Diagnosis of mast cell activation syndrome: a global "consensus-2"

Diagnosis (Berl). 2020 Apr 22;8(2):137-152. doi: 10.1515/dx-2020-0005. Print 2021 May 26.

Abstract

The concept that disease rooted principally in chronic aberrant constitutive and reactive activation of mast cells (MCs), without the gross MC neoplasia in mastocytosis, first emerged in the 1980s, but only in the last decade has recognition of "mast cell activation syndrome" (MCAS) grown significantly. Two principal proposals for diagnostic criteria have emerged. One, originally published in 2012, is labeled by its authors as a "consensus" (re-termed here as "consensus-1"). Another sizable contingent of investigators and practitioners favor a different approach (originally published in 2011, newly termed here as "consensus-2"), resembling "consensus-1" in some respects but differing in others, leading to substantial differences between these proposals in the numbers of patients qualifying for diagnosis (and thus treatment). Overdiagnosis by "consensus-2" criteria has potential to be problematic, but underdiagnosis by "consensus-1" criteria seems the far larger problem given (1) increasing appreciation that MCAS is prevalent (up to 17% of the general population), and (2) most MCAS patients, regardless of illness duration prior to diagnosis, can eventually identify treatment yielding sustained improvement. We analyze these proposals (and others) and suggest that, until careful research provides more definitive answers, diagnosis by either proposal is valid, reasonable, and helpful.

Keywords: chronic illness; mast cell activation disease; mast cell activation syndrome; medical controversies; medically unexplained symptoms; misdiagnosis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Consensus
  • Humans
  • Mast Cells
  • Mastocytosis* / diagnosis