Abstract

BackgroundSystemic mastocytosis (SM), a rare myeloid neoplasm, is defined as a clonal and neoplastic proliferation of mast cells in at least one extracutaneous organ(s). The pathologic diagnosis and treatment of SM are challenging.Case presentationWe presented a 44-year-old male patient who had endured abdomen discomfort for 4 years and diarrhea for 5 months. Colonoscopy and PET/CT found a protuberant lesion in the cecum with adjacent lymphadenopathy. Histopathology of the cecum biopsy showed diffuse infiltration of medium-sized round/oval cells in lamina propria with immunohistochemical expressions of CD45, CD117, CD25, CD68, CD123, CD56, CD4, and CD35, mimicking blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm. Sanger sequencing revealed missense mutation (D816V) in the exon 17 of KIT gene. Serum tryptase level was 38.56 ng/ml. No abnormality was found in skin examination and bone marrow biopsy. No primitive cells were observed in bone marrow smear and peripheral blood smear. The diagnosis of aggressive SM with intestinal tract involvement was established. The patient received avapritinib treatment at an initial dosage of 200 mg once daily and exhibited dramatic clinical improvement but memory impairment within 1 month. No recurrence was observed in 1-year follow-up at the adjusted avapritinib dose (75 mg once daily).ConclusionsSM is very rare and should be considered in patients with long-term diarrhea symptoms and hematopoietic/lymphoid-appearing tumors. KIT D816V mutation contributes to the differentiation of CD123, CD4, and CD56 immunoreactive SM from blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm. The rare side-effect of memory impairment in this case helps to accumulate the experience of avapritinib in treating KIT D816V-mutant SM.

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