ARTICLE
Peripheral blood involvement occurs in a percentage of mycosis fungoides
(MF) patients ranging from 3.6 to 19% [1-4]. It is more frequent in the
advanced stages (tumoral lesions or lymph node involvement), whereas it
is extremely rare in early stage disease.
Herein, a case of a MF patient with limited skin lesions and peripheral
blood involvement is reported.
Case report
A female patient aged 72 years presented to our clinic with a 2-year
history of erythematous pruritic macules and patches on her shoulders,
upper chest and thighs. Her medical history was unremarkable. Physical
examination revealed (Fig. 1)
scattered slightly scaly, indurated, round or oval patches, ranging in
diameter from 5 to 12 centimeters. She had no superficial palpable adenopathies
or hepatosplenomegaly. Histological examination revealed a band-like dermal
infiltrate with single-cell epidermotropism (Fig.
2). The infiltrate was mainly constituted by clusters of small
to medium atypical lymphoid cells, intermingled with numerous macrophages
and dermal dendritic cells. Routine staging procedures (chest X rays,
abdomen ultrasound, thoracic and abdominal CT scans) were unremarkable.
Morphological examination of circulating white blood cells revealed the
presence of circulating atypical lymphoid cells (Sézary cells,
SC), with the characteristic cerebriform nuclear profile confirmed at
electron microscopy (Fig. 3).
The SC population accounted for 36% of circulating leukocytes with absolute
values at diagnosis of 1,224/mm3. T cell clonality was confirmed
by the detection of a dominant TCRgamma gene rearrangement in a heteroduplex
analysis in both skin and peripheral blood. A bone marrow biopsy specimen
showed no SC infiltration. The final diagnosis was therefore MF stage
IB (T2N0M0) with peripheral blood involvement
(B1) according to the Mycosis fungoides Cooperative Group Classification
[5].
The patient was treated with fludarabine 25 mg/m2 5 days
a month for up to 4 cycles, achieving a complete hematological response,
whilst the cutaneous lesions remained unchanged. After chemotherapy was
discontinued due to persistent bone marrow toxicity (neutropenia and thrombocytopenia),
a hematological early relapse occurred. The patient therefore underwent
extracorporeal photochemotherapy treatment (ExP, 5 cycles for 2 consecutive
days each month); at the time of writing, no response has been achieved.
Materials and methods
Immunohistochemistry and flow-cytometry
Immunohistochemistry was performed on cryostatic sections stained with
an avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method (LSAB-Plus Peroxidase K0690
Kit, DAKO Corporation, CA 93013 USA). In addition, biopsy fragments were
dissociated using an automated mechanical disaggregation device (Medimachine,
CONSULTS, Italy, distributed by Becton-Dickinson, S. José,
CA, USA, and Dakopatts, Denmark) and three color flow cytometry was performed
simultaneously on cellular suspension, as reported [6]. Two-, or three-color
immunofluorescence peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) analysis was performed
simultaneously using FITC-, PE-, and PerCP-conjugated antibodies, according
to standard procedures. A wide panel of MoAbs directed against T cell
antigens, as well as activation and proliferation markers, were tested
(table I). KM-93 antibody
(indirect immunofluorescence using a FITC-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse
IgM, Southern Biotechnology Associates, Inc., Birmingham, AL, USA), is
directed against the sialyl LewisX antigen (sLex) [7, 8], even
if it has not yet been clustered as CD15s like other sLex-reactive
MoAbs. Although no data are reported in literature as to KM-93 expression
on cutaneous infiltrates, Priest et al. showed that KM-93 is highly
expressed on HUT78 cells, a skin-homing CTCL line, and that is capable
of blocking the binding of HUT78 cells to E-selectin [9]. The clonal rearrangement
of the T cell receptor (TCR) was identified using a panel of 28 MoAbs
directed against the variable regions of the beta chain (Serotec Ltd.,
Oxford, UK; Beckman Coulter Company, Marseille, France; Endogen, Cambridge,
MA, USA; Pharmingen, S. Diego, CA, USA).
Soluble interleukin-2 receptor assay
Soluble interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R) levels were determined with
enzyme-linked immunosorbent techniques (ELISA) using a commercially available
kit (Genzyme; Cambridge, MA, USA), as previously reported [10].
Results
The phenotype of the cutaneous infiltrate is shown in table
I. Three color flow cytometry performed on cellular tissue suspensions
showed that the majority of lymphoid cells (75%) expressed a single variable
region of the TCR beta-chain (vbeta17); clonal T cells were phenotypically
CD3+CD4+CD45R0+CD7-CD26-.
Activation markers (CD25, CD38, CD71) were expressed on less than 30%
of the cell infiltrate. L-selectin/CD62L and the sLex antigen
KM-93 were expressed on 20% of the cell infiltrate. CD103 expression was
nearly restricted to epidermotropic cells.
Circulating cells showed a similar phenotype, expressing the same variable
region of the TCR-beta chain (vBeta 17). All the TCR vbeta17+
cells were CD4 positive and CD26 negative (Fig.
4). The kinetics of the CD4+ vbeta17+ and
CD4+CD26- subpopulations during follow-up are shown
in Figure 5a. A decrease which paralleled the reduction in the
SC count, was observed during the fludarabine treatment, followed by a
progressive increase during ExP corresponding to the early relapse after
the hematological remission. The sIL-2R kinetic was similar, showing a
decrease from baseline levels (4,984 U/mL) down to normal values, followed
by a further increase (Fig. 5b).
No significant modifications in the KM-93+, CD62L
and CD103 expression on PBL could be found during follow-up. In fact,
the percentage of CD4+CD26-KM-93+
cells remained between 7 and 18% during all the follow-up period, without
relation to the number of phenotypically atypical lymphoid cells. Similarly,
the percentage of the CD4+CD26-CD62L+
cells within the lymphoid population remained between 10 and 32% (Fig.
5c).
Discussion
This paper reports on a female MF patient stage IB (T2N0M0)
with peripheral blood involvement. In particular, clonality in the peripheral
blood was demonstrated by the expansion of a single restricted variable
region of the TCR beta-chain (vbeta17), which was the same expressed in
the cutaneous infiltrate. Atypical lymphoid cells in the skin and peripheral
blood showed a similar CD4+CD7- T helper memory
phenotype, with a lack of CD26, which we have recently shown as a common
characteristic feature of atypical circulating lymphoid cells in both
SS [11, 12] and MF patients with peripheral blood involvement [12].
We feel that the interest of our case lies in the presence of peripheral
blood involvement in a MF patient with such limited patch lesions, in
as much as it is commonly associated with cutaneous nodular lesions and/or
extracutaneous involvement. Schecter et al. [2] found peripheral
blood involvement in 27% of T3 patients and in 9% of T2;
Vonderheid et al. [1] reported similar results (13.6% in T3
patients and 3.1% in T2 patients); any of these authors found
peripheral blood involvement in T1 patients. Toro et al.
[3] did not find peripheral blood involvement in their stage I or II MF
patients. On the other hand, using PCR amplification, a higher rate of
peripheral blood involvement was demonstrated, with up to 57% positivity
[13, 14].
Even if the presence of peripheral blood involvement does not affect
the stage according to the present TNM classification [5], a series of
papers suggested that it is associated with a worse prognosis [1-4, 14].
Schechter et al. [2] reported a 22% 5-yr survival in T2-T3
MF patients with peripheral blood involvement, with respect to 70% in
patients without peripheral blood involvement. More recently, Fraser-Andrews
et al. [14] showed that the presence of a peripheral blood clone
is an independent prognostic variable after correcting for age, skin,
and lymph node stage. On the basis of these data, our patient was treated
with a more aggressive approach than would have been usual for her cutaneous
objectivable disease. The complete hematological remission obtained by
monochemotherapy with fludarabine was associated with the normalisation
in sIL-2R levels, confirming the usefulness of this measurement in the
monitoring of CTCL patients [10]. However, the hematological clearing
was not associated with a parallel cutaneous response and an early hematological
relapse occurred, associated to a further sIL-2R level increase.
The biological mechanisms responsible for haematological spreading are
as far as we know not completely defined, even if the literature reports
clearly show that homing molecules may be involved in these processes
[15-17]. In fact, it is conceivable that the low sLex/CLA expression
[15] in the cutaneous lymphoid infiltrate could give rise to a higher
recruitment in the peripheral blood. The persistent low CD62L/L-selectin
expression on circulating cells could be related to the absence of lymph
node involvement, as suggested by Borowitz et al. [17]. The finding
of a low KM-93 expression on circulating cells is in keeping with previous
reports [16-18], showing that the levels of CLA+ circulating
cells correlate with the stage and the extent of cutaneous involvement.
Moreover, our results showed that the percentage of sLex/KM-93+
CD4+CD26- circulating cells did not depend on the
whole CD4+CD26- levels, in as much as an increase
in the CD4+CD26- subpopulation was not associated
with a parallel KM-93+ amount. It could therefore be hypothesised
that the increase in the peripheral blood tumour burden could be related
in our case to the persistent low expression of cutaneous homing molecules
on the PBL surface.
CONCLUSION
Article accepted on 8/5/01
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