Long-term outcomes of patients with advanced-stage cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and large cell transformation

Author:

Arulogun Suzanne O.12,Prince H. Miles123,Ng Jonathan4,Lade Stephen5,Ryan Gail F.36,Blewitt Odette1,McCormack Christopher34

Affiliation:

1. Division of Haematology and Medical Oncology, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne;

2. Monash University, Clayton;

3. University of Melbourne, Parkville;

4. Department of Dermatology, St Vincent's Hospital Department of Medicine, Melbourne; and

5. Department of Pathology and

6. Division of Radiation Oncology, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Although mycosis fungoides (MF) is typically an indolent disease, patients with advanced-stage disease (stages IIB-IVB), including Sézary syndrome (SS), often have a poor outcome. A 31-year, retrospective analysis of our cutaneous lymphoma database, of 297 patients with MF and SS, was undertaken to study long-term outcomes and identify clinical predictors of outcome in patients with advanced-stage disease (ASD, n = 92) and large cell transformation (LCT, n = 22). Two-thirds of patients with ASD presented with de novo ASD. The median overall survival (OS) for ASD was 5 years with a 10-year predicted OS of 32%. Age at initial diagnosis (P = .01), tumor stage (P = .01), and clinical stage (P = .001) were found to be significant predictors of outcome. Patients who presented with de novo ASD demonstrated better outcomes that were not statistically significant than those with a prior diagnosis of early-stage MF (P = .25). Transformation developed in 22 of the 297 MF/SS patients (7.4%), with a transformation rate of only 1.4% in patients with early-stage disease, compared with stage IIB (27%) and stage IV (56%-67%) disease. The median OS from diagnosis of LCT was 2 years. We confirm that the incidence of LCT is strongly dependent on tumor stage at diagnosis, and we demonstrate a much lower overall risk of LCT than previously reported.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

Reference16 articles.

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