Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3201605 | Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2007 | 8 Pages |
BackgroundIn a group of patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM), marked and sustained eosinophilia is detectable (SM-eo).ObjectiveAlthough the molecular defect has been defined in some cases, little is known about the impact and clinical correlates of eosinophilia.MethodsIn a cohort of 63 patients with SM, we identified 9 with permanent eosinophilia (>1500/μL). According to the World Health Organization classification, 2 had indolent SM, 1 had smoldering SM, 2 had SM with associated chronic eosinophilic leukemia (SM-CEL), and 4 had aggressive SM.ResultsSM-eo was found to be associated with a significantly reduced probability of overall and event-free survival compared with SM without eosinophilia (P < .05). In the 2 patients with SM-CEL, a CHIC2 deletion was found. By contrast, no KIT mutation at codon 816 was detectable in these patients. In the other patients with SM-eo, KIT D816V was demonstrable. The 2 patients with SM-CEL had cardiomyopathy, whereas other organ systems remained largely unaffected. By contrast, in all other patients with SM-eo, organopathy, if recorded, affected the bone marrow, liver, or/and skeletal system, but not the heart, even when eosinophilia persisted for many years.ConclusionsThe biochemical basis of eosinophilia in SM is variable and predictive for the type of organopathy.Clinical implicationsIn SM eosinophilia is of prognostic significance but is not a final diagnosis and is not invariably associated with cardiomyopathy. The latter might be restricted to cases with an associated primary eosinophilic disorder (SM-CEL).