Volume 159, Issue 5 pp. 1197-1199

Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides (stage IIA) progressing to Sézary syndrome: a case report

N. Agar

N. Agar

St John’s Institute of Dermatology, St Thomas’ Hospital, Lambeth Palace Rd SE1 7EH, London, U.K.

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S.J. Whittaker

S.J. Whittaker

St John’s Institute of Dermatology, St Thomas’ Hospital, Lambeth Palace Rd SE1 7EH, London, U.K.

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First published: 20 October 2008
Citations: 6

N. Agar.
E-mail:[email protected]

S.J. Whittaker.
E-mail:[email protected]

Conflicts of interest None declared.

Summary

Folliculotropic mycosis fungoides is associated with a worse prognosis than classical mycosis fungoides (MF), but whether this is due to resistance to skin-directed therapy or to biological differences is unclear. We discuss a case of a patient with folliculotropic MF (stage IIA) who progressed to develop Sézary syndrome (SS), stage IVB, over 6 years. A 40-year-old man presented with pruritic plaques affecting his head and trunk, characterized by follicular plugging. The histology was consistent with folliculotropic MF and T-cell gene analysis studies revealed a T-cell clone in the skin only. His condition gradually deteriorated and 5 years after presentation, T-cell gene analysis studies revealed the presence of a clone in the blood identical with that seen in the skin. His condition progressed with the development of erythrodermic disease and a leukaemic blood picture and he subsequently died of systemic nodal and visceral involvement. We present the first report detailing the stepwise progression of a patient with stage IIA folliculotropic MF to SS. This case demonstrates that MF and SS represent a clinical spectrum of the same disease.

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