Pharmacological treatment options for mast cell activation disease

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Abstract

Mast cell activation disease (MCAD) is a term referring to a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by aberrant release of variable subsets of mast cell (MC) mediators together with accumulation of either morphologically altered and immunohistochemically identifiable mutated MCs due to MC proliferation (systemic mastocytosis [SM] and MC leukemia [MCL]) or morphologically ordinary MCs due to decreased apoptosis (MC activation syndrome [MCAS] and well-differentiated SM). Clinical signs and symptoms in MCAD vary depending on disease subtype and result from excessive mediator release by MCs and, in aggressive forms, from organ failure related to MC infiltration. In most cases, treatment of MCAD is directed primarily at controlling the symptoms associated with MC mediator release. In advanced forms, such as aggressive SM and MCL, agents targeting MC proliferation such as kinase inhibitors may be provided. Targeted therapies aimed at blocking mutant protein variants and/or downstream signaling pathways are currently being developed. Other targets, such as specific surface antigens expressed on neoplastic MCs, might be considered for the development of future therapies. Since clinicians are often underprepared to evaluate, diagnose, and effectively treat this clinically heterogeneous disease, we seek to familiarize clinicians with MCAD and review current and future treatment approaches.

Figures

  • Fig. 1 May-Grünwald/Giemsa stain of a resting human mast cell and a mast cell following activation-induced degranulation. Note the loss of granule staining. Mast cells obtained from the human bone marrow, magnification 1000×
  • Table 2 Classification of systemic mastocytosis (modified form Valent et al. 2007)
  • Table 1 WHO 2008 diagnostic criteria for systemic mastocytosis (Valent et al. 2001)
  • Table 3 Current provisional criteria to define mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS; modified from Afrin and Molderings 2014)
  • Fig. 2 Scheme of conditions responsible in MCAD for the development of individual phenotypes
  • Table 4 Case series and clinical therapeutic trials in systemic mastocytosis and mast cell activation syndrome
  • Table 5 First-line drugs which can potentially be used in the treatment ofmast cell (MC) activation disease and their target location andmechanisms of action
  • Table 6 Symptomatic treatment (orally as needed) in MCAD (modified from Molderings et al. 2014)

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APA

Molderings, G. J., Haenisch, B., Brettner, S., Homann, J., Menzen, M., Dumoulin, F. L., … Afrin, L. B. (2016, July 1). Pharmacological treatment options for mast cell activation disease. Naunyn-Schmiedeberg’s Archives of Pharmacology. Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00210-016-1247-1

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