| Literature DB >> 35573524 |
Mădălina Laura Banciu1, Elena Codruta Dobrica2, Cristina Soare1, Ana Maria Malciu1, Vlad Mihai Voiculescu1,3.
Abstract
Mycosis fungoides represents the most common cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, clinically manifested with evolving skin lesions, including patches, plaques, tumors, and erythroderma. Early diagnosis remains difficult to establish because it mimics several benign skin conditions, but maintaining a high index of suspicion for the disease is essential in preventing the progression of a potentially fatal disease. We report the case of a 69-year-old female who presented in our dermatology clinic in 2018 with scaly, indurated, itchy erythematous-violaceus patches and plaques, and tumors disseminated throughout the skin evolving for nine years. Skin biopsy supplemented with immunohistochemical staining established the diagnosis of mycosis fungoides. Due to the equivocal clinical presentation and the lack of extracutaneous manifestations, the patient received conventional therapy according to the stage of the disease. The rapidly progressive evolution of the cutaneous lesions in the last year of the disease determined the patient's death despite instituting systemic chemotherapy. Patient follow-up and a multidisciplinary approach are essential to diagnose and manage this disease in its early stages. This will prevent the progression to a life-threatening malignancy and the use of immunosuppressive therapy, which can cause serious side effects.Entities:
Keywords: chemotherapy; cutaneous t-cell lymphoma; large plaque parapsoriasis; mycosis fungoides; retinoids
Year: 2022 PMID: 35573524 PMCID: PMC9106548 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.24098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Erythematous-violaceus, scaly, indurated, plaques, and patches disseminated throughout the skin
Figure 2Erythematous-squamous plaques and pustules
Figure 3Photomicrograph (x100, x400, hematoxylin and eosin stained)
Image showing epidermis with irregular hyperplasia (yellow arrows) , parakeratosis (yellow square), superficial and deep dermal infiltrates perivascular and interstitial; epidermotropism (red square); nodular lymphoid aggregates located in the deep dermis (red arrow)
Figure 4Immunohistochemical staining
Image revealing positivity for CD2 and CD4 and negative results for CD3 and CD5 markers
TNM classification and clinical staging of mycosis fungoides (adapted from NCCN clinical practice guidelines, 2020)
BSA: body surface area; NCCN: National Comprehensive Cancer Network; TNM: Tumor, Nodes, Metastasis
| Stage | T | N | M | Description |
| IA | T1 | N0 | M0 | <10% BSA patch/plaque |
| IB | T2 | N0 | M0 | >10% BSA patch/plaque |
| IIA | T1-T2 | N1 | M0 | Patch/plaque with palpable nodes without histological involvement |
| IIB | T3 | N0-N1 | M0 | Cutaneous tumors with/without palpable nodes |
| III | T4 | N0-N1 | M0 | Erythroderma with/without palpable nodes |
| IVA | T1-T4 | N2-N3 | M0 | Non-palpable or palpable nodes with histological involvement |
| IVB | T1-T4 | N0-3 | M1 | Visceral involvement |