Staging is the process of learning how much cancer is in your body and where it is. Tests like a skin biopsy, CT, MRI, and PET scan may be done to help stage your cancer. Your providers need to know about your cancer and your health so that they can plan the best treatment for you.
Staging looks at the size of the tumor and where it is on the skin, and if it has spread to other organs. There are a few different kinds of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, making staging more complex. There are two main staging systems, as described by the International Society for Cutaneous Lymphomas (ISCL) and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC):
*For these types of CTCL, if the lymphoma has spread to anywhere other than the skin (N and M), it will be staged as non-Hodgkin lymphoma and not a skin lymphoma.
Staging for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma is based on:
The staging system is very complex. Below is a summary. Talk to your provider about the stage of your cancer.
Stage IA (T1, N0, M0, B0, or B1)
Stage IB (T2, N0, M0, B0, or B1)
Stage IIA (T1 or T2, N1 or N2, M0, B0 or B1)
Stage IIB (T3, N0 to N2, M0, B0 or B1)
Stage IIIA (T4, N0 to N2, M0, B0
Stage IIIB (T4, N0 to N2, M0, B1)
Stage IVA1 (Any T, N0 to N2, M0, B2)
Stage IVA2 (Any T, N3, M0, any B)
Stage IVB (Any T, any N, M1, any B)
This system does not assign an overall stage at the end. Instead, your provider will tell you the score from each lettered category: T, N, and M.
T1: There is only a single skin lesion.
T2: There are 2 or more lesions on the skin. These may be in a single body region or in 2 body regions that are next to each other.
T3: There are skin lesions in body regions that aren’t next to each other, or in at least 3 different body regions.
N0: No lymph nodes are enlarged or contain lymphoma cells.
N1: There are lymphoma cells in the lymph nodes that drain an area where skin contained lymphoma.
N2: One of the following is true:
N3: Lymph nodes deep inside the chest or abdomen contain lymphoma cells.
M0: No signs of lymphoma outside of the skin or lymph nodes.
M1: Lymphoma has spread to other organs or tissues.
Treatment for CTCL depends on many factors, like the type of CTCL, your cancer stage, age, overall health, and testing results. CTCL is a chronic disease for most patients, meaning you can live with this cancer for many years. There are more than 30 treatments for CTCL. Unlike a lot of other cancers, progression on one treatment does not mean that the same treatment won’t work better in the future. Your treatment may include some or all of the following:
Topical therapies are put on the skin a few times a day as an ointment, cream, or gel to the affected areas. Corticosteroids can be used to treat small areas with few side effects but are not often applied to the whole body. They can cause thinning of the skin after long-term use.
Phototherapy, or UV light, uses a source of light to treat some skin diseases.
As with any UVA/B exposure, there is a risk for melanoma and basal and squamous cell cancers due to this therapy.
Systemic therapies are those that treat the entire body by circulating through the bloodstream. These include photopheresis, bexarotene, and other medication therapies, which can be given alone or in combination with other systemic or topical therapies.
Photopheresis is used to treat patients with erythrodermic stage or blood involvement of the disease. It is basically a form of PUVA for the blood. You will have two IV catheters placed, one used to remove blood, the other to return the treated blood to your system. The blood is passed through a machine that separates the white blood cells from the rest of the blood, mixes them with a liquid form of psoralen (photosensitizer), exposes them to UVA light, and returns them to the body. The process damages the cancerous T cells, but other types of white blood cells resist this damage and help create an immune response in the body. The procedure takes 3-4 hours and is done on two consecutive days about once a month. It has minor side effects, including fever, increased skin redness, and dizziness.
Interferons are substances the body produces normally to rev up the immune system. By giving synthetic (manmade) forms of interferon-alpha (called interferon alfa 2b and alfa 2a), the body's immune system is stimulated to attack the cancer cells. It is given by injection several times a week, often along with other therapies and may work well with photopheresis. Side effects are related to the stimulation of the immune system and include fever, chills, muscle aches, and fatigue- often called "flu-like" symptoms. Other side effects include depression, sleep disturbances, anxiety, hair loss, and nausea. If patients have stopped responding to interferon alfa, a synthetic form of interferon-gamma may be used.
Chemotherapy may be used in advanced cases of CTCL. Your provider will create a regimen for you including which drugs you will receive, the dose of each drug, and how often you will receive them. The first-line therapies often are brentuximab, gemcitabine, liposomal doxorubicin, or pralatrexate. Some other less common chemotherapies are chlorambucil, pentostatin, etoposide, cyclophosphamide, and temozolomide.
Targeted therapies attack a specific target found on the cancer cells, causing fewer side effects compared to traditional chemotherapy. Targeted therapies include Alemtuzumab and vorinostat.
Allogeneic stem cell transplants may be used in a small number of patients. Allogenic stem cell transplants are thought to be the only cure for advanced stages of CTCL.
You may be offered a clinical trial as part of your treatment plan. To find out more about current clinical trials, visit the OncoLink Clinical Trials Matching Service.
Your care team will make sure you are included in choosing your treatment plan. This can be overwhelming as you may be given a few options to choose from. It feels like an emergency, but you can often take a few weeks to meet with different providers and think about your options and what is best for you. This is a personal decision. Friends and family can help you talk through the options and the pros and cons of each, but they cannot make the decision for you. You need to be comfortable with your decision – this will help you move on to the next steps. If you ever have any questions or concerns, be sure to call your team.
You can learn more about lymphoma at OncoLink.org.
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