24-Hour Urine Testing
A 24-hour urine collection is one of the more sensitive diagnostic tools for MCAS because it captures cumulative mediator metabolite output over a full day, rather than trying to catch a transient spike in blood. For a comparison of all current diagnostic methods and their limitations, see Existing Diagnostics.
What’s Measured
N-methylhistamine: The primary urinary metabolite of Histamine (produced via HNMT). Elevated levels indicate increased histamine production or reduced clearance over the collection period.
11β-Prostaglandin F2α (11β-PGF2α): The stable urinary metabolite of PGD2. Since PGD2 is the dominant prostaglandin from mast cells, elevated 11β-PGF2α is relatively specific to mast cell activation. This is one of the more useful markers — it’s elevated in many MCAS patients who have normal Serum Tryptase.
Leukotriene E4 (LTE4): The terminal metabolite of the cysteinyl Leukotrienes. Elevated levels suggest active leukotriene production, which may indicate mast cell activation or other inflammatory processes.
2,3-dinor-11β-prostaglandin F2α: A further metabolite of PGD2. Some labs include this for additional sensitivity.
Advantages Over Blood Testing
- Histamine has a half-life of minutes in blood — a blood draw has to happen during or immediately after a flare to catch it. Urine collects metabolites continuously.
- PGD2 metabolites in urine are more stable and reflect cumulative production.
- Less dependent on perfect sample handling (though refrigeration during collection is still important).
Limitations
- Still requires refrigeration during the 24-hour collection period.
- Certain foods and medications can affect results (some providers recommend a low-histamine diet for 24 hours before and during collection).
- Results can be normal if the collection period happens to fall on a low-symptom day.
- Reference ranges vary by lab, and some labs have limited experience with these assays.
Practical Tips
Ideally, the collection should span a day that includes typical or above-average symptom activity. Some providers recommend timing it around known triggers — a symptomatic day is more likely to produce informative results. Refrigerate the collection container throughout.