Dupixent (dupilumab) and T-cell lymphoma (CTCL)

Licensed attorney since 2007. Licensed to practice law in Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and Washington D.C.

Nathan's Accollades & Practice Areas He Specializes In

Concerned about a CTCL diagnosis after Dupixent? Proven injury lawyers for Alabama & Georgia.

Call now: 205-533-7878 (AL)  |  706-550-9000 (GA)    Free Consultation

If you or a loved one developed or were later diagnosed with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) after treatment with Dupixent (dupilumab), you deserve clear answers and fast help. Our team investigates potential drug-injury and misdiagnosis cases across Alabama and Georgia, coordinating with dermatology/oncology experts to review timelines, pathology, and whether earlier testing or warnings should have occurred.

Common Causes — And the Proof That Wins

Cause Key Evidence
CTCL mistaken for eczema before/while on Dupixent Dermatology notes, photo timeline, biopsy/pathology slides, second-read by hematopathology expert
Delayed biopsy or inadequate workup of non-healing “eczema” Care timelines, referral records, guideline comparisons, expert opinions
Failure to warn of lymphoma red-flags and need for monitoring Medication guides, consent forms, pharmacy counseling logs, manufacturer literature
Inadequate follow-up after worsening or spreading lesions Appointment intervals, triage messages, escalation requests, imaging/biopsy orders
Pharmacy or charting errors (missed alerts, documentation gaps) EHR audit trails, pharmacy logs, adverse event reports, witness statements

Why Choose Bodewell

Advantage Benefit
Drug-injury & misdiagnosis focus in AL/GA We map timelines and guidelines to show what should have happened—and when
Pathology & oncology expert network Independent slide reviews strengthen causation and liability theories
Proven results in complex injury claims Strategic negotiation and trial readiness drive better settlements
Hands-on client service Regular updates, direct access to your lawyer, and clear action plans
No fee unless we win You pay nothing up front; we advance case costs

Dupixent (dupilumab) and T-cell lymphoma (CTCL): what we look for

  • Whether CTCL signs were present before Dupixent and went unrecognized
  • Changes after starting Dupixent—worsening plaques, new tumors, lymph node symptoms
  • Delays in biopsy, staging, or oncology referral
  • Duty to warn, monitor, and promptly reassess non-responsive “eczema”
  • Economic and human losses tied to the delay or failure to diagnose

Compensation May Include

  • Medical bills (diagnostics, treatment, travel)
  • Lost income and reduced earning capacity
  • Pain, mental anguish, and loss of quality of life
  • Caregiving and household help
  • Wrongful death damages where applicable

Deadlines in Alabama & Georgia

Many claims must be filed within two years; some notices are shorter—call to confirm your exact deadline.

  • Alabama: generally 2 years; contributory negligence may be raised by defendants; 6-month municipal notice can apply in certain claims.
  • Georgia: generally 2 years; modified comparative fault; city/county ante-litem notice may apply for government entities.

What To Do Now

  1. Get your full medical file: dermatology, pathology slides/blocks, oncology, pharmacy records.
  2. Document your timeline: first symptoms, Dupixent start/stop dates, biopsies, referrals.
  3. List witnesses: family, pharmacists, nurses who observed symptom changes.
  4. Call us for a free review: we coordinate expert reads and deadline checks.
  5. Do not delay—evidence and deadlines are time-sensitive in AL/GA.

Talk to a lawyer today: 205-533-7878 (AL)  |  706-550-9000 (GA)    Free Consultation

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. This page provides general information, not legal advice. For direct help, visit /contact/ or meet our team at /meet-our-team/.

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