6533b823fe1ef96bd127e140

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Systemic mastocytosis. A GIMEMA multicenter survey

Alessandro PulsoniLivio PaganoR FanciSimona GattoMaria Teresa Van LintLuana FianchiGrazia SanpaoloCarlo CastagnolaMaria Enza MitraGiuseppe LeoneChiara CattaneoMichela RondoniCaterina Giovanna ValentiniFiorina GionaEnrico PoglianiPellegrino MustoMorena CairaCecilia CaramattiAnna CandoniLaura MarbelloGiovanni Martinelli

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyHematologybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentImmunologyAlpha interferonRetrospective cohort studyImatinibCell BiologyHematologyHematopoietic stem cell transplantationmedicine.diseaseMast cell leukemiaBiochemistryGastroenterologySurgeryHematologic diseaseInternal medicinemedicineSystemic mastocytosisbusinessmedicine.drug

description

Abstract To evaluate clinical and biological features, treatments and outcome of patients(pts) with Systemic Mastocytosis(SM). A retrospective study (1995–2006) about pts with SM admitted in 14 Italian hematology divisions in tertiary cares or university hospitals. 30 cases of SM were collected(median age 62 y.o.; M/F 14/16) and classified according to the WHO criteria: Mast Cell Leukemia in 14 pts, Aggressive SM in 12 and Indolent in 3; the remaining one had SM with associated clonal non-mast cell-lineage hematologic disease. Skin was the principal extramedullary organ involved (19 pts) followed by spleen(15), liver(13), and cardiovascular system(12). Molecular biology studies were performed in 22 pts: 15 showed the c-kit point mutation D816V; in another patient a different c-kit mutation was found while in 3 pts additional gene defects and karyotype abnormalities were recognized. Treatments were heterogeneous, and the same patient could have received different therapies after failure of the previous one. Imatinib(400 mg/day) was used in 17 pts (11 as first line therapy, 5 and 1 as second and third line respectively); interferon-alpha(3×3 MU s.c. weekly) was employed in 7 patients(4 as first line therapy, 2 as second and 1 as third line); 2-CDA(0.14 mg/kg) was administered in 3 pts(1 as first, 1 as second and 1 as third line therapy); 2 patients underwent HSCT as second and third line respectively. Data about response to treatment are reported in the table. The overall response rate to imatinib was of 30%, registering 1 complete remission(CR) and 4 partial remissions. All but one responsive patients did not present c-kit point mutation. Three pts(10%) died for progression of SM; a fourth patient in CR died for accidental causes. The actuarial Kaplan-Meier curve at 10 years showed an overall-survival of 87%. Conclusions: SM is a rare disease, characterized by severe and life-threatening mediator-related symptoms but with a low mortality rate. D816V c-kit mutation is frequent and associated with resistance against imatinib: only 1 patient showed a CR. Of note 2-CDA has shown interesting clinical response: all 3 treated pts showed a clinical improvement. Because of the rarity of SM, an effective standard of care is lacking. More data are needed to find new and successful therapeutic strategies; it is possible that new tyrosine kinase inhibitors could allow to achieve clinical and molecular remission of disease, crossing resistence to imatinib due to c-kit mutation, in order to improve above all quoad valitudinem prognosis of these pts. Response to treatments. DRUGS CR PR Stable Unrespons. N.E. TOTAL Imatinib 1 4 5 3 4 17 INF-alpha 0 1 1 5 0 7 2-CDA 0 3 0 0 0 3 Conventional CTX 0 1 2 4 1 8 Allo-HSCT 2 0 0 0 0 2 Wait & Watch 0 0 6 2 0 8

https://publons.com/wos-op/publon/14078355/