Utilities of Various Mast Cell Mediators in Diagnosing Mast Cell Activation Syndrome

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 5174-5174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Zenker ◽  
Lawrence B Afrin

Abstract Distinct from mastocytosis and simple allergy and characterized by constitutive mast cell (MC) activation and aberrant MC reactivity with little to no excessive MC accumulation, MC activation syndrome (MCAS) presents as acute-on-chronic multisystem polymorbidity of generally inflammatory ± allergic theme; severity may be disabling. Given suspicion of epidemic prevalence of MCAS (Molderings GJ et al., PLoS One 2013;8(9):e76241), diagnostic testing efficiency is important. Diagnosis (Molderings GJ et al., J Hematol Oncol 2011;4:10) presently rests on identifying clinical presentation consistent with chronic/recurrent aberrant MC mediator release, identifying elevated MC mediator levels, and eliminating other relevant diagnostic considerations. MCs produce >200 mediators, but few can be tested in clinical laboratories; even fewer are relatively specific to the MC. Mediators often tested in MCAS work-ups include serum tryptase (sTryp) and chromogranin A (sCgA), plasma prostaglandin D2 (pPGD2) and histamine (pHist) and heparin (pHep), random (r) and 24-hour (24h) urinary PGD2 (uPGD2) and N-methylhistamine (uNMH) and leukotriene E4 (LTE4), and 24h urinary 11-β-PGF2α (u11βPGF2α). Testing the entire suite may be prohibitively expensive, but few data on frequency of elevation of MC mediators are available to guide cost-effective testing (pHep may be the most sensitive per Vysniauskaite M et al., PLoS ONE 2015;10(4):e0124912). Test accuracy for many MC mediators (especially heparin and the eicosanoids) is also challenged by thermolability and half-lives as short as ~1 minute. Loss of specimen chill during handling (e.g., unrefrigerated centrifugation (UCF)) or transport may yield false negatives. Methods: We reviewed the charts of 198 adult pts (97% Caucasian, 84% female) evaluated at our center and diagnosed with MC activation disease (MCAD: MCAS (184), CM (4), indolent SM (9), aggressive SM (1)) from July 2014 through July 2015. Results: Table 1 shows performance in MCAS pts of MC mediators in tests accessioned at our center (testing accessioned elsewhere censored to reduce bias from variability in specimen handling by pts and lab staff not known to have been educated regarding proper specimen handling). Our sTryp results agree closely with Vysniauskaite et al. but are lower than found in smaller cohorts in Zblewski D et al., Blood 2014;124(21):3204 (>33%) and Ravi A et al., J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract 2014;2(6):775. Table 1. MC mediator performance in diagnostic testing for MCAS. Mediator # Tests Performed # Tests Yielding Elevated Result % Elevated % Elevated Comparisons Vysniauskaite (n=238) Zblewski (n=15) Ravi (n=25) sTryp 147 13 8.8 10 >40 40 sCgA 133 42 31.5 12 pPGD2 113 15 13.2 pHist 133 39 29.3 pHep* 121 35 28.9 59 r-uPGD2 102 10 9.8 r-uNMH 108 8 7.4 r-uLTE4 68 3 4.4 24h-uPGD2 107 41 38.3 24h-uNMH 111 6 5.4 22 8 24h-uLTE4 72 6 8.3 24h-u11βPGF2α 68 25 36.8 *Results affected by use of UCF in some cases; see below. Upon our recognition of oddly persistently negative pHep levels, a review of procedures in late December 2014 discovered specimen centrifugation since July 2014 had not been refrigerated. Refrigerated centrifugation (RCF) was immediately instituted, but lab issues led to inadvertent return in February 2015 to UCF which was re-discovered and re-corrected in March 2015. The rate of finding elevations in pHep levels (upper normal 0.02 anti-Factor Xa units/ml per Seidel et al., Thromb Haemost 2011;106(5):987) appeared strongly correlated with use of RCF (p <0.00001; Figure 1). RCF improved the rate of finding elevated pHep from 1 of 50 patients tested (2.0%) to 34 of 70 patients tested (48.6%). Other mediators did not appear significantly affected by UCF. Conclusions: In our cohort (5:1 female:male vs. previously reported 2-3:1 ratios), pHep, 24uPGD2, and 24u11βPG2α appeared the most sensitive indicators of MC activation; sTryp and urinary NMH and LTE4 appeared least sensitive. Our data confirm others' findings that sTryp is seldom elevated in MCAS; thus, normal sTryp decreases likelihood of mastocytosis but not MCAS. A sensitive assay is needed when testing pHep for evidence of MC activation as most elevated pHep levels in the MCAS population are below more commonly used assays' lower limits of detection (typically 0.10-0.20 anti-Factor Xa units/ml, geared to detect therapeutic pHep levels). Continuous specimen chilling appears important in accurately measuring pHep. Figure 1. Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 5194-5194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence B Afrin

Distinct from mastocytosis and simple allergy and characterized by constitutive mast cell (MC) activation and aberrant MC reactivity with little to no excessive MC accumulation, MC activation syndrome (MCAS) presents as acute-on-chronic multisystem polymorbidity of generally inflammatory ± allergic theme and may be epidemically prevalent (PLoS ONE 2013;8(9):e76241). Occasional patients (pts) suffer nearly continuous anaphylactoid and/or dysautonomic states poorly controlled by intermittently dosed epinephrine (epi), antihistamines, steroids, etc. Many medications (meds) have helped MCAS pts, but there are not yet any biomarkers predictive of effective therapy. Pts often try many meds, but med trials in pts suffering very frequent flares are impractical in that a flaring soon after dosing of a new med cannot be distinguished from "baseline" flaring from yet-uncontrolled disease vs. flaring in specific reaction to the new med. Thus, med trials in severe MCAS often are prematurely terminated for safety. Some modicum of stability is required to pursue med trials in such pts. Diphenhydramine (DPH) is a well tolerated histamine H1 receptor blocker which can quickly suppress MC activation and is used to treat allergic reactions and anaphylaxis. However, its half-life is as short as 1 hr (www.drugbank.ca/drugs/DB01075). Severely afflicted MCAS pts often need many DPH treatments each day (preferably intravenously (IV) for fastest onset of action); cumulative daily dosing often is 10-fold or more greater than the common single dosage of 25-50 mg. Intermittently dosed, though, its initially therapeutic serum level rapidly declines to subtherapeutic and the pt seesaws into yet another flare. The safety of continuous DPH infusion (CDI) was established in trials of the "BAD" regimen (DPH (Benadryl), lorazepam (Ativan), and dexamethasone) in refractory chemotherapy-induced emesis in adult and pediatric pts (Bone Marrow Transplant 1999;24:561; Pediatr Blood Cancer 2007;48:330). Reviewed here are several cases of life-threatening MCAS stabilized with CDI. Methods: Ten pts were treated (age range 18-49; 9 women). All were disabled from virtually continuous anaphylactoid and/or severely dysautonomic (e.g., pseudoepileptic, hypotensive, etc.) flaring despite multiple treatments daily including subcutaneous epi, DPH (25-100 mg doses by IV, intramuscular, and/or oral routes), H2 blockers, etc. Median total daily DPH dose before CDI was 600 mg (range 600-800 mg = 25-33 mg/hr). CDI was initiated in all at 5 mg/hr (≤20% of total daily DPH dose). With each flare, rescue DPH 25-50 mg IV was given and CDI was increased 1-2 mg/hr. Results: All 10 pts were already hospitalized for virtually continuous anaphylaxis; 2 had been continuously in intensive care units (ICUs) for 12 days and 8 weeks. Nine pts (including both ICU pts) ceased flaring once CDI reached 10-12 mg/hr (240-288 mg/d, <50% of prior total daily DPH consumption). Rates <10 mg/hr were uniformly ineffective. One pt reached 17 mg/hr without responding and treatment was stopped. Responders ceased flaring 12-24h, and were discharged 18-48h, after initiation of CDI. With indwelling lines and portable pumps, responders could continue CDI and demand-dose bolus DPH to address further flares. Two responders continued after discharge to suffer a flare every ~1-2 days, but increase of CDI to 13-14.5 mg/hr (312-348 mg/d) reduced flares to once every 1-4 weeks. With follow-up ranging 0.5-21 months (median 13), responders report continuing flares at greatly reduced rates ranging ~1-4/month (and much less severe), each time readily controllable with 10-25 mg of bolus DPH. No tolerance or other evidence of waning DPH effect was seen. No early or late toxicity has been identified. Eight responders pursued trials of other meds which generally proved well-tolerated, but no responder has gained sufficient improvement with other meds to permit weaning off CDI. Conclusions: In this small retrospective series of MCAS pts suffering almost continuous anaphylactoid/dysautonomic flares, CDI at 10-14.5 mg/hr appeared effective in most pts at dramatically reducing flare rates and appeared safely sustainable at stable dosing for at least 21 months. Stabilization has enabled successful trials of other helpful meds, but no pt has yet successfully stopped CDI. More research is needed to better understand MCAS pathobiology and identify better treatments. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 4878-4878 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence B Afrin ◽  
Frank Cichocki ◽  
Andrea Hoeschen ◽  
Kenneth B Beckman ◽  
Kalpna Gupta ◽  
...  

Abstract Recently recognized but likely prevalent, mast cell (MC) activation syndrome (MCAS) presents as heterogeneous chronic multisystem polymorbidity of generally inflammatory ± allergic theme; severity can be disabling. MCAS features aberrant MC reactivity and constitutive MC activation with little MC accumulation [Afrin, Ann Med 48:190-201], distinct from mastocytosis (rare and notable for recurrent KIT codon 816 variants). Studies at Univ. of Bonn [Molderings, Scand J Gastroenterol 42:1045-53 and Immunogenetics 62:721-7] suggest most MCAS patients (pts) bear in peripheral blood (PB) MCs somatic, likely constitutively activating, non-codon-816 variants, and some splicing variants, in mRNA for KIT, the dominant MC regulatory gene (MCRG). Other studies show most mastocytosis, too, bears variants in many MCRGs beyond KIT [e.g., Soverini, Blood 126:4085], suggesting the same is likely in MCAS. Confirmation of MCRG variants in MCAS would spur new direction in research in MCAS and chronic inflammatory diseases (CIDs) possibly born of MCAS [Afrin, Transl Res 174:33-59]. We are studying (UMN IRB-approved protocol 2015NTLS023) mRNA for KIT and other MCRGs in PB MCs from MCAS pts and controls (ctls). Methods: We extracted (Miltenyi CD117 immunomagnetic bead method per Bonn) PB MCs from 20 pts aged 18-50 diagnosed at UMN Jul-Dec 2015 with MCAS per criteria [Molderings, J Hematol Oncol 4:10] which in our experience (>1000 pts) reflects MCAS behavior better than other criteria [Valent, Int Arch Allergy Immunol 157:215-25]. We plan the same for 20 demographically matched ctls meeting rigorous good health criteria to exclude illness possibly from undiagnosed MCAS (9 ctls accrued so far, sequencing pending). Immunohistochemical staining with anti-human-c-kit antibodies (Thermo Scientific RB-9038-R7) confirmed extracts were pure bright CD117/c-kit-positive cells. mRNA was isolated (Qiagen RNeasy) and sequenced (Agilent HiSeq). Variant analysis of reverse-transcribed sequences from 38 genes (selected [Molderings, Crit Rev Oncol Hematol 93:75-89 and other reports] as regulating MC activation (receptor activation, signal transduction, cytokine production/release)) was performed via well-established GATK-based bioinformatic pipelines [Onsongo, BMC Res Notes 7:314], plus kallisto [Bray, Biotechnology 34:525-7] for finding RNA splice variants. Results: Table 1 shows key pt characteristics (families similarly afflicted). Percentages of pts with elevations of various MC mediators tested in diagnosing MCAS were similar to prior report [Zenker, Blood 126:5174]. Exonic RNAseq showed many variants across many MCRGs in all 20 pts (median 11,276 variants per pt across studied genes; median 3,277 per pt were novel) but no recurrent variant signatures. Table 2 shows high- and medium-impact variants (HMIVs, i.e., frameshifts and missenses) found with high confidence (≥20 reads aligned to the region of the variant in all 20 pts); 8 KIT variants found were low impact (3' untranslated region). As ctls are not yet fully accrued, we show comparator allele frequencies from 3 reference datasets. Other HMIVs were found with less confidence (<20 reads aligned to variant region in ≥1 pt) in ASXL1, CBL, DNMT3B, ETV6, EZH2, HNMT, IDH1, IL13, JAK2, KIT, KMT2A, KRAS, MS4A2, NLRP3, RASGRP4, SETBP1, SF3B1, TBXA2R, TET2, and TP53 (analysis ongoing). No HMIVs were found in ADGRE2, DNMT3A, HRH4, IL4, IL33, KITLG, MRGPRX2, NRAS, PDGFRα/β, RUNX1, SRSF2, SWAP-70, TNF, U2AF1, or VEGFA. We confirmed far greater expression of potentially more activating del(510-513) KIT splice variant in all pts. Discussion: We did not find HMIVs in PB MC KIT mRNA in our pts (we soon will study another 20), but we found all bear many mRNA variants in many MCRGs, requiring further study for significance. Reference datasets may be inadequate comparators, skewed by unrecognized MCAS (suspected prevalence as high as 17% [Molderings, PLoS One 8(9):e76241]), so we are accruing rigorously healthy ctls for similar study. If our ctls are largely devoid of HMIVs in MCRG mRNA from PB MCs (as in [Immunogenetics, op. cit.]), a stronger case will be made that MCAS is primarily a clonal disease, if complicated, heterogeneous, and notwithstanding MC-targeted/activating autoimmunity. Further study of variants will include validation by direct DNA sequencing, characterization, and probing for recurrence in CID-specific MCAS subpopulations. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
pp. 135910532110145
Author(s):  
Jennifer Nicoloro SantaBarbara ◽  
Marci Lobel

Individuals with Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (MCAS), a rare chronic disease, experience unpredictable physical symptoms and diagnostic challenges resulting in poor emotional states. The prevalence and correlates of depressive symptoms were examined among 125 participants who completed the CES-D and relevant instruments. The majority reported a clinically-significant level of depression which was especially common among younger participants and those who reported greater loneliness or more disease-specific stressors. Greater magnitude of depressive symptoms was associated with greater illness intrusiveness, less social support, and lower optimism. Results highlight the value of interventions targeting loneliness and stressors unique to this population.


2017 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 190-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence B. Afrin ◽  
Roger W. Fox ◽  
Susan L. Zito ◽  
Leo Choe ◽  
Sarah C. Glover

2013 ◽  
Vol 304 (10) ◽  
pp. G908-G916 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shizhong Zhang ◽  
Gintautas Grabauskas ◽  
Xiaoyin Wu ◽  
Moon Kyung Joo ◽  
Andrea Heldsinger ◽  
...  

Sensitization of esophageal afferents plays an important role in esophageal nociception, but the mechanism is less clear. Our previous studies demonstrated that mast cell (MC) activation releases the preformed mediators histamine and tryptase, which play important roles in sensitization of esophageal vagal nociceptive C fibers. PGD2 is a lipid mediator released by activated MCs. Whether PGD2 plays a role in this sensitization process has yet to be determined. Expression of the PGD2 DP1 and DP2 receptors in nodose ganglion neurons was determined by immunofluorescence staining, Western blotting, and RT-PCR. Extracellular recordings were performed in ex vivo esophageal-vagal preparations. Action potentials evoked by esophageal distension were compared before and after perfusion of PGD2, DP1 and DP2 receptor agonists, and MC activation, with or without pretreatment with antagonists. The effect of PGD2 on 1,1′-dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (DiI)-labeled esophageal nodose neurons was determined by patch-clamp recording. Our results demonstrate that DP1 and DP2 receptor mRNA and protein were expressed mainly in small- and medium-diameter neurons in nodose ganglia. PGD2 significantly increased esophageal distension-evoked action potential discharges in esophageal nodose C fibers. The DP1 receptor agonist BW 245C mimicked this effect. PGD2 directly sensitized DiI-labeled esophageal nodose neurons by decreasing the action potential threshold. Pretreatment with the DP1 receptor antagonist BW A868C significantly inhibited PGD2 perfusion- or MC activation-induced increases in esophageal distension-evoked action potential discharges in esophageal nodose C fibers. In conclusion, PGD2 plays an important role in MC activation-induced sensitization of esophageal nodose C fibers. This adds a novel mechanism of visceral afferent sensitization.


2021 ◽  
Vol 127 (5) ◽  
pp. S49
Author(s):  
M. Hakim ◽  
D. Kurian ◽  
U. Rehman ◽  
S. Kazmi ◽  
A. Ghazi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabelle Brock ◽  
Nicole Eng ◽  
Anne Maitland

Abstract Mast Cell Activation syndrome (MCAS) is a clinical condition, defined by the combination of 1) typical symptoms, 2) laboratory abnormalities and 3) response to treatment. Patients present with episodic symptoms of aberrant mast cell activation, such as abdominal cramping, asthma, hypotensive episodes, tachycardia, anaphylaxis, unexplained arrhythmias, and neurologic/psychiatric symptoms. Both clonal and nonclonal mast cell activation syndromes have been described, with a greater prevalence of non-clonal MCAS among the pediatric and adult population. Numerous extrinsic triggers of mast cell activation (MCA) are described, but recent reports point to nonatopic triggers, as the predominant, extrinsic stimulants of MCA in the adult population. The etiology of MCAS is unclear, though recent studies point to the disruption of the epithelium by infection, toxic exposures or physical trauma, and perturbation the tight regulation of these innate immune cells, associated to the epithelial borders. Here we describe a geriatric patient with adult onset MCAS, following a significant toxic exposure, scombroid poisoning. We also review the relevant literature regarding MCAS diagnosis and management as well as potential mechanisms for this hypersensitivity syndrome in adults.


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