Abstract

Peripheral blood involvement by MF/SS has significant implications for prognosis and treatment. Flow cytometry is commonly used to assess MF/SS by analyzing the ratio of CD26- and/or CD7-CD4 + T cells and assessment of immunophenotypic abnormalities. However, distinguishing normal from abnormal cells is not always easy. In this study, we aimed to establish quantitative thresholds to better distinguish normal CD4 + T cells from neoplastic CD4 + T cells. A retrospective analysis of flow cytometry data was performed on 30 MF/SS patients with a detectable abnormal T cell population (positive), 63 patients with suspected or confirmed cutaneous involvement without a detectable abnormal T cell population (negative), and 60 healthy controls (control). CD3 and CD4 median fluorescence intensity (MFI) was normalized to internal control subsets. Among the positive cases, 50% had CD3 expression outside ± 2 SD from the mean of the negative and control group in the CD4 + CD26- subset. The corresponding specificity of this threshold was 94%. The ± 2 SD threshold showed a sensitivity of 57% and a specificity of 94% for the CD3 intensity among the CD7-negative subset. For CD4 intensity, the ± 2 SD threshold had a sensitivity of 33.3% and specificity of 95% for the CD26-negative subset and a sensitivity of 37% and specificity of 95% for the CD7-negative subset. In our study, although changes in CD3 and CD4 intensity greater than ± 2 SD were specific for MF/SS, more subtle differences in the intensity of CD3 and CD4 should not be used as the sole abnormality to make a diagnosis of circulating MF/SS.

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