Patients with Mycosis fungoides are treated based on the stage and the previous treatment history.[2]
Treatment is weitten as early disease (stage IA, IB, IIA) and advanced disease)[3]
Mycosis fungoides (Early stages)
Stage IA
Patients with mycosis fungoides in stage IA ( patches, plaques, may be papules involve <10 % of total skin surface) treat by skin-directed therapy [topical corticosteroids, nitrogen mustard (meclorethamin, NH2)].
Skin direct therapy is recommended more than systemic therapy (chemotherapy+ skin direct therapy) in this stage.[2]
Systemic therapies +/- topical therapy are recommended for patients who intolerant of topical treatments
Stage IB-IIA
Generalized skin directed therapy with or without combination other skin directed therapies[4]
In majority of patients in this stages, skin directed therapy (topical corticosteroid, HN2, ultraviolet B (UVB) therap) recommended use more than systemic therapy.
The predominant therapy for cutaneous T cell lymphoma is PUVA. Adjunctive chemotherapy, radiotherapy, biological therapy, retinoid therapy, and photophoresis may be required.[1]
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.