Overview
Comprehensive FDA-approved therapies for Mycosis Fungoides (CTCL) including targeted agents, immunotherapy, and combination regimens. Treatment approaches vary by molecular subtype, stage, and biomarker status.
Epidemiology & Impact
Mycosis fungoides is the most common cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, accounting for 50% of primary cutaneous lymphomas. Annual incidence is 5-6 per million. It has a 2:1 male predominance, median age 55-60, and higher incidence in Black populations. The disease typically follows an indolent course through patch, plaque, and tumor stages over years. Early-stage disease has 10-year survival exceeding 80%.
Molecular Biology & Biomarkers
MF arises from skin-homing CD4+ T cells. Molecular features include CDKN2A deletions, TP53 mutations, and JAK-STAT pathway activation (STAT3, STAT5B). T-cell receptor clonal rearrangement serves as a diagnostic tool. The microenvironment shifts from Th1 to Th2 dominance as disease advances, causing progressive immunosuppression.
Evolving Treatment Landscape
Treatment follows a stage-adapted approach. Early-stage uses skin-directed therapies: topical corticosteroids, phototherapy (PUVA, narrowband UVB), and nitrogen mustard. Advanced disease options include brentuximab vedotin (CD30-positive), mogamulizumab (anti-CCR4), HDAC inhibitors (vorinostat, romidepsin), and bexarotene. Extracorporeal photopheresis is used for erythrodermic disease.
Approved Mycosis Fungoides / Sézary Syndrome Therapies
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQHow is MF diagnosed?
Diagnosis requires clinical-pathologic correlation: skin biopsy showing atypical T cells in the epidermis, immunophenotyping, and T-cell receptor gene rearrangement. Multiple biopsies may be needed as early MF mimics benign conditions.
Does MF always progress?
Many patients have indolent disease remaining skin-confined for years or decades. Early-stage 10-year survival exceeds 80%. Only a minority progress to tumors or systemic involvement.
What is Sezary syndrome?
Sezary syndrome is the leukemic CTCL variant with erythroderma, circulating Sezary cells, and lymphadenopathy — more aggressive than typical MF requiring systemic therapy.
Active Clinical Trials
PHASE 3 Late-Stage Pivotal Trials
ALCANZA
Drug: Brentuximab vedotin
Population: CD30+ mycosis fungoides/Sézary syndrome
Status: Published - FDA Approved
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PHASE 2 Efficacy and Safety Studies
HDAC Inhibitors + Checkpoint Inhibitors
Drugs: Romidepsin, Mogamulizumab
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PHASE 1 First-in-Human Dose-Finding Studies
Phase 1 trials establish safety profiles and determine recommended doses for novel anticancer agents in early-stage development.
Search for active Phase 1 trials on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗
Find Clinical Trials Near You
Interested in participating in a clinical trial? Visit ClinicalTrials.gov to search for trials by location, cancer type, and eligibility criteria. Discuss options with your oncologist to determine if clinical trial participation is appropriate for you.
Search ClinicalTrials.gov →🇪🇺 EU Clinical Pipeline (EudraCT Trials)
Active clinical trials registered in EU Clinical Trials Register
Phase 3 Trials
Late-stage European confirmatory trials
Phase 2 Trials
Mid-stage European efficacy trials
Phase 1 Trials
Early-stage European safety trials