Table 9

Recommendations for treatment of stage III or SS (stages III or IVa)

TreatmentComments*
First-line  
    ECP Well tolerated with limited toxicities; circulating T-cell clone should be detectable in blood by morphology, flow cytometry, or molecular studies; should not be considered in patients with SS who have extensive nodal (IVa) or visceral (IVb) disease; side effects to methoxsalen is rare; requires good venous access with the associated risk of infection; often combined with oral steroids (short-term), IFN-α, bexarotene, or low-dose MTX; improvement with ECP alone can take some weeks and maximum improvement may not be seen for many months; durable responses are not uncommon 
    IFN-α Major difficulty is tolerance and compliance; some responses can be very durable; somewhat inconvenient (daily subcutaneous injection); most common side effect is fatigue, particularly in older patients; requires moderately high doses aiming for 3 to 5+ MU/day; monitor FBC and thyroid function; IFN-α can also be combined with PUVA, retinoids, bexarotene, and ECP 
    PUVA + IFN-α For stage III disease; would not generally recommend PUVA alone; requires regular 2 or 3 times/week treatment and limited number of sites in nonmetropolitan areas 
    MTX See Table 7 for comments 
Second-line  
    Bexarotene See Table 7 for comments; can consider adding to ECP or IFN-α 
    Vorinostat See Table 7 for comments; no data available of adding to ECP or IFN-α 
    Denileukin diftitox See Table 7 for comments 
    Alemtuzumab See Table 10 for comments 
    Novel agents within clinical trials In patients with SS, chemotherapy is recommended after bexarotene and/or and HDACi and/or DD; it is very acceptable to consider novel agents within clinical trials before chemotherapy is considered (see Table 12) 
    Chemotherapy Choice of chemotherapy regimens is extensive (see Table 11), and choice depends on patient tolerance, risk of infection versus the relatively short duration of remission observed with most chemotherapy regimens; transplantation may be considered in highly selected individuals 
TreatmentComments*
First-line  
    ECP Well tolerated with limited toxicities; circulating T-cell clone should be detectable in blood by morphology, flow cytometry, or molecular studies; should not be considered in patients with SS who have extensive nodal (IVa) or visceral (IVb) disease; side effects to methoxsalen is rare; requires good venous access with the associated risk of infection; often combined with oral steroids (short-term), IFN-α, bexarotene, or low-dose MTX; improvement with ECP alone can take some weeks and maximum improvement may not be seen for many months; durable responses are not uncommon 
    IFN-α Major difficulty is tolerance and compliance; some responses can be very durable; somewhat inconvenient (daily subcutaneous injection); most common side effect is fatigue, particularly in older patients; requires moderately high doses aiming for 3 to 5+ MU/day; monitor FBC and thyroid function; IFN-α can also be combined with PUVA, retinoids, bexarotene, and ECP 
    PUVA + IFN-α For stage III disease; would not generally recommend PUVA alone; requires regular 2 or 3 times/week treatment and limited number of sites in nonmetropolitan areas 
    MTX See Table 7 for comments 
Second-line  
    Bexarotene See Table 7 for comments; can consider adding to ECP or IFN-α 
    Vorinostat See Table 7 for comments; no data available of adding to ECP or IFN-α 
    Denileukin diftitox See Table 7 for comments 
    Alemtuzumab See Table 10 for comments 
    Novel agents within clinical trials In patients with SS, chemotherapy is recommended after bexarotene and/or and HDACi and/or DD; it is very acceptable to consider novel agents within clinical trials before chemotherapy is considered (see Table 12) 
    Chemotherapy Choice of chemotherapy regimens is extensive (see Table 11), and choice depends on patient tolerance, risk of infection versus the relatively short duration of remission observed with most chemotherapy regimens; transplantation may be considered in highly selected individuals 

FBC indicates fludarabine, busulphan, and alemtuzumab.

*

For more details and detailed references, we refer the reader to the EORTC consensus recommendations for the treatment of mycosis fungoides/Sézary syndrome.

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