Abstract
We investigated the number, phenotype, and prognostic significance of CD8+ T cells in patients with mycosis fungoides (MF) and CD30- primary cutaneous large T-cell lymphoma (PCLTCL). Immunohistochemical stainings for CD8, granzyme B (GrB), T cell-restricted intracellular antigen (TIA-1), Fas ligand (FasL), and killer-cell inhibitory receptors (KIRs; CD95, CD158a, and CD158b) were performed on 83 first-diagnostic biopsy samples obtained from patients with plaque-stage MF (n = 42), tumor-stage MF (n = 20), and CD30- PCLTCL (n = 21). Serial sections and double-staining experiments showed that the large majority of CD8+ T cells in MF and CD30- PCLTCL expressed TIA-1 and FasL, whereas only a minority expressed GrB, which suggested that these CD8+ T cells were partly activated cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). These CD8+ CTLs never or rarely expressed KIRs. This phenotype was a constant feature of CD8+ CTLs and did not alter with disease progression. In contrast, the median percentage of CD8+ CTLs in plaque-stage MF (22%), tumor-stage MF (7%), and CD30- PCLTCL (3%) differed significantly (P < .0001) and was associated with a significant decrease in 5-year survival. Also within the group of tumor-stage MF, a significant relation between CD8+ CTLs and survival was found. Multivariate analysis in the total group of MF demonstrated that both skin stage and percentage of CD8+ CTLs were independent parameters of survival. Our results demonstrated that partly activated CD8+ CTLs were present in CTCL and that high proportions of these cells correlated with a better prognosis. This suggested that these CD8+ CTLs could play an important role in the antitumor response in these conditions.
Published Version
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