Clinical features and treatment outcomes for primary cutaneous CD4+ small/medium T-cell lymphoproliferative disorder: a retrospective cohort study from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and updated literature review
Isabella R. Plumptre, Jordan T. Said, Tiffany Sun, Cecilia Larocca, César A. Virgen, Thomas S. Kupper, David C. Fisher, Philip M. Devlin, Christopher P. Elco, Johanna S. Song, Nicole R. LeBoeuf
Abstract
Primary cutaneous CD4+ small/medium T-cell lymphoproliferative disorder (PCSM-TCLPD) was reclassified in 2016 as a rare benign entity with an excellent prognosis, yet its clinical features and best treatments remain poorly defined. We collected clinical data, treatments, and treatment-responses from our institution’s patients with PCSM-TCLPD through September 2018 and an identical PubMed review through June 2021. Among 36 cases (median-age 54 years; 58.3% head/neck), diagnostic biopsy resulted in sustained complete remission (CR) in 13/33 punch/shave biopsies and 3/3 excisional biopsies. The remaining 20 patients further required topical corticosteroids (n = 5); intralesional corticosteroids (n = 1); surgical-excision (n = 5); electron-beam-radiation (n = 6); or brachytherapy (n = 3). All patients ultimately achieved CR, excluding one patient continuing treatment at end-of-study. 57/59 (96.6%) of institutional and literature-reported radiation-treated patients experienced CR. No institutional cases progressed beyond skin; 5/209 (2.4%) literature-reported cases progressed to systemic/extracutaneous involvement, all pre-reclassification. PCSM-TCLPD responds well to local-directed therapy including radiation, and only rarely if ever progresses.