Dupilumab-Associated Lymphoid Reactions in Patients With Atopic Dermatitis

JAMA Dermatology
Open Access

Clinical Summary

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What was studied

Retrospective observational case series of adults with atopic dermatitis on dupilumab (October 2017–July 2022, single center) who developed clinical suspicion of cutaneous T‑cell lymphoma; skin biopsies before, during, and after treatment were reassessed to characterize lymphoid reactions versus mycosis fungoides.

Key findings

Among 14 patients, 3 were retrospectively diagnosed with preexisting mycosis fungoides and 11 with a dupilumab‑associated lymphoid reaction that mimicked MF clinically but showed distinctive histology (sprinkled small hyperchromatic lymphocytes in upper epidermis, dysregulated CD4:CD8 ratio, CD30 overexpression without loss of CD2/CD3/CD5); median time to clinical worsening was 4.0 months (IQR 1.4–10.0), and posttreatment biopsies showed complete clearance of the lymphoid reaction in all patients.

Study limitations

Single‑center retrospective case series with a small, selected cohort limited to patients who clinically deteriorated and were suspected of CTCL; posttreatment biopsies were not available for all patients; molecular (TCR clonality) data were frequently unavailable.

Clinical implications

Dupilumab can trigger a benign, reversible lymphoid reaction that mimics CTCL in adults with atopic dermatitis; recognizing its distinctive histopathology and reassessing after discontinuation are key, as lesions cleared on posttreatment biopsy in this series.