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Title: Paucity of intraepidermal FoxP3-positive T cells in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma in contrast with spongiotic and lichenoid dermatitis. Author: Wada DA, Wilcox RA, Weenig RH, Gibson LE. Journal: J Cutan Pathol; 2010 May; 37(5):535-41. PubMed ID: 19674197. Abstract: BACKGROUND: FoxP3 is the most specific available marker for regulatory T cells (Tregs). Tumor-associated FoxP3-positive Tregs have been identified in various neoplasms, including cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). FoxP3 expression in CTCL varies across groups; few studies have compared CTCL with inflammatory conditions. METHODS: Lesional skin biopsies from 20 patients with CTCL [13 mycosis fungoides (MF); 7 Sézary syndrome (SS)] and 22 with inflammatory dermatoses (11 spongiotic; 11 lichenoid or interface) were examined for FoxP3 expression by immunohistochemistry. Epidermal FoxP3-positive lymphocytes were counted as a percentage of the total epidermal CD3-positive T-cell population. RESULTS: FoxP3-positive T cells composed the minority of infiltrate in all major categories. Lower numbers of epidermal FoxP3-positive T cells were observed in CTCL, particularly MF, than in inflammatory dermatoses (P < .001). CTCL neoplastic T cells did not express FoxP3. CONCLUSION: FoxP3-positive T cells are less frequently encountered in MF than in inflammatory dermatoses. FoxP3-positive T cells occur in higher proportions in the dermis than in the epidermis and probably correlate with coexisting inflammatory components. CTCL neoplastic cells do not typically express a Treg phenotype and are associated with low numbers of FoxP3-positive Tregs in the infiltrate. FoxP3 expression by immunohistochemistry may aid histologic evaluation of these conditions.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]