Nine of 17 cases showed the characteristic clinical and histological features as well as clinical behavior of well defined types of CTCL, such as mycosis fungoides (2 cases), pagetoid reticulosis (2 cases), lymphomatoid papulosis (2 cases), and CD30+ large T cell lymphoma (2 cases), all of which usually express a CD4+ T cell phenotype, and 1 case of subcutaneous panniculitis-like T cell lymphoma.
Our results demonstrate that CD30(-) primary cutaneous large T-cell lymphomas do not produce T(H)2 cytokines, illustrating that not all cutaneous T-cell lymphomas have a T(H)2 cytokine profile.
DNA isolated from biopsy specimens of 28 patients with CTCL, including aggressive CTCL entities (transformed mycosis fungoides and CD30-negative large T-cell lymphoma) and an indolent entity (CD30-positive large T-cell lymphoma), were investigated.
Nine patients were enrolled in a physician-initiated, open-label, single-center, phase 2 clinical trial of brentuximab vedotin for CD30+ cutaneous T-cell lymphomas and LyP from 2011 to 2013.
Cutaneous CD30(+) lymphoproliferative disease (CD30(+)LPD), characterized by the presence of CD30(+) anaplastic large T cells, comprises the second most common group of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL).
Inactivation of the CDKN2A-CDKN2B locus has been reported in the most frequent subtypes of cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs), mycosis fungoides, Sézary syndrome (SS) and CD30+ cutaneous anaplastic large cell lymphoma.
Numerous CD30+ large cells were present in 4 LCT-CTCL consistent with secondary CD30+ ALCL; CD30 was expressed by <10% of the large cells in another case and was negative in the other 3 lymphomas.
Mycosis fungoides (MF) is the most common primary cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL), followed by CD30+ lymphoproliferative disorders, including lymphomatoid papulosis (LyP) and primary cutaneous anaplastic large cell lymphoma (pcALCL).
Compared with a physician's choice of either methotrexate or bexarotene, the CD30-directed antibody-drug conjugate brentuximab vedotin led to significantly superior clinical responses in patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphomas, according to the results of the international phase III ALCANZA trial.
Histopathology findings confirmed a diagnosis of pcALCL, which is a subtype of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma characterized by the presence of CD30+ T cells.
CD30 is promising target as it is universally expressed in virtually all classical Hodgkin lymphomas, anaplastic large cell lymphomas, and in a proportion of other lymphoma types, including cutaneous T cell lymphomas and diffuse large B cell lymphomas.
The genes encoding the T-cell receptor (TCR) variable beta (TCRBV) regions were studied in skin biopsy samples from 24 patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCL), i.e. mycosis fungoides (n = 7), Sézary syndrome (n = 4), lymphomatoid papulosis (n = 3) and large cell CTCL with (n = 3) or without (n = 7) CD30 expression.