Simple Summary Sézary syndrome (SS) is a leukemic and incurable variant of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma characterized by the accumulation of neoplastic CD4+ lymphocytes in the blood, lymph nodes, and skin.… Click to show full abstract
Simple Summary Sézary syndrome (SS) is a leukemic and incurable variant of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma characterized by the accumulation of neoplastic CD4+ lymphocytes in the blood, lymph nodes, and skin. With the exception of allogenic transplantation, no curative chance is available to treat SS, and it is a priority to find new therapies that target SS cells within all disease compartments. This review aims to summarize the more recent analyses conducted on skin- and blood-derived SS cells concurrently obtained from the same SS patients. The results highlighted that skin-SS cells were more active/proliferating with respect to matched blood SS cells that instead appeared quiescent. These data shed the light on the possibility to treat blood and skin SS cells with different compounds, respectively. Moreover, this review recaps the more recent findings on the heterogeneity of circulating SS cells that presented a series of novel markers that could improve diagnosis, prognosis and therapy of this lymphoma. Abstract Sézary syndrome (SS) is an aggressive variant of cutaneous t-cell lymphoma characterized by the accumulation of neoplastic CD4+ lymphocytes—the SS cells—mainly in blood, lymph nodes, and skin. The tumor spread pattern of SS makes this lymphoma a unique model of disease that allows a concurrent blood and skin sampling for analysis. This review summarizes the recent studies highlighting the transcriptional programs triggered by the crosstalk between SS cells and blood–skin microenvironments. Emerging data proved that skin-derived SS cells show consistently higher activation/proliferation rates, mainly driven by T-cell receptor signaling with respect to matched blood SS cells that instead appear quiescent. Biochemical analyses also demonstrated an hyperactivation of PI3K/AKT/mTOR, a targetable pathway by multiple inhibitors currently in clinical trials, in skin SS cells compared with a paired blood counterpart. These results indicated that active and quiescent SS cells coexist in this lymphoma, and that they could be respectively treated with different therapeutics. Finally, this review underlines the more recent discoveries into the heterogeneity of circulating SS cells, highlighting a series of novel markers that could improve the diagnosis and that represent novel therapeutic targets (GPR15, PTPN13, KLRB1, and ITGB1) as well as new genetic markers (PD-1 and CD39) able to stratify SS patients for disease aggressiveness.
               
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