| Literature DB >> 21418662 |
Gerhard J Molderings1, Stefan Brettner, Jürgen Homann, Lawrence B Afrin.
Abstract
Mast cell activation disease comprises disorders characterized by accumulation of genetically altered mast cells and/or abnormal release of these cells' mediators, affecting functions in potentially every organ system, often without causing abnormalities in routine laboratory or radiologic testing. In most cases of mast cell activation disease, diagnosis is possible by relatively non-invasive investigation. Effective therapy often consists simply of antihistamines and mast cell membrane-stabilising compounds supplemented with medications targeted at specific symptoms and complications. Mast cell activation disease is now appreciated to likely be considerably prevalent and thus should be considered routinely in the differential diagnosis of patients with chronic multisystem polymorbidity or patients in whom a definitively diagnosed major illness does not well account for the entirety of the patient's presentation.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21418662 PMCID: PMC3069946 DOI: 10.1186/1756-8722-4-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Classification of mast cell activation disease (modified from [2-4]).
| Mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS) | |
| Systemic mastocytosis (SM) defined by the WHO criteria | |
| Mast cell leukemia (MCL) | |
Criteria proposed to define mast cell activation disease (for references, see text).
| Criteria to define | WHO criteria to define |
|---|---|
| 1. Multifocal or disseminated dense infiltrates of mast cells in bone marrow biopsies and/or in sections of other extracutaneous organ(s) (e.g., gastrointestinal tract biopsies; CD117-, tryptase- and CD25-stained) | Multifocal dense infiltrates of mast cells (>15 mast cells in aggregates) in bone marrow biopsies and/or in sections of other extracutaneous organ(s) (CD117-, tryptase- and CD25-stained) |
| 2. Unique constellation of clinical complaints as a result of a pathologically increased mast cell activity (mast cell mediator release syndrome) | |
| 1. Mast cells in bone marrow or other extracutaneous organ(s) show an abnormal morphology (>25%) in bone marrow smears or in histologies | 1. Mast cells in bone marrow or other extracutaneous organ(s) show an abnormal morphology (>25%) in bone marrow smears or in histologies |
| 2. Mast cells in bone marrow express CD2 and/or CD25 | 2. Mast cells in bone marrow express CD2 and/or CD25 |
| 3. Detection of genetic changes in mast cells from blood, bone marrow or extracutaneous organs for which an impact on the state of activity of affected mast cells in terms of an increased activity has been proved. | 3. c-kit mutation in tyrosine kinase at codon 816 in mast cells in extracutaneous organ(s) |
| 4. Evidence of a pathologically increased release of mast cell mediators by determination of the content of | 4. Serum total tryptase >20 ng/ml (does not apply in patients who have associated hematologic non-mast-cell lineage disease) |
| • tryptase in blood | |
| • N-methylhistamine in urine | |
| • heparin in blood | |
| • chromogranin A in blood | |
| • other mast cell-specific mediators (e.g., leukotrienes, prostaglandin D2) |
The diagnosis mast cell activation syndrome is made if both major criteria or the second criterion and at least one minor criterion are fulfilled. According to the WHO criteria [1], the diagnosis systemic mastocytosis is established if the major criterion and at least one minor criterion or at least three minor criteria are fulfilled.
Frequent signs and clinical symptoms ascribed to episodic unregulated release of mast cell mediators (modified from [12]; further references therein; an exhaustive survey is given in [50]).
| Signs and Symptoms | |
|---|---|
| abdominal pain, intestinal cramping and bloating, diarrhea and/or obstipation, nausea, non-cardiac chest pain, Helicobacter pylori-negative gastritis, malabsorption | |
| burning pain, aphthae | |
| cough, asthma-like symptoms, dyspnea, rhinitis, sinusitis | |
| conjunctivitis, difficulty in focusing | |
| splenomegaly, hyperbilirubinemia, elevation of liver transaminases, hypercholesterolemia | |
| tachycardia, blood pressure irregularity (hypotension and/or hypertension), syncope, hot flush | |
| headache, neuropathic pain, polyneuropathy, decreased attention span, difficulty in concentration, forgetfulness, anxiety, sleeplessness, organic brain syndrome, vertigo, lightheadedness, tinnitus | |
| urticaria pigmentosa, hives, efflorescences with/without pruritus, telangiectasia, flushing, angioedema | |
| muscle pain, osteoporosis/osteopenia, bone pain, migratory arthritis | |
| fatigue, asthenia, fever, environmental sensitivities | |
Figure 1Diagnostic algorithm.
Diseases which should be considered as differential diagnoses of mast cell activation disease, since they may mimick or may be associated with mast cell activation (diagnostic procedure of choice in parentheses).
| Diabetes mellitus (laboratory determination) | |
|---|---|
| Helicobacter-positive gastritis (gastroscopy, biopsy) | |
| Carcinoid tumour (medical history, laboratory determination) | |
Treatment options for mast cell activation disease.
| • H1-histamine receptor antagonist (to block activating H1-histamine receptors on mast cells; to antagonize H1-histamine receptor-mediated symptoms) | |
|---|---|
| • |
All drugs should be tested for tolerance in a low single dose before therapeutic use, if their tolerance in the patient is not known from an earlier application.