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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Systemic mastocytosis
is characterized by
mast cell
proliferation in different organs. Classification delineates 4 categories: indolent systemic mastocytosis, systemic mastocytosis with an associated clonal hematologic non-
mast cell
lineage disease, aggressive systemic mastocytosis and
mast cell
leukaemia. Clinical manifestations are due to organ infiltration (skin, bone, gut, liver, spleen, lymph nodes) and release of mast-cell mediators. Diagnosis of mastocytosis is based on appropriate stains (Giemsa, Toluidine) and immunophenotype features (tryptase, CD117). Serum level of tryptase reflects the total burden of mast cells. Treatment must prevent
mast cell
mediators release (histamine antagonists, cromolyn sodium, corticosteroids, leukotriene-receptor inhibitors) and have a cytoreductive effect (interferon, cladribine, tyrosine kinase inhibitors).
...
PMID:[Systemic mastocytosis]. 1633 97
Systemic mastocytosis
(SM) is a disease characterized by tissue infiltration of neoplastic mast cells originating from hematopoietic stem cells. Patients with advanced SM have a poor prognosis, and there is no
mast cell
ablative therapy available for most patients who carry an activating point mutation in the c-kit gene. We report results of a prospective study evaluating the safety, engraftment, and possibility of inducing a graft-versus-
mast cell
(GvMC) effect after allogeneic nonmyeloablative hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) from an HLA-identical sibling. Three patients with advanced SM were transplanted. All achieved complete donor T cell chimerism followed by clinical evidence for GvMC effect. However, all patients experienced disease progression with the longest response duration of 39 months. The GvMC effect can be observed after nonmyeloablative HCT with limited efficacy. Effective cytoreductive therapy prior to HCT may be required for long-term disease control and cure.
...
PMID:A pilot study of nonmyeloablative allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant for advanced systemic mastocytosis. 1640 Mar 43
Systemic
mast cell
disorders in most instances appear to be clonal disorders of the
mast cell
and its progenitor. Symptoms result from a pathological release of
mast cell
mediators and a destructive
mast cell
infiltration. Cutaneous mastocytosis is most frequently seen in children and may regress.
Systemic mastocytosis
(SM) is a persistent disease. A somatic c-kit mutation at codon 816 is often detectable in haematopoietic cells. The clinical course of mastocytosis is variable, ranging from indolent to aggressive. Five categories of disease are recognized: Indolent SM, aggressive SM, SM with associated clonal haematological non-
mast cell
-lineage disease (AHNMD) and
mast cell
leukaemia (MCL). In SM-AHNMD, additional genetic abnormalities have been reported. Patients with cutaneous or indolent systemic disease are treated symptomatically. Patients with aggressive disease are candidates for cytoreductive therapy. The use of 'Kit-targeting' tyrosine kinase inhibitors are best selected following a mutational analysis of c-kit. For instance, the D816V mutation appears to be associated with relative resistance against imatinib. However, imatinib has been used with success in patients with SM-hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) and the FIPL1/PDGFRA fusion gene and in a patient with mastocytosis with a mutation outside of codon 816. The value of bone marrow transplantation remains under investigation.
...
PMID:Mastocytosis. 1660 39
Systemic mastocytosis
is a fascinating disease with diverse clinical features. There have been numerous advances in understanding the basis of clinical manifestations of this disease and of its molecular pathogenesis in the last several decades. The development of methods to study
mast cell
biology using cell culture and murine models has proven invaluable in this regard. Clarification of the roles of mast cells in various biological processes has expanded our understanding of their importance in innate immunity, as well as allergy. New diagnostic methods have allowed the design of detailed criteria to assist in distinguishing reactive mast cell hyperplasia from systemic mastocytosis. Variants and subvariants of systemic mastocytosis have been defined to assist in determining prognosis and in management of the disease. Elucidation of the roles of the Kit receptor tyrosine kinase and signal transduction pathway activation has contributed to development of potential targeted therapeutic approaches that may prove useful in the future.
...
PMID:Systemic mastocytosis. 1668 75
Systemic mastocytosis
(SM) is characterized by the abnormal growth and accumulation of mast cells (MC) in one or more organs. The interaction between the cytokine stem cell factor (SCF) and its cognate receptor, the c-kit receptor tyrosine kinase (KIT), plays a central role in regulating MC growth and differentiation. Whereas germline and somatically acquired activating mutations of KIT have been identified in SM, the issue as to whether individual KIT mutation(s) are necessary and sufficient to cause MC transformation remains unclear based on currently available data. Activating mutations of platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha (FIP1 L1-PDGFRA) are identified in a significant number of SM cases that have associated eosinophilia. To date, as with gastrointestinal stromal tumors, activating mutations of KIT and PDGFRA appear to be alternative and mutually exclusive genetic events in SM. The World Health Organization has specified criteria for classification of SM into six major subtypes: cutaneous mastocytosis, indolent systemic mastocytosis (ISM), systemic mastocytosis with an associated clonal hematological non-mast-cell disorder (SM-AHNMD), aggressive systemic mastocytosis (ASM), mast cell leukemia, and
mast cell
sarcoma. The ability to molecularly classify individual SM cases based on the presence or absence of specific mutations allows for molecularly targeted therapy in a growing number of cases. Imatinib mesylate therapy might result in complete remission of SM cases with wild-type KIT, certain KIT mutations, such as F522C, or the FIP1L1-PDGFRA fusion gene, but not of D816V-KIT-bearing SM. For the latter, interferon-alpha and 2-CdA are potential first- and second-line therapeutic options. Other drugs under investigation include novel tyrosine kinase inhibitors, as well as NF-kappaB inhibitors, which might display greater selectivity towards D816V-KIT as compared to wild type KIT. The pathogenesis of mastocytosis, its major clinical subtypes, and recent treatment advances are discussed in this chapter.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis, clinical features, and treatment advances in mastocytosis. 1678 90
Systemic mastocytosis
is characterized by an abnormal proliferation of tissue mast cells. Symptoms of mastocytosis are primarily attributed to the release of
mast cell
mediators during episodes of systemic activation of the excessive numbers of mast cells. Thus, biochemical evidence for the release of increased quantities of
mast cell
secretory products can suggest or confirm, depending on the clinical situation, a diagnosis of systemic mastocytosis. A major advantage of the biochemical approach to the diagnosis of systemic
mast cell
disease is that it has allowed the recognition of a class of patients in whom episodes of systemic mastocyte activation can be unequivocally documented biochemically but in whom clear-cut evidence of abnormal
mast cell
proliferation is lacking by current histologic criteria. Although the release of increased quantities of
mast cell
mediators can be demonstrated during episodes of
mast cell
activation in such patients, mediator levels are usually normal at quiescent times. By contrast, patients with proliferative
mast cell
disease (mastocytosis) usually exhibit chronic overproduction of
mast cell
mediators. Mast cell secretory products that can be measured in an attempt to obtain biochemical evidence of systemic
mast cell
activation include histamine, prostaglandin D2, tryptase, and heparin. The analytical approaches to assessing release of those individual
mast cell
products are evaluated. In general, the diagnosis and investigation of patients with systemic
mast cell
activation can best be accomplished by concerted use of histologic examination of key tissues together with analysis of chemical markers of the
mast cell
.
...
PMID:Biochemical diagnosis of systemic mast cell disorders. 1679 4
The gastrointestinal tract is a rich source of mast cells with an enormous surface area that permits a high degree of interaction between the
mast cell
and intestinal luminal contents. The active metabolic products of the
mast cell
influence gastrointestinal secretion, absorption, and motility through paracrine effects of local
mast cell
degranulation and also cause systemic effects through the release of cellular products into the blood stream.
Systemic mastocytosis
influences physiologic function through the systemic effects of
mast cell
products released from focal (e.g., bone marrow) or wide spread increases in
mast cell
number. Local gastrointestinal proliferation of mast cells in response to recognized (e.g., gluten in celiac sprue) or obscure stimuli can alter gastrointestinal function and induce systemic symptoms. Celiac sprue, inflammatory bowel disease, and non-ulcer dyspepsia are three examples of gastrointestinal diseases in which mast cells can be implicated in the pathophysiology of the symptoms.
...
PMID:The role of the mast cell in clinical gastrointestinal disease with special reference to systemic mastocytosis. 1679 7
Systemic mast cell disease
often becomes clinically manifest as a
mast cell
mediator activation syndrome with episodic or chronic nonspecific abdominal symptoms. As a result of genetic alterations, pathological mast cells have an increased proliferation rate as well as accumulation within different organs with consequential effect on gastrointestinal secretion, absorption, pain perception and motility caused by release of their mediators. These changes may not be detected in routine laboratory or imaging methods. This report describes how the diagnosis systemic
mast cell
disease can be established with a diagnostic questionnaire based on a synopsis of clinical findings relevant to a
mast cell
mediator activation syndrome.
...
PMID:[Systemic mast cell disease with gastrointestinal symptoms--a diagnostic questionnaire]. 1698 Oct 82
Systemic mast cell disease
is characterized by dysregulated
mast cell
growth and survival, with infiltration into multiple organs and release of systemic mediators. Much has been learned about
mast cell
biology over the past 20 years, and it has become apparent that activating mutations in the c-KIT receptor tyrosine kinase underlie the aberrant cell signaling and
mast cell
growth in a majority of patients. Despite this knowledge, targeted therapy with imatinib has been largely unsuccessful due to resistance of the common c-KIT D816V (Asp-->Val) mutation. Novel strategies designed to inhibit the growth of mast cells containing the c-KIT D816V mutations have shown success in vitro and may provide effective targeted therapy for this treatment-refractory disease.
...
PMID:Systemic mastocytosis: current classification and novel therapeutic options. 1709 33
Systemic mastocytosis
is a disease characterized by multifocal
mast cell
proliferation in the bone marrow or other extracutaneous organs. Because of loosely scattered and hypo-/agranular mast cells, the diagnosis is sometimes very difficult. In the bone marrow,
mast cell
infiltration may be associated with prominent lymphoid infiltration leading to a misdiagnosis of a low grade non-Hodgkin lymphoma. A 49-year-old woman presented with right arm and leg pain, psychiatric symptoms, and diarrhea for four years. Physical examination and laboratory investigation revealed hepatosplenomegaly, anemia, mild thrombocytosis, mild leucocytosis and lymphocytosis. In the bone marrow biopsy, there was a prominent B lymphocyte proliferation reminiscent of a low grade non-Hodgkin lymphoma/leukemia and there were some spindle cells aggregates in paratrabecular location. The consecutive bone marrow biopsies were similar to the first. The subsequent splenectomy specimen exhibited striking fibrosis. In the lymph node sections, there was marginal zone hyperplasia. Multifocal accumulations of mast cells were strongly positive with mast cell tryptase and CD117 on immunohistochemical staining, though no metachromasia was identified in Giemsa and Toluidine Blue stained aspirates and tissue sections, probably due to hypo-/agranulation of mast cells. The case was presented to emphasize the importance of the antibody to mast cell tryptase in the diagnosis of mastocytosis and to discuss problems of differential diagnosis of systemic mastocytosis.
...
PMID:Systemic mastocytosis presenting with a prominent B lymphocyte proliferation in the bone marrow and extensive fibrosis of the spleen. 1747 86
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