Abstract

Resistance to imatinib has been recurrently reported in systemic mastocytosis (SM) carrying exon 17 KIT mutations. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of imatinib therapy in 10 adult SM patients lacking exon 17 KIT mutations, 9 of which fulfilled criteria for well-differentiated SM (WDSM). The World Health Organization 2008 disease categories among WDSM patients were mast cell (MC) leukemia (n = 3), indolent SM (n = 3) and cutaneous mastocytosis (n = 3); the remainder case had SM associated with a clonal haematological non-MC disease. Patients were given imatinib for 12 months −400 or 300 mg daily depending on the presence vs. absence of > 30% bone marrow (BM) MCs and/or signs of advanced disease–. Absence of exon 17 KIT mutations was confirmed in highly-purified BM MCs by peptide nucleic acid-mediated PCR, while mutations involving other exons were investigated by direct sequencing of purified BM MC DNA. Complete response (CR) was defined as resolution of BM MC infiltration, skin lesions, organomegalies and MC-mediator release-associated symptoms, plus normalization of serum tryptase. Criteria for partial response (PR) included ≥ 50% reduction in BM MC infiltration and improvement of skin lesions and/or organomegalies. Treatment was well-tolerated with an overall response rate of 50%, including early and sustained CR in four patients, three of whom had extracellular mutations of KIT, and PR in one case. This later patient and all non-responders (n = 5) showed wild-type KIT. These results together with previous data from the literature support the relevance of the KIT mutational status in selecting SM patients who are candidates for imatinib therapy.

Highlights

  • Mastocytosis is a rare and heterogeneous disease characterized by an expansion of clonal mast cells (MCs) in different organs and tissues such as the bone marrow (BM), skin, gastrointestinal tract, liver, spleen and lymph nodes

  • BM aspirate and biopsy analyses revealed a hypercellular marrow with increased eosinophils together with the presence of CD25+bright, spindle-shaped MCs forming compact aggregates consistent with the diagnosis of indolent SM (ISM)-AHNMD, the associated haematological disorder being a chronic eosinophilic leukemia (CEL) (ISMCEL)

  • systemic mastocytosis (SM) patients are typically managed with drugs aimed at improving and/or preventing symptoms related to the release of MC mediators, together with cytoreductive therapy in advanced cases (e.g. aggressive SM (ASM), MC leukemia (MCL) and SMAHNMD)

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Summary

Introduction

Mastocytosis is a rare and heterogeneous disease characterized by an expansion of clonal mast cells (MCs) in different organs and tissues such as the bone marrow (BM), skin, gastrointestinal tract, liver, spleen and lymph nodes. Many of these D816V-negative patients correspond to well-differentiated SM (WDSM), a recently described rare subvariant of SM defined by skin involvement associated with clonal expansion of mature-appearing, CD25-/low MCs in the BM, for which specific diagnostic criteria have been proposed [19] and adopted in the new WHO 2016 classification. A significant proportion of patients with indolent forms of WDSM fail to fulfill the current WHO 2008 diagnostic criteria for SM, despite they systematically show features of a systemic MC disease such as BM MC aggregates, aberrant CD30 expression on BM MCs, mutations involving any region of KIT and/or a clonal nature based on the HUMARA pattern of inactivation of the X chromosome

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