Background: The etiopathology of chronic eczematous lesions of the palms and/or soles remains elusive in a considerable proportion of patients. Accumulating evidence suggests that a rare variant of mycosis fungoides (MF)-type cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL) restricted to the palms and/or soles may mimic common palmoplantar dermatoses.
Objective: In the present study, we analyzed the clinical and histological characteristics of 3 adult patients with preexisting nonclassified chronic palmoplantar eczema poorly responding to standard therapies. Palmar and/or plantar MF was eventually diagnosed.
Methods: The course of the disease, response to previous therapies and dermatological features are described, results of histochemical and immunohistochemical analyses are reported, including T cell receptor gamma gene rearrangement where obtainable.
Results: Onset of cutaneous lesions with broad clinical variation was experienced 2-10 years prior to diagnosis; conventional therapies led to short-time or partial remission only; except for 1 patient, the epidermotropic infiltrate was predominantly composed of CD4-positive cells; topical photochemotherapy seems to result in more durable responses.
Conclusion: As therapeutic strategies for this disease variant differ from symptomatic standard treatment regimens, awareness of MF-type CTCL as a relevant differential diagnosis of palmoplantar eczema should be expanded to prevent delay in diagnosis and adequate therapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000065862 | DOI Listing |
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