Immunophenotyping of mast cells: A sensitive and specific diagnostic tool for systemic mastocytosis
January 2009
Article
Introduction: The diagnosis of systemic mastocytosis (SM) is based on a combination of major and minor criteria. Flow cytometric detection of aberrant expression of CD2 and/or CD25 on CD117-positive mast cells is one of the minor criteria used. In the present study we examined the sensitivity and specificity of mast cell immunophenotyping in the diagnosis of SM. Material and methods: Patients were 36 persons with systemic mastocytosis diagnosed according to WHO criteria. Controls were 31 patients without SM. Immunophenotyping was performed according to published guidelines. Results: All patients with SM were positive for CD2 and/or CD25. All patients without SM, except one, were negative for these markers. The sensitivity for immunophenotyping was 100%, the specificity 91%. The positive and negative predictive values were 97% and I00% respectively. Conclusion: Immunophenotyping of bone marrow derived mast cells is not only a very sensitive but also a very specific method to diagnose SM with high positive and negative predictive value.
- adult
- article
- female
- human
- male
- aged
- controlled study
- clinical article
- sensitivity and specificity
- prediction
- enzyme immunoassay
- flow cytometry
- immunophenotyping
- Immunophenotyping
- interleukin 2 receptor alpha
- cell count
- diagnostic value
- antigen expression
- Sensitivity
- Specificity
- tryptase
- CD2 antigen
- Mastocytosis
- Tryptase
- bone marrow biopsy
- enzyme blood level
- mast cell
- spindle cell
- systemic mastocytosis