Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm
BPDCN; previously "blastic NK-cell lymphoma" / "agranular CD4+ CD56+ haematodermic neoplasm" (older, incorrect โ origin proven to be plasmacytoid dendritic cells); blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukaemia / lymphoma
Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm is a rare and aggressive haematological malignancy of plasmacytoid dendritic cell origin. In WHO-HAEM5 (5th edition, 2022) and the parallel ICC 2022, BPDCN is classified under plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasms / histiocytic-dendritic cell neoplasms (revised from its earlier placement under "myeloid neoplasms and acute leukaemia" in WHO 2017). Although it is a systemic disease, almost all patients (~90%) present with characteristic skin manifestations as the initial sign โ distinctive bruise-like, violaceous to red-brown patches, plaques and nodules with a strikingly truncal predilection. Bone marrow, peripheral blood, lymph nodes and (less commonly) CNS are also involved at diagnosis or develop rapidly thereafter. The diagnostic immunophenotype โ CD4+ CD56+ CD123+ TCL1+ TCF4+ CD303+ โ is unique. Until 2018 BPDCN was uniformly fatal with median survival 12โ14 months; the CD123-directed agent tagraxofusp (Elzonris) has substantially improved outcomes for those who can subsequently receive allogeneic stem-cell transplantation. The NICE technology appraisal for tagraxofusp in BPDCN (TA782) was terminated — there is no positive NICE recommendation; any UK use should be confirmed through specialist haematology MDT and current local / specialist funding, IFR, clinical-trial or compassionate-use routes.
Clinical features
- Skin involvement in ~90% at presentation โ frequently the first manifestation that prompts a haematology referral.
- Characteristic bruise-like (purpuric / violaceous), red-brown patches, plaques or nodules; occasionally ulcerated.
- Truncal and head/neck predilection; lower limbs less common.
- Bone marrow involvement (~75โ90% at presentation): cytopenias.
- Lymph node and splenic involvement common.
- Leukaemic blood involvement frequent.
- CNS involvement at presentation in ~10%; develops in ~25% during the disease course.
- Median age 60โ70; M:F ~3:1.
- Differential: leukaemia cutis (AML, CLL); cutaneous lymphoma (PCDLBCL-LT, PCBCL, MF tumour stage); cutaneous metastasis; vasculitis; Kaposi sarcoma.
Histology & immunophenotype
- Dense, monomorphic dermal infiltrate of medium-sized blasts with fine "blastic" chromatin and indistinct nucleoli.
- Sparing of the epidermis (Grenz zone).
- Angiocentric / angiodestructive growth common.
- Diagnostic immunophenotype:
- CD4+, CD56+ โ the original diagnostic doublet.
- CD123+ (IL-3Rฮฑ) โ strong, the therapeutic target for tagraxofusp.
- TCL1+, BDCA-2 (CD303)+, BDCA-4+, TCF4+ โ plasmacytoid dendritic cell markers; specific.
- HLA-DR+
- TdT positive in ~30–50% (do not mistake for B-/T-lymphoblastic leukaemia); CD68 often shows a characteristic punctate cytoplasmic dot pattern.
- Negative for lineage-defining markers — CD3, CD20, CD19, CD79a, MPO, lysozyme, CD117 — distinguishing from AML and B-/T-cell lymphomas.
- EBV negative.
- Cytogenetics โ complex karyotype with multiple deletions; recurrent NPM1, TET2, ASXL1, IKZF1 mutations.
Staging
- FBC, peripheral blood film and flow cytometry.
- Bone marrow aspirate and trephine.
- CT chest/abdomen/pelvis ยฑ PET-CT.
- Lumbar puncture for CSF cytology and flow cytometry.
- HLA typing and donor work-up if allogeneic transplantation contemplated.
- Refer urgently to a specialist haematology service.
Management
- Multidisciplinary management through a specialist leukaemia / lymphoma service.
- First-line — tagraxofusp (Elzonris):
- CD123-directed cytotoxin (anti-CD123 + diphtheria toxin) for first-line treatment of adults.
- The NICE appraisal (TA782) was terminated — not NICE-recommended. Any UK use should be confirmed through the local specialist haematology service and current local / specialist funding, IFR, clinical-trial or compassionate-use route before initiating.
- Response rate ~90%; complete response ~57% in first-line.
- Toxicities: capillary leak syndrome (potentially severe), hepatic transaminitis, thrombocytopenia.
- Used as a bridge to allogeneic transplantation in fit patients.
- Intensive chemotherapy regimens (HyperCVAD, ALL-style, AML-style) โ historical first-line; now reserved for patients ineligible for tagraxofusp.
- Allogeneic haematopoietic stem-cell transplantation in first remission โ the only curative modality; substantially improves long-term survival.
- CNS prophylaxis (intrathecal methotrexate / cytarabine) given high CNS relapse risk.
- Relapsed / refractory disease โ clinical trials (CD123 CAR-T cells, BCL2 inhibitor venetoclax, BET inhibitors).
Prognosis
Historically grim โ median overall survival 12โ14 months without targeted therapy or transplantation. With tagraxofusp followed by allogeneic transplantation in remission, 2-year overall survival approaches 50% in fit younger patients. CNS relapse remains a major cause of treatment failure. Long-term surveillance (clinical, marrow, imaging, CSF) is essential.
References
- Pemmaraju N et al. Tagraxofusp in blastic plasmacytoid dendritic-cell neoplasm. N Engl J Med; 2019.
- Sukswai N et al. Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm โ diagnostic criteria and management. Pathology; 2020.
- NICE TA782. Tagraxofusp for treating blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (terminated appraisal). London: NICE; no recommendation; accessed 18 May 2026.
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