening affecting at least 80% body surface area. |