Is Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma a Death Sentence?

Posted by paulb2112 @paulb2112, Jul 18 11:53pm

Hi, I’m 61 years old. Not 100% diagnosed yet. They still have to do a genetic organization test. But biopsy came back with elevated white blood cells and lymphatic infiltrates.
My red patch is in my groin area on the right side about the size of a small 5” pancake. It is red but faint, not raised, a little shiny, but no itching or cracking. No night sweats, no fever, no cuts or bleeding. Not presenting as advanced. Dermatologist is unsure and sending me to oncologist. I’m seeing “5 years to live” all over the internet and it’s scaring me to death. I just got the news today. While it’s not definite should I be worried about a short timeline? Can the biopsy showing elevated t-cells not necessarily be cancerous? If they are cancerous, what is my life expectancy. I do have a pre-existing lung disease/immune related, that has been in remission for 11 years. I’m healthy with perfect weight for my height, workout and run 3.5 miles daily. Drink only one light alcoholic drink per week. Do not smoke. I’ve only had this red patch for seven weeks. Please help provide some information if you can. Thanks, Paul

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I was diagnosed with T Cell Lymphoma (Sezary Syndrome) in 01/23. My understanding is that it’s not life threatening, just life changing. The worst of the symptoms is the itching which is beyond description.
Wishing you the best in your journey through this

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Nice reply, norseman44, and thanks for contributing so quickly.

Pual, please see:

"...What is the prognosis for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma?
How long someone lives varies with the type of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma they have, the stage of the cancer, the person’s age, and their overall health.

For most patients, the prognosis is good. This is especially true when the disease is found early and treated. With ongoing care, many people live for decades after their diagnosis..."

This is approximately halfway down the following page:
https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/a-z/ctcl-overview
I urge you to be optimistic, not fatalistic, and to await further pinpointing of the type. Please try not to fret, as numbing as such a diagnosis must surely be.

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I've had it since 2015. Radiation came first, but hat has limited value. I'm told it doesn't work as well the second time in the same area. I use Clobetasol .05% to treat specific spots. My Oncologist said they might try U.V. light if it gets out of control. I am on a low carb diet (G.O.L.O.) and make sure I take vitamin D3 and Zinc to strengthen my immune system. Blessings!

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Thank you for this, I need this so bad. I’m a scaredy cat, because I’ve had a lung disease in 2013 and am well and no longer show signs of it, and now this. Can’t catch a break!

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@pastororwin580

I've had it since 2015. Radiation came first, but hat has limited value. I'm told it doesn't work as well the second time in the same area. I use Clobetasol .05% to treat specific spots. My Oncologist said they might try U.V. light if it gets out of control. I am on a low carb diet (G.O.L.O.) and make sure I take vitamin D3 and Zinc to strengthen my immune system. Blessings!

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So sorry for your struggles with the treatment. I’m hoping you’ll find just the right treatment that works. 9 years is a good run so far! I think I’m in the very early stages, only six weeks with a rash on my inner thigh. I caught it super early. They are optimistic that it can be treated with creams and potions. I’m just scared about living my life with this new challenge. Has it impacted your life in a devastating way? Or is it more like a huge annoyance? My fear is that it will come back somewhere else and end up killing me. 😣

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@gloaming

Nice reply, norseman44, and thanks for contributing so quickly.

Pual, please see:

"...What is the prognosis for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma?
How long someone lives varies with the type of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma they have, the stage of the cancer, the person’s age, and their overall health.

For most patients, the prognosis is good. This is especially true when the disease is found early and treated. With ongoing care, many people live for decades after their diagnosis..."

This is approximately halfway down the following page:
https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/a-z/ctcl-overview
I urge you to be optimistic, not fatalistic, and to await further pinpointing of the type. Please try not to fret, as numbing as such a diagnosis must surely be.

Jump to this post

I will certainly try. I know we caught this early and that’s a positive thing. When I hear “cancer” it’s just frightening. If treatment works and it goes into remission , does that mean it will just come back somewhere else?

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Unfortunately, with cancer, there are no firm bets. Cancer can be 'beaten into submission' and appear to be gone for a long time, but suddenly it rears up again somewhere else, always as a slow metastases. Some go and a person lives to a ripe old age, never developing any other cancers, not even metastatic from the original. Some cancers, like breast and colon, tend to migrate, so they are best caught early.

I know next to nothing about your condition, but it is unlikely, to me, that what you have now is related to your previous cancer. Again, I am new to this, and know that some cancers can appear to be 'in remission' for years, and then reappear. Nothing I have read suggests that the experts know the cause of your lymphoma type, and neither have any of the sites I visited quickly stated that it can be the result of earlier cancers in the same patient.

However, the cutaneous T-Lymphoma can spread to other parts of the body, so it bears close monitoring. I wish I had better information and a better prognosis, but it seems as if each patient is going to be a unique case.

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@gloaming

Unfortunately, with cancer, there are no firm bets. Cancer can be 'beaten into submission' and appear to be gone for a long time, but suddenly it rears up again somewhere else, always as a slow metastases. Some go and a person lives to a ripe old age, never developing any other cancers, not even metastatic from the original. Some cancers, like breast and colon, tend to migrate, so they are best caught early.

I know next to nothing about your condition, but it is unlikely, to me, that what you have now is related to your previous cancer. Again, I am new to this, and know that some cancers can appear to be 'in remission' for years, and then reappear. Nothing I have read suggests that the experts know the cause of your lymphoma type, and neither have any of the sites I visited quickly stated that it can be the result of earlier cancers in the same patient.

However, the cutaneous T-Lymphoma can spread to other parts of the body, so it bears close monitoring. I wish I had better information and a better prognosis, but it seems as if each patient is going to be a unique case.

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Thank you kindly for your reply. To give you some background: The lung disease I had was likely immune related, and not cancerous. It was 11 years ago. It’s called interstitial lung disease, but we think it was an isolated “event” because it has seemingly resolved itself. I have had no relapses in about 9 years and my doctor considers me “resolved.” I am not even fully diagnosed yet as of Thursday morning. That’s when I received the initial biopsy report, that I’m told is “not a diagnosis.” I have a small red patch in one location on my groin right leg, where many lymph nodes are. They call it the “bathing trunk” area. I had a biopsy about 10 days ago. The pathology shows what my doctor calls a “suspicion that it might be t-cell lymphoma” and has sent me to see a cutaneous oncologist probably in the next two weeks after they also review the biopsy slides. There is still pending gene rearrangement test that would either support or negate the suspicion, however, I’m told if the gene test is negative, I’m still not 100% out of the woods. The rash is only 6-7 weeks old at most. I fought it very early, and I made sure my GP sent me to a dermatologist right away. The hardest part dealing with this is that I have been applying topical steroids, and other things like antibiotic creams and eczema ointments and it hasn’t cleared. I don’t have night sweats, fever, or itching of any kind, except recently at the biopsy location. The lesion is approximately 5-6 inches round and is not raised or flaky, and doesn’t have spores or puss, etc. its possible, I’m overreacting, and the biopsy not conclusive, but just seeing the biopsy report and seeing my white blood cell count high and this rash that won’t go away, I’m preparing myself for the worse. I realize it’s treatable but I’m reading about 5 year to 9 year life expectancy and it scares me to death. I just got married 2 years ago at 59 for the first time, I thought I was going to live my life normally, and fear this will change everything.

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Shucks. Being in this quandary can't be great for good sleep and calm. I guess there's nothing for it but to await a formal diagnosis. It would be great if it had been just a dermatitis, but as you have resorted to the usual fixes, and the lesion is still intractable, we'll just have to be patient and hope for the best.

Congratulations on your recent marriage, even if late in life. It's a major, and great, accomplishment to find a mate and to cleave to him/her with the same finality and verve as how one approaches life's other great undertakings. I hope you get to enjoy many more years of marital bliss. 😀

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@paulb2112

Thank you kindly for your reply. To give you some background: The lung disease I had was likely immune related, and not cancerous. It was 11 years ago. It’s called interstitial lung disease, but we think it was an isolated “event” because it has seemingly resolved itself. I have had no relapses in about 9 years and my doctor considers me “resolved.” I am not even fully diagnosed yet as of Thursday morning. That’s when I received the initial biopsy report, that I’m told is “not a diagnosis.” I have a small red patch in one location on my groin right leg, where many lymph nodes are. They call it the “bathing trunk” area. I had a biopsy about 10 days ago. The pathology shows what my doctor calls a “suspicion that it might be t-cell lymphoma” and has sent me to see a cutaneous oncologist probably in the next two weeks after they also review the biopsy slides. There is still pending gene rearrangement test that would either support or negate the suspicion, however, I’m told if the gene test is negative, I’m still not 100% out of the woods. The rash is only 6-7 weeks old at most. I fought it very early, and I made sure my GP sent me to a dermatologist right away. The hardest part dealing with this is that I have been applying topical steroids, and other things like antibiotic creams and eczema ointments and it hasn’t cleared. I don’t have night sweats, fever, or itching of any kind, except recently at the biopsy location. The lesion is approximately 5-6 inches round and is not raised or flaky, and doesn’t have spores or puss, etc. its possible, I’m overreacting, and the biopsy not conclusive, but just seeing the biopsy report and seeing my white blood cell count high and this rash that won’t go away, I’m preparing myself for the worse. I realize it’s treatable but I’m reading about 5 year to 9 year life expectancy and it scares me to death. I just got married 2 years ago at 59 for the first time, I thought I was going to live my life normally, and fear this will change everything.

Jump to this post

I was being treated for psoriasis for about 5 years before my lymphoma raised its head.
Only when my WBC spiralled to 125 did they send me to a hematologist who diagnosed the T Cell. Oncology identified it as Sezary Syndrome

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