Immunohistochemical staining is useful in the diagnosis of bone marrow infiltration in systemic mastocytosis. However, it is not clear if antibody staining may be helpful in the diagnosis of cutaneous mastocytosis (CM). We studied the histological appearance of CM in 35 pediatric patients. Cases were assigned to three basic clinical groups: I--Urticaria pigmentosa (UP, n=29); II--Mastocytomas (n=4); and III--Diffuse Cutaneous Mastocytosis (DCM, n=2). The analysis of clinical information revealed an association between the presence of diarrhea and a higher number of cells/field. Nine doubtful cases, all of them macules, were selected based on the scarcity of mast cells (MC) and the absence or rarity of other inflammatory cells. We compared the number of cells identified in Giemsa and immunohistochemical stains in definite and doubtful cases. The intraclass correlation statistic tested the concordance between each staining method. All 9 dubious cases according to the Giemsa stain had their CM diagnosis confirmed by the immunohistochemistry analysis. The intraclass correlation between Giemsa and c-kit was good (0.7) when the number of MC was high. However, there was no correlation between the mast cells counts in the two different stains in the dubious cases. The immunohistochemistry with c-kit might make CM diagnosis easier, especially in the macular cases, when there is a lower number of MC.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.14670/HH-22.535DOI Listing

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