To the editor:

Spindle-shaped tryptase+/CD25+/CD117+/CD2+/− mast cells (MCs) are a hallmark of the bone marrow (BM) in myeloid/lymphoid neoplasms harboring a FIP1L1-PDGFRA (FP) fusion gene.1,2  These neoplasms that may present as chronic eosinophilic leukemia (CEL), acute myeloid leukemia/blast phase, myeloid sarcoma, or lymphoblastic lymphoma/leukemia rarely fulfill the criteria of the World Health Organization category “systemic mastocytosis with associated haematological non-mast cell disorders” (SM-AHNMD).1-5  Among 123 SM-AHNMD patients, only 12 carried an FP fusion gene.5 KIT D816V analysis performed on 8 of these FP-positive patients and on 2 cases included in another study were negative.5,6  Thus, the relationship between MCs in FP-positive CEL and KIT D816V-positive SM remains elusive.

We microdissected tryptase+ MCs from formalin-fixed, EDTA-decalcified, paraffin-embedded BM trephine biopsies of 19 FP-positive CEL patients using a PALM MicroBeam (Carl Zeiss Microscopy, Oberkochen, Germany). DNA was extracted from 100 to 250 pooled MCs per biopsy (QIAamp DNA Mini Kit; Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). KIT D816V mutation was evaluated by analyzing KIT exon 17 nested polymerase chain reaction products by LightCycler-based high-resolution melting and conventional direct sequencing.6  Genomic DNA from the KIT D816V-positive MC leukemia cell line HMC-1 and NB4 cells harboring wild-type KIT served as controls. The polymerase chain reaction reactions and final results were evaluated in a blinded fashion. Low levels of KIT D816V-mutated DNA ranging from <10% to 20% were detected in the MCs of 5 of 19 FP-positive CEL patients (Figure 1). The KIT D816V mutation was not detectable in DNA/RNA extracted from whole white blood cells derived from peripheral blood or BM samples, probably as a consequence of the very low burden of mutated KIT D816V-positive cells, which was only detectable in DNA obtained from microdissected MCs. Fluorescence Immunophenotyping and Interphase Cytogenetic as a Tool for Investigation Of Neoplasia (FICTION) using a Vysis 4q12 tri-color rearrangement fluorescence in situ hybridization probe kit (Abbott Molecular, Wiesbaden, Germany) resulted in 1 green/aqua fusion signal with a deletion of the orange signal of the CHIC2 gene in the nuclei of tryptase+ BM MCs in a patient with KIT D816V-positive MCs (Figure 1). The presence of CD25+-positive MCs with concomitant KIT D816V and serum tryptase levels >20 ng/mL support the diagnosis of SM-AHNMD/SM-FP–positive CEL in 2 patients. This discrepancy to the previously published negative KIT D816V mutational analysis of microdissected MCs may be explained by a sampling effect because only 2 FP-positive SM-CEL cases were examined.6  It remains elusive whether FP and KIT D816V are present in the same clone or whether there are 2 separate clones. We reported on the heterogeneity of molecular aberrations in KIT D816V-positive SM with ≥1 additional mutation, for example, TET2, SRSF2, ASXL1, and others in 24 of 27 patients.7  In a murine model, expansion of eosinophils and MCs may result from an interaction between FP, interleukin 5, the ligand stem cell factor, and KIT in the absence of a KIT mutation.8  It can be speculated that the FP fusion gene favors secondary KIT mutations in MCs via growth and proliferation signals or that a yet unknown mechanism causes genomic instability with independent evolution of FP and KIT D816V.

Figure 1

FP-positive CEL with concomitant KIT D816V mutation. (A) Hypercellular BM biopsy with a marked increase in eosinophils (Giemsa stain). (B-E) Phenotypically aberrant MCs are arranged in loose clusters and as interstial infiltrates (B) tryptase, (C) CD117, (D) CD2, and (E) CD25. (F-I) fluorescence in situ hybridization with a 4q12 tri-color rearrangement probe (F) alone or (G-H) combined with tryptase IH (fiction) (note nuclei with green/aqua fusion signals [arrows] as a surrogate for CHIC2 deletion). Normal tricolor green/orange/aqua fusion signals are marked by an arrowhead. (J) c-kit antisense sequence of microdissected MCs from FIP1L1-PDGFRA–positive CEL showing a KIT D816V mutation. (A-E) Photomicrographs by Horn Imaging Camera (Aalen, Germany) adopted to a Zeiss Imager.M1 (Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) microscope. (F-I) Imaging system ApoTome.2 (Carl Zeiss).

Figure 1

FP-positive CEL with concomitant KIT D816V mutation. (A) Hypercellular BM biopsy with a marked increase in eosinophils (Giemsa stain). (B-E) Phenotypically aberrant MCs are arranged in loose clusters and as interstial infiltrates (B) tryptase, (C) CD117, (D) CD2, and (E) CD25. (F-I) fluorescence in situ hybridization with a 4q12 tri-color rearrangement probe (F) alone or (G-H) combined with tryptase IH (fiction) (note nuclei with green/aqua fusion signals [arrows] as a surrogate for CHIC2 deletion). Normal tricolor green/orange/aqua fusion signals are marked by an arrowhead. (J) c-kit antisense sequence of microdissected MCs from FIP1L1-PDGFRA–positive CEL showing a KIT D816V mutation. (A-E) Photomicrographs by Horn Imaging Camera (Aalen, Germany) adopted to a Zeiss Imager.M1 (Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) microscope. (F-I) Imaging system ApoTome.2 (Carl Zeiss).

Close modal

Acknowledgments: This work was supported by the European Leukemia Net, Work Package 9.

Contribution: A.H.S.-G., P.E., and A.R. designed the study; A.H.S.-G., P.E., J.S., B.V.-K., P.F., and A.R. performed experiments and analyzed data; A.H.S.-G., P.E., J.S. G.M., and A.R. collected patients’ samples; K.S. gave advice concerning the KIT D816V mutational analysis; A.H.S.-G., K.S., H.-P.H., and H.-H.K. critically reviewed patients’ BM biopsies; A.H.S.-G., P.E., G.M., P.F., and A.R. wrote the manuscript; and all authors critically reviewed and edited the paper.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Correspondence: Annette H. Schmitt-Graeff, Departement für Pathologie, Universitätsklinikum Freiburg, Breisacherstrasse 114a, D-79106 Freiburg, Germany; e-mail: annette.schmitt-graeff@uniklinik-freiburg.de.

1
Swerdlow
 
SH
Campo
 
E
Harris
 
NL
, et al. 
World Health Organization Classification of Tumours of Haematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissue
2008
4th ed
Lyon, France
IARC Press
2
Pardanani
 
A
Brockman
 
SR
Paternoster
 
SF
, et al. 
FIP1L1-PDGFRA fusion: prevalence and clinicopathologic correlates in 89 consecutive patients with moderate to severe eosinophilia.
Blood
2004
, vol. 
104
 
10
(pg. 
3038
-
3045
)
3
Cools
 
J
DeAngelo
 
DJ
Gotlib
 
J
, et al. 
A tyrosine kinase created by fusion of the PDGFRA and FIP1L1 genes as a therapeutic target of imatinib in idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome.
N Engl J Med
2003
, vol. 
348
 
13
(pg. 
1201
-
1214
)
4
Metzgeroth
 
G
Schwaab
 
J
Gosenca
 
D
, et al. 
 
Long-term follow-up of treatment with imatinib in eosinophilia-associated myeloid/lymphoid neoplasms with PDGFR rearrangements in blast phase. Leukemia. 2013;27(11): 2254-2256
5
Pardanani
 
A
Lim
 
KH
Lasho
 
TL
, et al. 
Prognostically relevant breakdown of 123 patients with systemic mastocytosis associated with other myeloid malignancies.
Blood
2009
, vol. 
114
 
18
(pg. 
3769
-
3772
)
6
Sotlar
 
K
Colak
 
S
Bache
 
A
, et al. 
Variable presence of KITD816V in clonal haematological non-mast cell lineage diseases associated with systemic mastocytosis (SM-AHNMD).
J Pathol
2010
, vol. 
220
 
5
(pg. 
586
-
595
)
7
Schwaab
 
J
Schnittger
 
S
Sotlar
 
K
, et al. 
 
Comprehensive mutational profiling in advanced systemic mastocytosis. Blood. 2013;122(14):2460-2466
8
Yamada
 
Y
Sanchez-Aguilera
 
A
Brandt
 
EB
, et al. 
FIP1L1/PDGFRalpha synergizes with SCF to induce systemic mastocytosis in a murine model of chronic eosinophilic leukemia/hypereosinophilic syndrome.
Blood
2008
, vol. 
112
 
6
(pg. 
2500
-
2507
)

Author notes

A.H.S.-G., P.E., and A.R. contributed equally to this work.

Sign in via your Institution