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| * During treatment with systemic retinoids, lipid panel and thyroid function tests should be closely monitored | | * During treatment with systemic retinoids, lipid panel and thyroid function tests should be closely monitored |
| | | * Gemfibrozil should be avoided because of the known side effects of the combined therapy; fish oil tablets can be used instead |
| | * Some authors have also documented liver toxicities associated with administration of retinodis, and liver function tests (LFTs) should also be monitored in these patients. |
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Revision as of 15:32, 13 December 2018
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sowminya Arikapudi, M.B,B.S. [2]
Overview
The predominant therapy for cutaneous T cell lymphoma is PUVA. Adjunctive chemotherapy, radiotherapy, biological therapy, retinoid therapy, and photophoresis may be required.[1]
Medical Therapy
- Medical therapy for early stage MF is:
- Patients with stage IA disease( patches, plaques, may be papules involve <10 % of total skin surface) treat by skin-directed therapies
The predominant therapy for cutaneous T cell lymphoma is PUVA. Adjunctive chemotherapy, radiotherapy, biological therapy, retinoid therapy, and photophoresis may be required. [1]
Medical therapy for cutaneous T cell lymphoma[1]
Stage
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PUVA
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Topical chemotherapy
|
Systemic chemotherapy
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Radiotherapy
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Biological therapy
|
Retinoid therapy
|
Photopheresis
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Stage I
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- By itself
- Or with interferon alfa
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- To 1 or 2 skin lesions (local radiation therapy)
- Total skin electron beam therapy (TSEB)
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- By itself
- Or with topical chemotherapy
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Stage II
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- By itself
- Or with interferon alfa
|
|
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- To 1 or 2 skin lesions (local radiation therapy)
- Total skin electron beam therapy
|
- By itself
- Or with topical chemotherapy
|
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Stage III
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- By itself
- Or with interferon alfa
- Or systemic chemotherapy
|
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- May be combined with other skin-focussed therapies
|
- Total skin electron beam therapy
- As palliative therapy to reduce the size of tumours or relieve symptoms
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- By itself
- Or with topical chemotherapy
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Stage IV
|
- By itself
- Or with interferon alfa
- Or systemic chemotherapy
|
|
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- Total skin electron beam therapy (TSEB)
- As palliative therapy to reduce the size of tumours or relieve symptoms
|
- By itself
- Or with topical chemotherapy
|
|
- By itself
- Or with total skin electron beam therapy
|
Recurrent cutaneous T cell lymphoma
|
|
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- Total skin electron beam therapy
- Radiation therapy to bulky tumours or lymph nodes
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Treatment for cutaneous T cell lymphoma[1]
Treatment
|
Description
|
Phototherapy or Ultraviolet light therapy
|
PUVA (psoralen and ultraviolet A light therapy)
|
- Treatment consists of giving a drug called psoralen and then a certain amount of ultraviolet A light is used on the skin
- Psoralen makes the skin very sensitive to the effects of UVA light, which helps destroy the lymphoma cells
- Psoralen is taken as a pill, usually about 2 hours before the skin is treated with the UVA light
- PUVA is effective for treating thick patches and plaques
- PUVA treatments are given much the same as a tanning session under a sunlamp
- Treatments are given several times (often 3 times) a week at first
- When the person responds, then the number of treatments is usually decreased
- Treatments may need to be continued on a regular basis for several months (maintenance therapy)
- PUVA treatment is sometimes called photochemotherapy
|
Ultraviolet B (UVB) light
|
- UVB therapy is effective in treating skin patches or thin plaques
- Psoralen is not used with UVB treatment
- Treatment with UVB phototherapy may also be given several times a week
|
Chemotherapy
|
Topical chemotherapy
|
- Is usually used to treat limited disease or early stage cutaneous T cell lymphoma because it is a local therapy
- Mechlorethamine
- Carmustine
|
Systemic chemotherapy
|
- Is used to treat cutaneous T cell lymphoma that is more advanced, that has relapsed, or that no longer seems to be responding to other treatments
- Most common chemotherapy pills
- Intravenous chemotherapy drugs
|
Radiation therapy
|
Local external beam radiation therapy
|
- May be used if only 1 or 2 small areas of skin are affected
- It may also be used to treat patches that remain after PUVA treatment
|
Total skin electron beam (TSEB) therapy
|
- May be used to treat larger areas of skin
- Usually given only once to treat a person with cutaneous T cell lymphoma
- But can sometimes be repeated using reduced doses if cutaneous T cell lymphoma recurs
- Can cause a sunburn-like reaction and people may lose their finger nails, toe nails and hair
- Requires special equipment and may not be available in all treatment centres
|
Biological therapy
|
Interferon alfa
|
- Interferon alfa is injected under the skin into the fatty tissue (subcutaneously) to help boost the immune response
- It may be used alone or in combination with other treatments, such as PUVA
|
Denileukin diftitox
|
- Is a newer drug that is a combination of the biological therapy drug interleukin-2 and the diphtheria toxin
- The interleukin finds the cutaneous T cell lymphoma cells and the diphtheria toxin kills the cells
|
Retinoid therapy
|
Retinoids
|
- Retinoids are drugs that are similar to vitamin A and interfere with cell growth
- Retinoids may be applied to the skin or may be taken by mouth (orally)
- Bexarotene is one retinoid drug that may be used
- Bexarotene comes in a gel form that can be put on the skin
- It is used for early stage cutaneous T cell lymphoma with limited skin involvement
- It can also be taken as a pill and is used for people with extensive skin involvement or who relapse
|
Photopheresis
|
Photopheresis
|
- Involves running a person's blood from a vein in their arm through a machine that exposes it to ultraviolet A light
- Similar to PUVA treatment, psoralen is used to make the cancerous white blood cells in the blood more sensitive to the effects of UVA light
- The treated blood is then returned (reinfused) back into the body
- This treatment is used for sezary syndrome or for progressing cutaneous T cell lymphoma
- Often need to be repeated several times
- May also be called extracorporeal photochemotherapy (ECP)
|
- During treatment with systemic retinoids, lipid panel and thyroid function tests should be closely monitored
- Gemfibrozil should be avoided because of the known side effects of the combined therapy; fish oil tablets can be used instead
- Some authors have also documented liver toxicities associated with administration of retinodis, and liver function tests (LFTs) should also be monitored in these patients.
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