Updated Diagnostic Criteria and Classification of Mast Cell Disorders: A Consensus Proposal

Peter Valent(Medical University of Vienna), Cem Akin(University of Michigan), Karin Hartmann(University of Basel), Iván Álvarez‐Twöse(Hospital Virgen del Valle), Knut Brockow(Technical University of Munich), Olivier Hermine(Université Paris Cité), Marek Niedoszytko(Gdańsk Medical University), Juliana Schwaab(Heidelberg University), Jonathan J. Lyons(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Melody C. Carter(National Institutes of Health), Hanneke Oude Elberink(University Medical Center Groningen), Joseph H. Butterfield(Mayo Clinic), Tracy I. George(University of Basel), Georg Greiner(Hospital Virgen del Valle), Celalettin Üstün(Rush University Medical Center), Patrizia Bonadonna(University of Verona), Karl Sotlar(Paracelsus Medical University), Gunnar Nilsson(Karolinska University Hospital), Mohamad Jawhar(Heidelberg University), Frank Siebenhaar(Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), Sigurd Broesby‐Olsen(Odense University Hospital), Selim Yavuz(University of Michigan), Roberta Zanotti(University of Verona), Magdalena Lange(Gdańsk Medical University), Bogusław Nedoszytko(Hospital Virgen del Valle), Gregor Hoermann(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Mariana Castells(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Deepti Radia(Medical University of Vienna), Javier I. Muñoz‐González(Universidad de Salamanca), Wolfgang R. Sperr(Medical University of Vienna), Massimo Triggiani(University of Salerno), Hanneke C. Kluin‐Nelemans(University Medical Center Groningen), Stephen J. Galli(Stanford University), Lawrence B. Schwartz(Virginia Commonwealth University), Andreas Reiter(Heidelberg University), Alberto Órfão(Universidad de Salamanca), Jason Gotlib(University of Basel), Michel Arock(Sorbonne Université), Hans‐Peter Horny(University of Michigan), Dean D. Metcalfe(National Institutes of Health)
HemaSphere
October 13, 2021
Cited by 290Open Access
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Abstract

Mastocytosis is a hematologic neoplasm characterized by expansion and focal accumulation of neoplastic mast cells (MC) in diverse organs, including the skin, bone marrow (BM), spleen, liver, and gastrointestinal tract. The World Health Organization classification divides the disease into prognostically distinct variants of cutaneous mastocytosis (CM) and systemic mastocytosis (SM). Although this classification remains valid, recent developments in the field and the advent of new diagnostic and prognostic parameters created a need to update and refine definitions and diagnostic criteria in MC neoplasms. In addition, MC activation syndromes (MCAS) and genetic features predisposing to SM and MCAS have been identified. To discuss these developments and refinements in the classification, we organized a Working Conference comprised of experts from Europe and the United States in August 2020. This article reports on outcomes from this conference. Of particular note, we propose adjustments in the classification of CM and SM, refinements in diagnostic criteria of SM variants, including smoldering SM and BM mastocytosis (BMM), and updated criteria for MCAS and other conditions involving MC. CD30 expression in MC now qualifies as a minor SM criterion, and BMM is now defined by SM criteria, absence of skin lesions and absence of B- and C-findings. A basal serum tryptase level exceeding 20 ng/mL remains a minor SM criterion, with recognition that hereditary alpha-tryptasemia and various myeloid neoplasms may also cause elevations in tryptase. Our updated proposal will support diagnostic evaluations and prognostication in daily practice and the conduct of clinical trials in MC disorders.


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